Sunday, 27 October 2024

Chocolate Beer Bread

I know I just made a chocolate sourdough, but this is a different chocolate sourdough. This one contains no sugar and no chocolate, but more than twice the amount of cocoa (proportionally). And the liquid is beer, rather than water. (I used a dark ale for mine.)

While the previous chocolate sourdough claimed to be a savoury bread, I actually found it relatively sweet. This one, however, is nothing like that. It is exceptionally dark and somewhat bitter. The recipe recommends pairing it with salty offerings like pickles, cheeses, and/or cured meats. And TF found it to be an excellent substrate for Vegemite. Meanwhile, the Kidlet thinks it will make an ideal bread for grilled cheese and has requested one tomorrow.

This bread also has some of the most impressively crisp, delightful crust that I've ever achieved. And it got great oven spring. (Despite me forgetting about it for an entire afternoon and generally being pretty lax with my care and timings when making it.) Very nice overall!



Chocolate Beer Bread

Slightly adapted from King Arthur Flour

Ingredients

  • 350g hard (strong/high grade/bread) flour
  • 40g Dutched (alkalized) cocoa
  • 300g beer
  • 80g ripe (fed) sourdough starter @ 100% hydration
  • 1/2 Tbsp. coarse sea salt

Directions

  1. Refresh your starter and make sure it's nice and active.
  2. Combine the flour, cocoa, beer, starter, and salt and mix very well.
  3. Let dough rest, covered, for 3-8 hours, stretching and folding every hour or so.
  4. Once dough feels light and well-risen, shape it into a loaf and place it (seam-side-up) in a floured banneton.
  5. Cover and let rest for 2-3 hours at room temperature (or 6-24 hours in the fridge).
  6. When ready to bake: preheat oven to 250°C (475°F) and boil some water.
  7. Grease a baking sheet and dust it with cornmeal.
  8. Turn the loaf out onto the preapred baking sheet.
  9. Gently rub or brush a little water onto the crust and then slash as desired.
  10. Pour some boiling water into a roasting pan and place it on the bottom rack of the oven.
  11. Place the bread on the rack above the water pan and bake at 250°C (475°F) for 15 minutes.
  12. Reduce heat to 200°C (400°F), remove water pan, and bake for another 15-20 minutes.
  13. Turn off oven and allow bread to rest in hot oven for 10 minutes.
  14. Transfer to a wire rack to cool.

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