Hello, welcome. Thank you so much for being here!
This sourdough sandwich loaf is made entirely with freshly milled flour. It’s flexible – yet sturdy – and so, so good for you. Did I mention this dough only has 4 ingredients? And this process is less involved for those with time sensitive schedules!
This dough comes together in a stand mixer, and then we set it and forget it for the first rise (or bulk ferment). After a little more work to portion out the dough, it can be baked 2 hours later, or left in the fridge to ferment overnight.
Throughout this post I’m expecting you to have some familiarity with the sourdough bread making process. While this isn’t a complete, beginner sourdough bread making post, it is an informative post that will help you start incorporating freshly milled flour into your sourdough bread making process.
Tools you may need
Stand mixer
Grain mill
Kitchen scale
Large mixing bowl
Loaf pans
Ingredients
Sourdough starter
Water
Hard wheat berries
Salt
Terms
Sourdough starter: homemade yeast made with flour and water that makes baked goods rise.
Stretch and fold: with wet hands, take one edge of the dough – making sure you’re grabbing from the bottom – and stretch the dough upwards until it’s pulled as thin as it can go before tearing. Then fold that section over the rest of the dough. Rotate the bowl and continue these stretch and folds until you have a nice cohesive shape for the rising process.
Bulk ferment: this takes place after mixing the dough and is the first rise of the dough for it to double in size.
Laminate: gently thin out the dough with damp fingertips while forming it into a slight rectangle shape – similar to making cinnamon rolls.
Second ferment: this takes place after shaping the dough, further fermenting the dough to make it more digestible.
Soft Sourdough Sandwich Bread Made Entirely with Freshly Milled Flour
Yield: 2 loaves
Prep time: 1 hour, divided
Bulk ferment: 2-4 hours, or until double in size
Second ferment: 2-24 hours
Bake time: 25-30 minutes
Measurements
750 g water
200 g sourdough starter
850 g hard wheat berries, freshly milled
20 g salt
Directions
Dough
- Feed your sourdough starter 100 g of freshly milled flour and 150 g filtered water. Set aside until doubled in size. (Placing this in a warm place will hasten rising time.)
- Once your starter has doubled in size add water, starter, salt and freshly milled flour to your stand mixer bowl.
- Mix on low (speed 2) until no dry flour remains and you have a shaggy dough. Cover and let sit for 20-30 minutes.
- Knead in your stand mixer on medium (speed 4) for 8-10 minutes, or until a smooth ball forms that pulls away from the sides of the bowl.
- Oil a large mixing bowl and transfer dough from your stand mixer into that prepped bowl.
- To create a cohesive shape for our bulk ferment, perform one set of stretch-and-folds, then cover and let the dough rise until double size. (Placing this in a warm place will hasten rising time.)
- Grease your loaf pans with butter.
- Once the dough has risen, divide it in half. Working with one half, laminate the dough and create tension over the surface of the oblong dough by using the countertop as you pull the dough toward yourself.
- Place the log of dough seam down in the prepared loaf pan. For a shorter second ferment, leave the pan on the counter, but cover it with a tea towel (ferment it no more than 2 hours.) For a longer second ferment, insert that dish into a grocery sack to keep in moisture. Then place it into the fridge up to 24 hours (we typical ferment ours overnight).
- Repeat with the second half of the dough.
Baking
- Preheat the oven to 400 F. (If you’ve fermented your loaf pan in the fridge, allow it to come to room temperature before baking it.)
- Bake you sandwich loaf for 25-30 minutes, or until the internal temperature is 160 F.
- If your schedule allows it, let the loaf cool out of the pan for at least 2 hours.
Plan of Action
First Morning: Feed your sourdough starter. (See Dough step 1.)
Afternoon: Mix dough and allow to rise for bulk ferment. (See Dough steps 2-6)
Evening: Shape the dough and prepare for second ferment. (See Dough steps 7-8).
Bake your sandwich loaf if using a short second ferment stage.
Second Morning: If using a longer second ferment, bake your sourdough sandwich bread!
If you appreciate a step-by-step visual guide, here is a video from my youtube channel that takes you through this sourdough sandwich bread making process.