AIR-FRIED SOURDOUGH BREAD

When your oven dies and you won’t have another one delivered for a couple of weeks, but your freezer is running out of sourdough slices, what can you do? Desperate times call for desperate moves. You turn to the air-fryer. I am actually quite pleased with the way the bread turned out, although the crust is not nearly as crisp as a “normal” sourdough bread. But if you like to experiment in the kitchen, give it a try…

AIR-FRIED SOURDOUGH
(from the Bewitching Kitchen)

250g bread flour
50 g sourdough starter at 100% hydration
180g water
5 g salt

Make the levain mixture about 6 hours before you plan to mix the dough. It should be very bubbly and active.

When you are ready to make the final dough, place the water in the bowl of a KitchenAid type mixer and dissolve the starter in it, mixing with a spatula briefly, then add the flour, and salt. Turn the mixer on with the hook attachment and knead the dough for 4 minutes at low-speed all the time.

Remove from the machine, and transfer to a container lightly coated with oil, cover lightly with plastic wrap and allow it to ferment for 4 hours, folding every 45 minutes or so. Because the dough is already a bit developed from the initial time in the mixer, you should get very good structure after 3 and a half hours, or even sooner than that.
After four hours bulk fermentation, shape the dough as a ball, and place, seam side up, in a lightly floured banetton. Leave at room temperature one hour, and then place in the fridge overnight, from 8 to 12 hours.

Next morning, turn your air-fryer to 400F and leave it on for 5 minutes at that temperature. Invert the bread on a piece of parchment paper, and cut it so that very little paper is outside the perimeter of the dough. Score if you want. Place the bread in the air-fryer with ice cubes around it.

Air-fry for 25 minutes, remove the paper and check the internal temperature. If it is over 205F, and the crust has good color, invert the bread and inspect the bottom. If a bit soggy and pale, place the bread in the fryer with the bottom up, and continue roasting it for another 5 minutes or so. Remove from the fryer and let it cool completely before slicing.

ENJOY!

to print the recipe, click here

Comments: The air-fryer will never be my choice to make sourdough bread, but I was pleasantly surprised by how well things turned out. Let’s suppose you are on a road trip and still want to bake some bread while away from home, maybe you can take your fryer with you… Just a thought! I do like to experiment, so this was actually pretty cool. I painted the surface with Sugarprism green after baking.

ONE YEAR AGO: Ube Macarons

TWO YEARS AGO: Christmas Sourdough

THREE YEARS AGO: Star-Shaped Sun-dried Tomato Bread

FOUR YEARS AGO: Cranberry White Chocolate Tart

FIVE YEARS AGO: I dream of Madeleines and a Tower of Cheesecakes

SIX YEARS AGO: Dominique Ansel’s Chocolate Mousse Cake

SEVEN YEARS AGO: Slow-Roasted Eye of the Round Beef

EIGHT YEARS AGO: Steam-Roasted Indian-Spiced Cauliflower

NINE YEARS AGO: Creamy Zucchini-Mushroom Soup

TEN YEARS AGO: Ken Forkish’s Pain au Bacon

ELEVEN YEARS AGO: Carrot and Cumin Hamburger Buns

TWELVE YEARS AGO: Potato Galettes a l’Alsacienne & Book Review

THIRTEEN YEARS AGO: Caramelized Carrot Soup

FOURTEEN YEARS AGO: Miso-Grilled Shrimp

FIFTEEN YEARS AGO: Pain Poilane

CHRISTMAS SOURDOUGH

A sourdough loaf to celebrate the season…

RAS-EL-HANOUT CHRISTMAS SOURDOUGH
(from the Bewitching Kitchen)

480g bread flour
20g spelt flour
75g sourdough starter at 100%
10g salt
335g water
1/2 tsp Ras-El-Hanout

Make the levain mixture about 6 hours before you plan to mix the dough. It should be very bubbly and active.

When you are ready to make the final dough, place the water in the bowl of a KitchenAid type mixer and dissolve the starter in it, mixing with a spatula briefly, then add the two types of flour, salt and spices. Turn the mixer on with the hook attachment and knead the dough for 4 minutes at low-speed all the time. You will notice the dough will gain quite a bit of structure even with just 4 minutes in the mixer. Remove from the machine, and transfer to a container lightly coated with oil, cover lightly with plastic wrap and allow it to ferment for 4 hours, folding every 45 minutes or so. Because the dough is already a bit developed from the initial time in the mixer, you should get very good structure after 3 and a half hours, or even sooner than that.

After four hours bulk fermentation, shape the dough as a ball, and place, seam side up, in a lightly floured banetton. Leave at room temperature one hour, and then place in the fridge overnight, from 8 to 12 hours.

Next morning, heat the oven to 450F.

Place a parchment paper on top of the dough, a flat baking sheet, and invert the dough, flipping it out of the banneton. Flour the surface of the dough, add the stencil and air-brush if so desired. Score with a razor blade.

Bake at 450F for 45 minutes, preferably covered for the first 30 minutes to retain steam. Cool completely over a rack before slicing.

ENJOY!

to print the recipe, click here

Comments: I think I’m finally getting the gist of stenciling bread. You need to really keep the stencil tightly on the surface, and get just a drop or two of air-brush color in the machine so that you can hold it vertically and get the spray to go exactly where you need. Work in small passes instead of trying to add a heavy layer all at once. I did not even wash the container, I started with green, sprayed it, emptied the air-brush, added the red and tested on a piece of paper until the color came out truly red.

For the scoring I used a razor blade combined with scissors, and after 6 minutes in the oven I opened the lid quickly and scored it deeply again around the design to make sure it would lift during baking.

We all loved this bread, I think the mixture of spices gives it a super subtle extra flavor, not overpowering at all. And of course, the stencil on top is perfect for the season!

ONE YEAR AGO: Christmas Sourdough

TWO YEARS AGO: Star-Shaped Sun-dried Tomato Bread

THREE YEARS AGO: Cranberry White Chocolate Tart

FOUR YEARS AGO: I dream of Madeleines and a Tower of Cheesecakes

FIVE YEARS AGO: Dominique Ansel’s Chocolate Mousse Cake

SIX YEARS AGO: Slow-Roasted Eye of the Round Beef

SEVEN YEARS AGO: Steam-Roasted Indian-Spiced Cauliflower

EIGHT YEARS AGO: Creamy Zucchini-Mushroom Soup

NINE YEARS AGO: Ken Forkish’s Pain au Bacon

TEN YEARS AGO: Carrot and Cumin Hamburger Buns

ELEVEN YEARS AGO: Potato Galettes a l’Alsacienne & Book Review

TWELVE YEARS AGO: Caramelized Carrot Soup

THIRTEEN YEARS AGO: Miso-Grilled Shrimp

FOURTEEN YEARS AGO: Pain Poilane