Blueberry Sourdough Bread Boule Made With Fresh Milled Flour
This blueberry sourdough bread boule made with fresh milled flour was the perfect balance of sweet and tangy! Slathered with a smear of butter or even some cream cheese, this loaf was giving me blueberry bagel vibes all over!
115gSourdough Starter1/2 cup (Fed HEAVY the night before, it should be active, healthy, and bubbly)
500gof Fresh Milled Hard White Wheat Flour*See notes for wheat variety variations
10gsea salt1&3/4tsp
425groom temperature filtered waterabout 1&3/4 cups
21gHoney1 TBSP
166gFresh Blueberries1 cup - you can use frozen, but they will bleed purple color throughout the dough more.
Dusting of rice flourYou can use wheat flour for this as well, if you don't need the full loaf to be fermented.
Instructions
Making The Dough
Firstly, pour 400g of room temperature filtered water into a medium bowl.
Then, add the Heavily fed active sourdough and stir it together.
Autolyse
Next, add 500 g of fresh milled hard white wheat flour, mix until no dry flour is left. Cover and let sit for 30- 45 minutes. This is called the Autolyse. This allows the fresh milled flour to start absorbing the liquids, and the bran to start to soften.
In a separate small bowl, add 25g room temperature filtered water (1/8cup) and 10g of sea salt (1&3/4 tsp), stir to start dissolving the salt. Set this aside until the next step.
Bulk Fermentation & Stretch & Folds
Then, after the autolyse, add the salt & water mixture, and the honey to the flour mixture. Then, mix it in with your hands. You should see that the dough already is softer and not so shaggy than it was before the autolyse. Cover, and let sit for 30-60 minutes. This is the beginning of the Bulk Ferment.
During this Bulk Ferment Period, Pull & fold dough in the bowl, turning the bowl a few times, Then cover again.
Repeat this Pull & Fold technique every 30-60 minutes until the dough rises about 20-30%. It should get bubbly, and stretchy over time. This phase should take about 4-6 hours.
After the Bulk Ferment Period, then take the dough to a clean flat work surface.
Add The Blueberries & Lamination
Gently flatten and stretch the dough into a flat rectangle sheet.
Sprinkle the blueberries evenly all over the flat sheet of dough, and gently press them into the dough without smashing them.
Then, fold 1/3 of the dough towards the middle, and then the other 1/3 of the dough towards the middle to overlap the first folded layer. This should cover all the blueberries with dough.
Then, roll the dough up. Next step it to preshape the loaf.
Pre-shape The Loaf
To pre-shape the loaf, use the cup & turn technique to form a round shape, try to use your hands to create surface tension as you shape. If the blueberries tear through, that's ok, just pinch the dough back together after shaping.
Bench Rest
Let the dough ball rest for 10-20 minutes. This is called the Bench Rest.
Repeat shaping 1-2 more times, until the dough ball forms good surface tension. You should notice the dough ball “remembers” better each time you shape it.
Baking The Loaf
During this time, preheat oven to 480*F with Dutch Oven or a High Heat Proof Baking Vessel With Lid inside. (If you don’t have one, never fear, check the notes for an alternative.)
Place dough on parchment paper, and coat dough ball with a little rice flour and score the loaf however you desire.
Place loaf in preheated Dutch oven with lid on.
Bake bread 35 minutes at the 480*F covered.
Then, decrease oven to 450*F, remove the lid, and continue baking 20-25 more minutes.
Check the temperature of the loaf, and bake until the internal temperature of the center of the loaf reaches. 210*F
Let the loaf cool completely before slicing into it. I let it rest overnight uncovered for best results (I know that is hard to do, but remember we didn't do an overnight ferment, so this bread deserves to rest! lol)
Notes
*Fed Heavy The Night Before- feed 50g of starter with 100g of water and 100g of freshly milled flour (preferably hard wheat for this feeding, because that is what you are going to need for the loaf tomorrow.)*You can sub hard red for hard white, and you can use 80% of a hard wheat variety, with 20% of something like Kamut, Spelt, Einkorn, or Rye *If you don’t have a Dutch Oven, the alternative method would be to use a heat save bowl, fill it with water, and preheat the oven with that water inside to create steam. Then, place loaf on parchment paper and on a baking sheet, and bake with the water in the oven for the first 20 minutes. Finish baking without the water (Be careful while removing, it will be very hot!)*To Store- To store this bread, keep covered at room temperature for 1-2 days. (However, covering the loaf will make the exterior of the loaf softer.) I like to slice into it the next morning after it has cooled. Then, enjoy the slices toasted and slathered with your desired topping. Then place a few extra slices in a bag for the next morning. For longer storage, I slice it and keep in a freezer safe bag. Then, I can just grab a slice out of the freezer whenever I want!