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Comments on How do I get darker sourdough without burning it?

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How do I get darker sourdough without burning it?

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I made my first sourdough bread recently. The friend who gave me the starter also gave me a basic recipe attributed to Ed Wood, which I followed (1 cup fed starter, 3.5 cups all-purpose flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 cup water). The dough behaved as I expected through the two rises. I baked it on a cookie sheet lined with parchment paper at 425 F for 60 minutes. This was in my oven's standard heating mode (called "bake" on the panel), not heat from above ("broil") nor convection (fan). The oven is only a couple years old and as far as I know is working properly and calibrated correctly.

The sourdough loaves I've seen have a nice deep golden-brown crust. Mine... doesn't. I considered whether I should have baked it longer, but the crust was already pretty hard and I was worried about making a brick. But I've never made sourdough before, so that was a guess. While the crust is hard, the inside is soft and has the texture I expected.

What do I need to do to get the richer crust color I expected? Is this only achievable with a dutch oven (which I don't have)? Should I use a loaf pan instead of a sheet? Should I have made a few smaller scores instead of one long one?

Here's a picture of my results:

light-colored loaf

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General comments (2 comments)
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Did you use a wash?

A water wash (a few tablespoons of water applied to the top about halfway through) can give you a crispy crust.

An egg wash (whisk an egg in a bowl with a small splash of water) applied when the loaves go in can give you a darker, glossier crust.

Finally, make sure the oven is completely preheated before the bread goes in.

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General comments (1 comment)
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Monica Cellio‭ wrote almost 4 years ago

I did not; thank you for these tips! (The oven was completely preheated.)