Cakes & Bakes: Seeded sourdough boule

Home-made sliced seeded sourdough boule

For this week’s Cakes & Bakes recipe we have a delicious, crusty, seeded sourdough boule (a fancy French word for a round, slightly domed loaf).

Sourdough starter in a clear glass bowl | H is for Home

My starter and, as a result, dough are getting quite lively in this warmer weather!

proofed boule in a cane banneton | H is for Home

The seeds add texture and and depth of flavour, with distinctive little hits as you crunch through individual seeds. You could even lightly toast them before adding them to the dough – something which I’ll try next time.

Cooked sourdough boule | H is for Home

It’s a very versatile loaf, suitable for accompanying all manner of meals and perfect for sandwiches. It makes for great toast too! We enjoyed ours liberally spread with a lovely soft goat’s cheese on day 1 – and then it was transformed into the aforementioned toast and served with poached eggs on day 2. Both fabulous!

A delicious, crusty, seeded sourdough boule

Click here to save the recipe to Pinterest

Seeded sourdough boule
Yields 1
Prep Time
23 hr
Cook Time
1 hr
Total Time
24 hr
Prep Time
23 hr
Cook Time
1 hr
Total Time
24 hr
Ingredients
  1. 350g/12⅓oz water at 27ºC/80ºF
  2. 108g/3¾oz fresh sourdough starter (100% hydration) that has been refreshed the night before and again in the morning
  3. 400g/14oz strong white bread flour
  4. 140g/5 strong wholemeal bread flour
  5. 150g/5oz lightly toasted mixed seeds (sesame, poppy, sunflower, pumpkin, flax, linseeds, pine nuts etc.)
  6. 6g/¼oz fine salt
  7. a little rice flour for dusting your bannetonHome-made seeded sourdough boule ingredients
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Instructions
  1. In a large mixing bowl, whisk the warm water and starter to combine
  2. Knead in the flour, cover with a reusable food cover / cling film and let the dough rest in a cool environment for 1½ hours
  3. Add the seeds and salt and mix until all the ingredients come together into a large ball
  4. Lift and fold your dough over, do a quarter turn of your bowl and repeat three more times. Repeat hourly 3 more times
  5. Shape your dough lightly and place it into a dusted banneton
  6. Cover again and refrigerate (overnight) for 8-12 hours
  7. Remove from the fridge and allow to warm and prove until the dough has risen by about 50%. This normally takes about 2 hours in a kitchen that is about 18-20ºC
  8. Preheat the oven to 220ºC/425ºF/Gas mark 7 for ½-1 hour (also preheat your La Cloche or baking stone if using)
  9. Gently remove the loaf from the banneton, slash the top of with a lame (grignette) and put it into the oven
  10. Bake for 40 minutes, turn the heat down to 190ºC/375ºF/Gas mark 5 and bake for another 10-15 minutes depending on how brown you like the crust
  11. Allow the loaf to cool completely (at least an hour) on a wire rack before slicing
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H is for Home Harbinger https://hisforhomeblog.com/

Cakes & Bakes: Seeded sourdough loaf

Slices of home-made seeded sourdough loaf | H is for Home

Since I revived my sourdough starter a fortnight ago, we’ve been enjoying pancakes (for brunch on Justin’s birthday), waffles and last week’s raisin bread. This week, I made a seeded sourdough loaf.

Sourdough autolyse, mixed seeds and ground pink Himylayan salt | H is for Home

To begin with, I used my go-to overnight sourdough recipe and simply added a selection of seeds. It’s a very good recipe for using up bits & pieces of packets of seeds you have in the cupboard. However, if you don’t use seeds that often, rather than buy a bag each of say sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds and linseeds, Morrisons (and all large supermarkets, probably) do little packets of ready mixed seeds.

Loaf proving in a banneton | H is for Home

Also, I changed the order of cooling and proving. Vanessa Kimbell recommends proving for a couple of hours and then putting it into the fridge. To begin with, I do the final folding at night and put the loaf in its banneton straight into the fridge. Then, in the morning, I bring it out to prove while the oven preheats – that way round works better for me!

Home-made seeded sourdough loaf | H is for Home

It made a delicious, crusty 1kg loaf. Sliced, it’s perfect with bowls of soup – or on its own with just a bit of butter. The good thing about home-made sourdough bread is that it can last over a week without going mouldy. After a number of days, as the loaf begins to go hard, it makes brilliant toast or bruschetta; the twice-cooked seeds impart an even nuttier taste.

If you want to try it out, click here to save the recipe to Pinterest for later

Home-made seeded sourdough loaf | H is for Home

Seeded sourdough loaf
Yields 1
Total Time
24 hr
Total Time
24 hr
Ingredients
  1. 350g water at 27ºC
  2. 108g fresh sourdough starter (100% hydration) that has been refreshed the night before and again in the morning
  3. 540g strong white bread flour
  4. 50g mixed seeds (anything like sesame, sunflower, pumpkin, flax, pine nuts or linseeds)
  5. 6g fine salt
  6. a little rice flour for dusting your bannetonHome-made seeded sourdough loaf ingredients
Add ingredients to shopping list
If you don’t have Buy Me a Pie! app installed you’ll see the list with ingredients right after downloading it
Instructions
  1. In a large mixing bowl, whisk the warm water and starter to combine
  2. Knead in the flour, cover with a reusable food cover / cling film and let the dough rest in a cool environment for 1½ hours
  3. Add the seeds and salt and mix until all the ingredients come together into a large ball
  4. Lift and fold your dough over, do a quarter turn of your bowl and repeat three more times. Repeat hourly 3 more times
  5. Shape your dough lightly and place it into a dusted banneton
  6. Cover again and refrigerate (overnight) for 8-12 hours
  7. Remove from the fridge and allow to warm and prove until the dough has risen by about 50%. This normally takes about 2 hours in a kitchen that is about 18-20ºC
  8. Preheat the oven to 220ºC for ½-1 hour (also preheat your La Cloche or baking stone if using)
  9. Gently remove the loaf from the banneton, slash the top of with a lame (grignette) and put it into the oven
  10. Bake for 40 minutes, turn the heat down to 190ºC and bake for another 10-15 minutes depending on how brown you like the crust
  11. Allow the loaf to cool completely (at least an hour) on a wire rack before slicing
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H is for Home Harbinger https://hisforhomeblog.com/

Cakes & Bakes: Raisin sourdough loaf

Slice of home-made raisin sourdough loaf | H is for Home

I’ve resurrected my starter after spending 3 weeks away from home – abroad in Trinidad. Justin requested a sourdough raisin loaf, but with no added spices, so that it would be more versatile with regards to teaming it with other food and dishes.

Saoking raisins in strong black tea | H is for Home

I like to pre-soak the dried fruit that I use in baked goods as it stops them drying out and burning in the oven. Depending on what you’re making, you can soak them in strong tea, alcohol or plain old water.

Covering raisin soudough loaf dough with food 'shower cap' | H is for Home Covering raisin soudough loaf dough with food 'shower cap' | H is for Home

On self same trip to Trinidad, the friend that I stayed with introduced me to some wonderfully useful kitchen devices – if you can call them that. They’re like shower caps for covering food… just brilliant! She bought them in a dollar store when she was visiting her sister in the USA. They come in 3 different sizes and the largest is the perfect circumference for fitting over the bowl of my vintage Kenwood mixer and 1-kilo-sized round banneton. They’re reusable and knock the socks of cling film and the plastic bags that I’ve been using. For those of you that are interested, I’ve since found them for sale in Lakeland.

Raisin sourdough loaf dough proofing in a banneton | H is for Home

I adapted a recipe by Vanessa Kimbell, baker, teacher, originator of my favourite 24-hour sourdough loaf recipe and the author of The Sourdough School: The Ground-breaking Guide to Making Gut-friendly Bread.

Raisin sourdough loaf on a breadboard with a wooden handled bread knife | H is for Home

Click here to save my raisin sourdough loaf recipe to Pinterest

Raisin sourdough loaf
Yields 1
Cook Time
1 hr 10 min
Cook Time
1 hr 10 min
Ingredients
  1. 100g/3½oz raisins, soaked in strong tea for at least an hour
  2. 215g/7½oz water
  3. 180g/6⅓oz sourdough starter (100% hydration)
  4. 90g/3oz wholemeal flour
  5. 305g/10¾oz strong white flour
  6. 10g/⅓oz fine salt
  7. 13g/½oz cold waterHome-made raisin sourdough loaf ingredients
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If you don’t have Buy Me a Pie! app installed you’ll see the list with ingredients right after downloading it
Late afternoon
    MIX
    1. In a large bowl whisk your water and starter and mix well. Add all the flour and mix until all the ingredients come together into a large ball
    2. Cover with a clean damp cloth and let the dough rest on the side in the kitchen for between 30 minutes and 2 hours – this is what bakers call the 'autolyse'
    FOLD
    1. Add the salt mixed with the water and dimple your fingers into the dough to allow the salty water and salt to distribute evenly throughout the dough. Leave for 10 minutes
    2. Next, lift and fold your dough over, do a quarter turn of your bowl and repeat three more times. Repeat 3 times at 30-minute intervals with a final 15-minute rest at the end
    SHAPE
    1. Shape the dough lightly into a ball then place into a round banneton dusted with flour (If you don’t have a banneton, use a clean tea towel dusted with flour inside a colander). Dust the top with flour, then cover with a damp tea-towel
    PROVE
    1. Transfer the dough in its covered banneton to the fridge and leave to prove there overnight for 8-12 hours
    Following morning
    1. Take the banneton out of the fridge to allow your dough to warm up and finish proving (it should get to 50% bigger than when it went into the fridge)
    BAKE
    1. Preheat the oven to 220°C/450ºF/Gas mark 8 for at least 30 minutes before you're ready to bake. Place your cloche, Dutch oven or baking stone in the oven and a large pan of boiling water underneath. The hydration helps form a beautiful crust
    2. Once the oven is up to full heat, carefully remove the cloche/Dutch oven/baking stone from the oven, taking care not to burn yourself. Dust with a fine layer of semolina or rice flour, which stops the bread sticking, then put your dough onto the baking stone and slash the top with your blade. This decides where the bread will tear as it rises. Bake for an hour
    3. Turn the heat down to 180°C/350ºF/Gas mark 4 (and remove the lid if you're using a cloche or Dutch oven) and bake for another 10-15 minutes. You need to choose just how dark you like your crust but I suggest that you bake until it's a dark brown - it tastes much better
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    Adapted from Vanessa Kimbell's basic sourdough recipe
    Adapted from Vanessa Kimbell's basic sourdough recipe
    H is for Home Harbinger https://hisforhomeblog.com/

    A round-up of our top 5 bread recipes

    Mosaic of the most popular H is for Home bread recipes

    Some time ago, we posted our top 5 cake recipe round up. This time, it’s the top 5 bread recipes on our blog – chosen by the number of visits they get on our website as well as the number of (re)pins they received on Pinterest.

    Click on each image to save it to Pinterest yourself!

    1. Sourdough cheese scones

    Warm cheese scones straight from the oven take a lot of beating in the taste stakes; cut them in half and smother them with butter! Cured meats, pate, olives or additional slices of cheese are also delicious. Perfect for afternoon tea, buffets or party snacks.

    Sourdough cheese scones recipe | H is for Home

    2. Baguettes made with a poolish

    Baguettes are the second most versatile type of bread – the sandwich loaf is probably king! Slice one lengthways and fill with cheese, cold meat or salad. Cut it into rounds, spread with garlic butter, piece it back together, wrap it in foil and bake – tasty garlic bread!

    Baguettes made with a poolish using a recipe from Emmanuel Hadjiandreou's

    3. Hokkaido milk bread

    This Japanese bread is one of the best loaves for lovers of the humble bacon sarnie. Soft and slightly sweet, it absorbs the oil from the bacon, taking on its flavour. That sweet/salty thing sometimes works a treat! Also perfect for cute, mini burgers and pulled pork sandwiches that are ideal for barbecues and get-togethers.

    Hokkaido milk bread recipe | H is for Home

    4. Beetroot loaf

    The bright pink colour of this loaf is the first thing you notice. It’s great served buttered, alongside a chunky vegetable soup. Or perhaps toasted with a delicious medley of sautéed mushrooms.

    Home-made beetroot loaf | H is for Home

    5. Butter-dipped biscuits

    These are biscuits in the USA sense of the word. As the name suggests, it’s impregnated with delicious, melted butter. They’re great served on the side of breakfast dishes, stews, casseroles and the like.

    Home-made butter-dipped biscuits recipe | H is for Home