Sourdough Journey #16: Sourdough bread #3: win or fail?

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Is the 3rd time  a charm?



This past week has been so exciting as I’ve  been making sourdough bread using the Elaine Boddy method from the book, The Sourdough Whisperer.

One loaf - fantastic
Two loaves - best bread I have ever made
Three loaves .. is three loaves the charm or did I get cocky and end up with a fail?


The Bread-Making

Why did I think I had messed up somehow? 

During the four stretch and fold interactions with the dough, it was really wet and never really moved into that smooth ball texture.

I remember, with the first two loaves, being intrigued to see and feel the change in texture, as it turned into a smooth ball of dough. 

Even when I put the dough into the banneton last night, it was very gooey and I never got that “ball” of dough in my hand. 

Did I not work it enough?
Was my sourdough starter not ready?
Did I use too much starter?
Did I measure the flour and water incorrectly?
Was it too hot or cold in the kitchen?
Did I not work the dough enough?
Did I work it too much?

I had so many questions and, yet I kept going. 

This was a learning opportunity. When I cut that bread open, I was going to learn something new about bread-making. I was probably going to have to reach out to Elaine Boddy, to discover what that was, but a lesson was definitely unfolding, in a gooey, blobby, mess. 

The Dough

For the records, I used the mini-loaf recipe in Elaine’s book, with the adaptation of homemade garlic-infused salt and the addition of a handful of freeze-dried kale flakes. 

This was the same additions that I had done in my second loaf, “the best bread I have ever made” version. 

The Outcome



Delicious. 
The texture is very spongy and, while some may not like that (and I don’t know why), I love it !!

Third time was definitely a charm, even if it didn’t go as smoothly as expected. 

The lessons

  • Be patient
  • Trust the process
  • Go with the flow
  • Different isn’t necessarily a fail 
  • Let the yeast do its thing in its own time
  • And if it hadn’t turned out delicious, find the “why” and learn from it, for next time 
  • Take photos - even if you think it is the same as before. You never know. 
- Debbie
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