In Search of the Perfect Loaf: A Home Baker's Odyssey (10 page)

BOOK: In Search of the Perfect Loaf: A Home Baker's Odyssey
9.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

 • • • 

 

T
his multitude of methods shouldn’t be too surprising, considering how many foods are actually fermented—from soy sauce to sauerkraut. When someone asks me what’s the best way to make a sourdough starter, I think of Pliny the Elder, who wrote about various methods in his encyclopedic
Natural History
in the first century
A
.
D
. What he recorded aren’t “recipes” but descriptions of a multitude of ways to ferment grains common in the baking rooms of Rome at the dawn of recorded history. When it comes to sourdough, Pliny shows we have nothing on the Romans.

Pliny, for example, said that
millet made the best sourdough
when mixed with the three-day-old juice of freshly crushed grapes—known as “grape must.” This doesn’t seem too far off from Silverton’s approach, though she used wheat instead of millet. Millet is also promising since it has a rich history of fermentation:
millet wine has been found
in Chinese tombs of the Xia and Shang dynasties, predating Pliny by at least a millennium. Pliny also says to soak wheat bran with white wine must for three days, then dry it in the sun and shape it into small cakes. To use it as a leavening agent, soak the cakes in water, heat the mixture with spelt flour, then knead them into the dough. “It is generally thought that this is the best method of making bread,” he says. He also called for grapes “at the time of vintage,” a telling piece of advice, as we shall see.

He describes yet another leaven made with barley and water, formed into cakes and then baked “till they turn reddish brown. When this is done, the cakes are shut close in vessels, until they turn quite sour.” To use them as a leavening agent, they are steeped in water. But the most common method, he tells us, was to boil flour, water, and salt until it formed a porridge; it was then left to sit until it turned into sourdough. As a final aside, he notes that bakers “make use of a little of the dough that has been kept from the day before”—a common method still used today and known as
pâte fermentée
, or fermented dough. Bakers save a bit of dough for the next day’s mix to enhance the flavor of the bread.

When I discussed these methods with Andrew Ross, a cereal scientist and avid baker at Oregon State University, he mentioned boiling was advantageous because it breaks open the starch in the grain, freeing sugars for yeast and bacteria to feast upon. Pliny’s instructions “should make a particularly active starter,” he said.

But Pliny’s description raises another question, too, about the presence of grapes in so many of these recipes. As it turns out,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
, the ubiquitous species of yeast used in baking, brewing, and wine making, is naturally found on grapes. But not just any grapes. Pristine grapes tend to have very little wild yeast on them, yet on about a quarter of grapes with ruptured skins the yeast shows up.
One recently investigated vector
for this yeast was wasps, especially queens, which harbor yeast in their intestines during the dormant winter and then spread them to their progeny the following year. The wasps peck at the ripe fruit in the summer, transferring yeast to the grapes when they pierce the fruit’s skin. One study, which investigated wasps in Tuscany, found that their intestinal yeast varied seasonally, but
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
was most prevalent right at the time of the grape harvest. This gives a new meaning to seasonality, for not only was the fruit ripe for wine making, but so, too, were the populations of wasp gut yeast that could infect the grapes. The yeast found in the wasps’ innards also matched the strains found in Tuscan wine and in baker’s yeast. So, the wasps, grapes, bread, and wine of Tuscany were part of a singular yeast ecology that varied seasonally. No wonder Pliny specified “grapes at the time of harvest.” The key, though, is to seek out
ripe grapes with punctured
or split skins, because each fruit can add between 10 million and 100 million organisms to a starter.

 • • • 

 

A
t its most basic level, what baking does—what all grain fermentation does—is to rely on single-cell organisms to hack the seed’s built-in process of germination and growth. By doing so, the seed is transformed and becomes food for us, rather than a plant.

Here’s how it works. The seed has three components: the starchy endosperm; the oil- and vitamin-rich germ, which is where the embryo of the plant springs to life; and the nutritious and fibrous bran coating, which protects the seed. When the kernel becomes wet, hormones awaken and trigger the process of growth. Amylase enzymes located in the outermost layer of the endosperm,
called the aleurone
, come alive. They flow through the endosperm and begin to break down starch, a polysaccharide, made of long chains of sugar molecules, into shorter chains that can feed the plant embryo. Protease enzymes do the same thing to proteins, creating smaller chains of amino acids, so they, too, can feed the germinating plant. In this way, the seed offers a complete life-giving package. It contains its own protective casing (the bran), a backpack of high-energy food (the endosperm), an enzyme-rich food processing facility (the aleurone), and the plant embryo which springs to life (the germ). All this processing facility needs to get going is water and warmth. If the seed has all of these things, you get a wheat plant.

Bread baking subverts, or hijacks, this entire life process. Because when bakers make dough, they trigger the same chain of events: water activates amylase enzymes in the flour, which then flow through the viscous substance to reach the starch, breaking it into smaller chains of sugars. These sugars then feed the yeast or sourdough that the baker also adds to the mix. Malted barley, which is rich in amylase, helps this process along, which is why flours are often spiked with a judicious amount of the substance.
Saliva, which contains ptyalin
, an amylase enzyme, does the same thing, which is why native peoples from Asia to Africa to the Americas masticated grains and spit them into a bowl to spur fermentation.These days, however, malted barley is a sufficient source of amylase, so there’s no need to chew and spit unless you’re so inclined.

With sugar levels rising in the dough, yeast release their own suite of enzymes to help convert the starch to sugar. The yeast initially consume oxygen in the dough, which is why a dough whipped up in a high-speed mixer will ferment so quickly. After taking in oxygen, the yeast cells will exhale carbon dioxide gas and sweat out water in a process of aerobic respiration, not unlike what you do when you go for a jog. But when the oxygen runs out, as it soon does, the yeast do not die as you would on your oxygen-deprived run. Instead,
the yeast begin a process
of anaerobic fermentation, continuing to process sugar without the fuel of oxygen. This fermentation process causes the yeast to burp carbon dioxide gas and emit ethanol alcohol, which not only allows the dough to rise but creates unique flavor compounds in the bread. Ethanol is also toxic to many species of bacteria that might compete with the yeast for these sugars.

Saccharomyces cerevisiae
—the same yeast species found in the guts of Tuscan wasps—is particularly adept at this sugar-eating-carbon-dioxide-belching activity, which is why it has been employed as a fermenting agent for so long. Chinese wine making dates back more than nine thousand years; evidence of fermented beverages appears in Iran about six thousand years ago. Over many millennia, this yeast species was selected by humans and domesticated for fermentation. Recently,
651 variants
of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
were genetically mapped, revealing their relationship on a vast family tree (the parentage of French champagne yeast wasn’t too distant from Sicilian bread yeast). Aside from these domesticated strains,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
also live in the wild, found in everything from rotting grapes to the bark of oak trees.
Yeasts—a fungi—are actually ubiquitous
, with more than 1,500 species identified thus far with more genetic diversity than all the vertebrate species in the world.
At least 23 yeast species
have been found in various sourdough starters.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
is the most common, though usually one or two others, such as
Candida humilis
, take up residence as well.

The reliance on these yeasts to ferment foods dates back to prehistoric—even to prehuman—times, since animals ranging from birds to elephants have been spotted eating fermented fruit and then getting drunk. Hence, the “drunken monkey hypothesis,” which posits that we got our taste for alcohol from ancestral chimps who have been observed imbibing the fermented-fruit equivalent of two bottles of wine in twenty minutes and then staggering around. With this deep biological bias for drink, it’s a short jump from chimps and rotten fruit to wine making, and from there to beer, which has the advantage of using a dried store of grains rather than ripe seasonal fruit. A long-lasting stash of dried barley berries meant our ancestors living in the Middle East could make an alcoholic beverage any time of the year, not just when grapes were ripe. Beer as opposed to wine, though, has a number of disadvantages: grains, specifically barley, must be sprouted and malted, or at least masticated and spit to stimulate enzymes that will turn carbohydrates into simple sugars. And that’s much harder than picking ripe fruit, dropping it in an earthen vessel, mashing it with honey (which also contains wild yeast), and waiting, which is why many archeologists think that wine came first.

But if wine came before
beer, the anthropologist Sol Katz, professor emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania, told me he thought beer came before bread. “A sprouted grain is easy to discover,” Katz told me. “The grains get wet, they sprout, you eat them, and they taste sweet. The moment you detect sweetness, you connect it with the fermentation of fruit.” Making the leap to beer would probably have been easier than taking the additional steps of grinding the grain, fermenting it, and then cooking it over fire, in a form of bread. Plus the grain in question was barley, which was among the earliest wild cereals gathered at the dawn of agriculture. Although much of the evidence has been lost to time, archeologists have found chemical traces of barley beer in a jug from a site in western Iran dating from six thousand years ago. Another religious site in southwestern Turkey where wild grain was consumed might push the beer-making date back to more than eleven thousand years ago. But while the Middle East is often thought of as the birthplace of viniculture, it wasn’t likely the first.
Rice and honey mead
, along with wild grapes and hawthorn fruit, were fermented in China around nine thousand years ago in the Yellow River valley.

Bread made with a beer starter and “spent grains” from the beer-making process

Beer versus bread does become something of a chicken-and-egg problem, but whatever the progression, fermentation was one of the oldest food-processing technologies. As the archeologist Patrick McGovern tells us in
Uncorking the Past
,
yeast was employed for making wine since before the dawn of agriculture. Beer and bread probably weren’t too far behind.

With sourdough, though, the story gets more complex because yeast don’t work alone but rather in tandem with lactic acid bacteria (
Lactobacilli
), a family of organisms that can survive and even thrive in the alcohol-rich and highly acidic environment that the yeast produces. These bacteria create a range of sharp and mild acids that influence the taste of the loaf, the texture of the interior crumb, the appearance of the crust, and the loaf’s longevity, since they delay staling. In a marvelous relationship, the yeast and bacteria work together, for the yeast converts starch into the type of sugars that the bacteria can digest. The bacteria also expel carbon dioxide gas, helping the loaf to rise.
Debra Wink, a home baker
in Pittsburgh with a background in microbiology, explained to me that these organisms don’t appear all of a sudden. The starter’s ecology evolves, with one set of organisms appearing only to be supplanted by another as the culture matures and acidifies. To create an acidic niche for the most beneficial organisms in a sourdough starter, she uses pineapple juice to help the process along, though any citrus or even crushed vitamin C will lower the pH enough to achieve the effect. But, as with grapes, I’ve found this isn’t absolutely necessary.

BOOK: In Search of the Perfect Loaf: A Home Baker's Odyssey
9.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Butcher's Son by Dorien Grey
Pesadilla antes de Navidad by Daphne Skinner
Walkers (Book 2): The Rescue by Davis-Lindsey, Zelda
Atkins and Paleo Challenge Box Set (10 in 1): Over 400 Atkins and Paleo Recipes With Pressure, Slow Cooker and Cast Iron for Busy People (Atkins Diet & Paleo Recipes) by Grace Cooper, Eva Mehler, Sarah Benson, Vicki Day, Andrea Libman, Aimee Long, Emma Melton, Paula Hess, Monique Lopez, Ingrid Watson
The Yellow Snake by Wallace, Edgar
La última batalla by C.S. Lewis
Grantville Gazette, Volume 40 by edited by Paula Goodlett, Paula Goodlett
Gojiro by Mark Jacobson