All Natural Indigo Sourdough

by Jadem52 in Cooking > Bread

5211 Views, 82 Favorites, 0 Comments

All Natural Indigo Sourdough

indigo sourough.jpg
bread2.jpg

For the past few months I have had so much time to do whatever I want, and in that time I have gotten very addicted to baking sourdough. Sourdough is a super cool way to bake bread because it only uses three main ingredients: flour, water, and salt. You also need a sourdough starter, which is technically a fourth ingredient, however, it's made from flour and water so it comes from two of the same three ingredients. It's amazing how you can take these three things and with a little time to catch some natural yeast, you can make amazing bread, arguably better than bread made with chemically grow yeast. But what's even cooler than just normal sourdough, is indigo sourdough. With just one additional ingredient, you can create sourdough bread that is naturally indigo colored, which is exactly what I'm going to show you how to do.

Supplies

For this recipe you will need:

- 540g Bread Flour - I highly recommend King Arthur

- 11g iodine-free salt

~ 20g butterfly pea flowers

- 40g sourdough starter

- water

- Rice flour for dusting

You will also need the following tools:

- Scale

- 16 oz jar

- Mixing Bowl

- Bench Scraper

- Banneton or a Bowl w/ clean kitchen towel

- Razor Blade

- Dutch Oven

- Parchment Paper

Create Butterfly Pea Tea

01bffcb861341a52f2d0f525cdc57c889b10c67830.jpg
01e7a0f9ef9a1059700a7b27c6b3154beedfd1300f.jpg
01cf00f4198b9c844a565fdd58248628a22e945218.jpg
01402bd9eecb230f99b284e4ac354ed1eb1e221e06.jpg
01305a342d633356ffde5464a4020b8ecb8e98bade.jpg

First, you must make tea using the butterfly pea flowers early the morning one day before you wish to serve your bread. To do this boil about 500g of water. While the water heats up, remove the light green stems from the flowers until you have about 12g of flower petals, discard the stems. Now place all 12g of flowers into a heat-safe container, add about 450g of boiling water. Allow the mixture to steep until it is about room temperature, this should take about 45 minutes. Once the tea has steeped and is at about room temp, use a fine mesh strainer to remove all of the flowers, you should be left with about 410g of dark blue liquid. Pour the liquid into a container of a zeroed scale, if you have more than 410g, that's not a problem, however, if you have less, add water until you are at 410g.

Mix Levain

0176516abbc1a4da8230fb15d0f01bbab4cbf7b2d4.jpg
0174c7c11e8980362cbfb438b2a53e0d510b949d07.jpg
01d60d04c8534a4a500e04230e3c4f706657a2633d.jpg
0167fb7a595bcbba124b5db2cbeeb7cda97afcc8dc.jpg

Next, you will build the levain, this should be done pretty earlier in the morning the day before you want your bread to be done. To do this, place a clean jar(16oz or bigger) on a scale and add 40 grams of an established sourdough starter. Next, add 40 grams of the room temp butterfly tea from the last step. Finally, add 40 grams of bread flour and mix thoroughly. Add a rubber band to the jar to mark where the starter is right now and place a lid on top but don't seal it. Place your starter in a warm area(~80°F) and allow it to rise for 3-4 hours until it is at least doubled and the surface is bubbly. If you don't have a spot that is around 80°F, you can always put the starter in the oven with just the light on, it may take longer but it will warm it a little bit. Make sure to follow the next step before the rising time it up.

Autolyse

0185e61428f53a3333975ac6d7a8002fb21ece3638.jpg
01d01769cca7ed38f455f72576b65aef5653361ce2.jpg
017c72993de9dd6345bc9bb8f8e83d0566317d52eb.jpg
0171a43e067c1119dba49bdef62af570c5de942605.jpg
014ad49528762ea21427a2711e6a6b20f98549fa5e.jpg

About 3 hours into the starter's rising period, you will mix your dough to give the flour time to hydrate from the water. In a large mixing bowl, add 500g of strong bread flour, then add 370g of the butterfly pea tea. Mix the dough with your hand or a dough whisk until there are no dry spots. If you use your hand, I find it easiest if your hand is in the shape of a duck's beak, with all your fingertips touching. Once the dough is mixed, cover and let sit until the starter has doubled and is bubbly. The dough only needs to sit for 30 minutes but it can sit for a few hours if your starter is being sluggish.

Add Levain and Salt

01be4338836b541003a755beba5c33af7b8365c1d2.jpg
01e8f722bc88675129aae2195f4aeccdff1f728da1.jpg
014061f82066bcb389481791f5b5086e7789bb4001.jpg
01c0c49432c17cc09518825ef0e235b0b05e7a0b1e.jpg
01523af9ca67d9912b582ea94567ddbe6de2ffbb5f.jpg
01d183daac8385e26ac87915561aa79959d9561bea.jpg
012a7cda20a2cc4f8335f8e92eae349e1bae48d04d.jpg

Once the starter has at least doubled and is very bubbly, pour 100g of it onto the dough as well as 11g of salt. Use a wet hand to mix the dough by grabbing portions of dough, and folding them over top of the starter and salt. Continue to grasp outer portions of dough and fold them over until the start seems well incorporated.

Kneading the Dough

017f2e0b97cb94dddaad44446055868d333cec1675.jpg
01ddeeb2b9dadaa75701f4e2923d7a4715284a375c.jpg
01cbf5c89d0e7634721408a3b387bcfd65933151f0.jpg

Now you will knead the dough to add strength to the gluten. Kneading in sourdough is a little different than other types of bread because the dough is super wet. The easiest way to do it is to keep the dough in the bowl and with a wet hand, grab a portion of the dough, pull it up as high as it can extend, and then fold it down to the middle. Continue grabbing, stretching, and folding the dough for about 5 minutes. Alternatively, you could use the slap and fold method instead if you have used that method before. Either way, the goal is for the gluten to be strong enough that you can stretch it to the point that you can see light through it, aka the glass pane test. If you can stretch the dough enough to see light, then you can move forward. If the dough breaks while stretching it, then knead the dough for a little longer up to 5 more minutes. If you can't quite get is super thin, that's ok your bread might just end up a little denser. Place the dough in a covered container in a warm place.

Bulk Fermentation

01a107d287fc29ec180614e7de93682081a6f85d1e.jpg
01c5894cd1b4b6da1a85c38609f3620ba12d913093.jpg
014e3f7b43b587e712b6b1e6878be148e229b3a6e0.jpg
01704b72847d9b9c65df13e4edc2e3603918a7821c.jpg

This is the main rise period of the dough, at this point you should start a stopwatch immediately to record how long your dough has been rising. During this period, you will complete four sets of stretches and folds. 30 minutes after you started the timer, perform the first stretch and fold. To do this, wet your hand and grasp on edge of the dough, like before, pull the dough up as high as it can go. Then fold it across to the other side. Pretend the dough is a square, you want to do 4 stretches, one on each side. Cover and repeat the 4 stretches at the 60-minute(1h) mark, 90-minute(1.5h) mark and one at 120-minute(2h) mark. After your final stretch at 2 hours, allow your dough to rise untouched until your stopwatch gets to 3 hours. If your kitchen is colder(~70F) let the stopwatch go to 4 hours before moving on. When the dough is ready, it should have large bubbles on top and have risen a little in the bowl.

Pre-Shaping

01332f6ea8eae1f2e64ccea36f8e5b4b4a17e57727.jpg
01d330315324067b1f75cdde8e829b944937a6a1af.jpg
01f4f070f05dbd52abd525b356ed85cd800658af69.jpg
01c907ef0457486c9549920ff6ce9c2b41ed67ca0b.jpg
012ccf8a1a8b5baef3a2fc665733aa45c8dbadcff0.jpg
01b153efc50dcfd52e964bee5b73462b7e010d6d76.jpg
01a2dfbc2a4bc2ffb21b0d237ca181d53b7c2f57e3.jpg
01dfbdd18998a5aea0907d28cbbd3b4490fb047ba8.jpg
011f4662124d222cb33cf63fd240197d2c5c98161f.jpg

Once the dough is done rising, it's time to pre-shape it into a ball or boule to proof overnight. Start by flouring the top of the dough, then turn it out onto a lightly floured work surface. Stretch the dough with floured hands into a rectangle shape. To shape the dough, fold the bottom 1/3 of the rectangle up. Next, grab one side and fold it in, then fold in the other side. Finally, fold the top down all the way to the bottom. Use a floured bench scraper to turn the dough over so the seam is underneath it. Cover the dough with an overturned bowl for 15 minutes. In that time, prepare a proofing basket. If you have a banneton, lightly flour it, if you do not, then grab a bowl and cover it with a clean kitchen towel. Dust the towel with rice flour, if you don't have rice flour, then heavily coat the bowl with wheat flour.

Final Shaping

01eec7752b2e8b57c1ba9db40d06afb798f22e43d3.jpg
01a06ae06fa959b1146520377ceb70506a97588d24.jpg
01f3143c08b684572c7d6ef5963d23bb80e7ecaf0c.jpg
01e7c89debbc81f70d2de99cf7559cc6cbfcae44b4.jpg
01822fa57c5d05f4cb1346447e250914583b77b7af.jpg
01575c5f649cb8f16093abba7d9a333792728c1bcb.jpg
01819663612551567c8ff45b63b1dcbfac3580ff4f.jpg
01d1023414e556d562eed9cab8aabff9af9a97451b.jpg
01c3fc9b6dfa1e4796efb29f5efd9462fecf005ba0.jpg
01a115b45bde7ab4ba9dca408f8b8e7ad4df93e39e.jpg
0100ea7b398d53225b6a4190005de941ace99b279e.jpg

Once the 15 minutes is up, remove the bowl covering from over the dough. Next, flour the surface of the dough and use a bench scraper to turn it over on a lightly floured surface. Stretch the dough out a little into a round rectangle with your hands, keep flour on them to prevent sticking. Then shape similarly to before, this time stretching each side a little as you go. First, fold the bottom up, then the two sides, and finally the top down. This time you will want to stitch the dough together. To do this, pull the top two corners in and stick them down, then grab down from the corners about an inch and pull the dough in, keep stitching in the dough from the sides until you reach the bottom corners. For a more in-depth video on shaping and stitching, I recommend watching this video. Once the dough has been stitched, roll from the bottom up to create a nice tight round.

Cold Proof

011da7fcf9171694ac3a48d1773e091d3fdda88f10.jpg
0165f16f6edd7a4901403d8bb537a4dc2458f2db71.jpg
014ff0007661700463163998624ffd7e47d411f32a.jpg

Once the loaf has been shaped, immediately dust the surface with rice flour, so that none of the dough feels sticky. Next, carefully use the bench scraper to invert the loaf into the prepared bowl or banneton so the top is at the bottom of the bowl. Put the entire bowl into a sealed plastic bag, then place it into a fridge to proof overnight and up to two days.

Bake

0103ab7ec7220874b47ea342e399a87b8607e13c9c.jpg
01e9d1d7590b5b73cb6d99c3090285f48db02603e5.jpg
017d73f6a9096bafc69675b9b5ea1f260efa5086e8.jpg
01b00e27de7367e5762cd5c74512ab548f554010a0.jpg
01f257b0230337711bb54b6f18fc8a62c6e9f030b6.jpg

At least 45 minutes before you wish to bake, and about 3 hours before you wish to serve the bread, preheat your oven to 500°F with the dutch oven inside. After the oven has preheated for 45 minutes, remove your dough from the fridge. Carefully invert the dough onto a piece of parchment. Make sure there is plenty of parchment paper on either side to grasp onto. Use a razor blade or the sharpest kitchen knife you have to make a slash into the loaf, I recommend this slash be about 3/4 inch deep and be at a slight angle. You can also add more rice flour to the top of the loaf to get a whiter crust. Now carefully transfer the loaf into the dutch oven, using the parchment as handles, this may be easier to do if you remove the dutch oven and set it on the stovetop. Place the dutch oven in the center of the oven with the lid on, then turn the oven down to 450°F. Bake for 20 minutes with the lid on, then remove the lid and turn the oven to 425°F. Bake the loaf for another 20-30 minutes until the loaf is browned to your liking; how dark you want the loaf to be is a personal decision, but do not remove the load until it is at least light brown all around. Allow bread to cool on a wire rack.

Enjoy

bread1.jpg
01de377bb5485241776b1abc8f6aae53a0240e8f81.jpg

Allow your bread to cool fully before eating, this should take about an hour. I know it's tempting to cut the loaf as soon as you remove it, however, the loaf is still cooking on the inside using the heat it has absorbed. Once it is fully cooled you can slice and serve as you wish. This type of bread is great once toasted with butter and jam or a cream cheese spread, but I'll leave how you enjoy it completely up to you!

One other cool thing to mention is that if you want the loaf to look more violet than indigo, simply add a tablespoon of lemon juice when mixing the dough.