George, my sourdough starter (thanks for naming him, ChannonD --and thanks everyone for your great suggestions), has been bubbling away for a few weeks now and I've been using him to make waffles, pancakes, and sandwich breads with different combinations of flours: all white, part whole-wheat, and all whole-wheat. You already have my recipe for Sourdough Sandwich Bread, and today, I want to share with you a recipe for my All Whole Wheat Sourdough Sandwich bread with no added yeast.
This is a super simple bread, and it requires just a few main ingredients: Flour, sourdough starter, and some sugar or molasses. I also add a couple of teaspoons of apple cider vinegar into the mix to help with the rise. Whole wheat flour is low in gluten, the substance that helps create structure in breads and helps them rise, and a little acid can actually help with gluten formation. You can substitute the vinegar with lemon juice.
I love this bread: it has a nuttier, warmer flavor than the all-white bread, which is excellent too, and although it doesn't rise as high, it has, as you can see, a nice, open crumb -- not so open that your peanut butter or jelly would slip through, but enough to make the bread light and airy and not dense at all, as wholegrain sandwich breads sometimes tend to be. Jay, who's missing a few teeth, loves this bread with the crust trimmed away. It makes great toast too!
I haven't shared my recipe for sourdough starter because I followed the one over on the King Arthur blog, except, as I told you in my last sourdough bread post, my sourdough is more hydrated-- it uses more water. If you want me to share the recipe for my starter, give me a holler and I will do so.
There is some waiting involved in the recipe, and you need to be patient, in order to help the gluten form. There are three rise times, including an overnight wait time while the flour and sourdough soak together. Trust me, it's all necessary to make sure you get the best bread possible.
I am going to keep this post short because I have something to talk about after the recipe. Stay tuned if you're interested, and weigh in if you want to. I would love to hear what you think.
All Whole Wheat Sourdough Sandwich Bread
Ingredients
- 2 cups sourdough starter
- 2 cups water (I've been using distilled water for my breads because the chlorine can inhibit yeast and I find it does make a difference. But if you'd rather use tap water, that's okay too)
- 4-5 cups whole wheat flour
- 1 tablespoon sugar or molasses
- 2 teaspoon salt
- 2 teaspoon apple cider vinegar
Instructions
- Place the sourdough starter in a bowl along with the water, sugar, and 2 cups of whole wheat flour. Mix well and let it stand overnight or about eight hours.
- Beat the dough the next morning with the kneading attachment of a stand mixer or with a ladle, then add salt, vinegar, and 1 more cup of flour. Continue to add the flour and mix, ¼ cup at a time, until you get a dough that feels sticky but doesn't really stick to the sides of the bowl.
- Continue kneading on a flat surface, by hand or in the stand mixer, for another five minutes. If the dough sticks to the surface as you knead, add a little flour, no more than a tablespoon at a time. You want a supple, smooth ball of dough that's not too firm.
- Coat a large bowl with oil and place the ball of dough in it, turning over once to coat the top with oil.
- Cover with cling wrap or with a tight lid and let it stand in a warm place for two hours or until doubled.
- Lightly grease two loaf pans with an oil spray or oil, and sprinkle some cornmeal or cream of wheat on the sides and the bottom.
- Punch the dough down and divide into two. Shape each half into a loaf by rolling it out into a rectangle about six inches wide and nine inches long, and then rolling it into a log. Tuck the sides down and pinch any seams together. Place the loaf, seam side down, into a prepared loaf pan. Repeat for the second loaf.
- Cover the loaves with a towel or -- better still -- with shower caps. This is a trick I learned from the King Arthur blog, Flourish, and it works really well because it allows the loaf to expand without weighing down the top, the way a kitchen towel would.
- Place the loaves in a warm place and let them rise two hours or until they dome slightly over the top. Whole wheat loaves will not dome or rise as much as white or part-whole-wheat breads will, so don't wait too long to bake in the hope that your loaf will rise further. After two hours, the bread is likely to lose its structure.
- About half hour before baking, preheat the oven to 425 degrees Fahrenheit.
- When you're ready to bake the loaves, place them on the center rack and bake 40 minutes.
- Remove the loaves from the oven and, carefully, turn them out onto a rack. Let them stand, right side up, until they are thoroughly cool. As attractive as the smell of freshly baked bread is, resist the temptation to cut a slice off before the bread has thoroughly cooled because you can upset the moisture balance in the loaf.
- I like brushing or spraying the top with a little oil for an attractive look as soon as it comes out of the oven. But no need to do this if you'd rather not.
- Slice and eat!
**
Kathy
I'm just wondering what the consistency of the dough should be when you form it into loaves - should it still be a fairly wet dough or should I be adding flour?
Susan Hartigan
Hi there! I am a newbie making this recipe for the first time. I mixed it all up and it's doing the two hour rise in my warm kitchen. Problem is itsbeen 1.5 hours and it's NOT rising at all. Can you suggest anything? Thanks for your help!
Alisha
Hiee Vaishaali
I am just on step one currently
I have a general doubt I am completely new like 10 days old in sourdough baking
I wanted to understand if you say 2 cups sourdough starter
Do you mean it must be fed and then counted in 2 cups ?
Is it possible to make a smaller version as I am new
I have a nicely active starter , I am tired of searching for an article that can teach on how to maintain and use sourdough after activation
Lastly
The mother starter after feed blooms quickly, rises well but falls rapidly also is it normal ?
Shanrhi
Hi,
Just made the starter.
Would love to bake a whole wheat bread
Can you please tell me the purpose of using apple cider vinegar in this recipe as I need a substitute.
Also, since my OTG is small, can I half the recipe?
Thanks in advance
Jay
According to the article:
I also add a couple of teaspoons of apple cider vinegar into the mix to help with the rise. Whole wheat flour is low in gluten, the substance that helps create structure in breads and helps them rise, and a little acid can actually help with gluten formation. You can substitute the vinegar with lemon juice.
Vaishali
That's a great tip.
Courtney Bristow
Have you ever done this as one larger round loaf (more rustic boule style) vs. 2 sandwich loafs? Any recommendations if I wanted to try that instead, or does it need the shape of the loaf pan?
Anna Kristen Gadoury
I am running a bit behind schedule today. I completed the first step this morning and let it ride for 11 hours. Could I possibly do the second rise in the fridge and then the third in the morning and had the loaves baked and ready for tomorrow's lunch?
Satya
I made this and the bread came out just perfect ! I made the white bread as well, it was good too.Really wonderful recipe. As for the Vegan part, I think you are really balanced in your views. Thank you for putting such recipes together !
Yvonne
Hello, are you able to provide the conversion to metric like you have in the regular sandwich bread post? Thank you!
Rose
Do I leave the first mix of starter, sugar, water and flour on my counter or in the fridge overnight?
Vaishali
On the counter. If it was in the fridge I'd specify that.
Rose
Thank you.:)
Baileigh
Such a good recipe for a beginner sourdough baker like me! Thanks a lot.
Jb
I also found your recipe during the pandemic. Thank you for putting out a whole wheat version!
But I also have to say, I just read through your blog post following the recipe, and I agree whole-heartedly. People will never want to listen to vegans if there is a lack of compassion towards other people.
I have tried a couple of times to make the jump from vegetarian (for 24 years now) to vegan, but have not succeeded. I think it is probably because I make/cook for 5 other adults in my household, and it’s difficult to mesh everyone’s tastes and needs together. I look forward to perusing your site a bit more, in hopes that I’ll find some suggestions to help with my challenging situation. (Three of the people in the house are vegetarian, the other three are not. I won’t cook meat for the meat-eaters...they are on their own with that).
Stephanie G
Thank you for publishing this! During the COVID-19 stay-at home order, it has become impossible to find baker's yeast or unbleached all purpose flour in the grocery stores. After 6 weeks of the stay-at-home order, even baking powder and baking soda have been hard to come by.
I used up my 10 lb stash of all purpose flour getting the sourdough starter established. It took 3 weeks for it to become strong enough to bake bread. Fortunately, the Indian grocery stores have atta flour, which I used in recipes for the sourdough discard, and saved the all purpose flour for feeding the starter.
Now that my stash of all purpose flour is used up, I've been feeding the established starter with atta flour, and it seems to be doing ok.
Again, thank you for the information, allowing me to develop the skills needed to adapt in this time of shortages.
Vaishali
Great to hear, happy it's working.
Angie
What size of loaf pan do you use? I have a 9 1/4" x 5 1/4" pan and a 8" x 4" pan. Which would be better?
Vaishali
A standard loaf pan is about 8 1/2 by 4 1/2. I would prob go with the 8 by 4 for a nicely domed bread. The bread in the larger pan could come out flatter.
Sonika Choudhury
Hi
This recipe is great!
I stay in India and presently I do not have access to corn meal or Cream of Wheat. Can you suggest a substitute?
Thanks
Vaishali
Anything like coarsely powdered rice or wheat will work!
Rachel
If you have parchment paper, it works really great to line pans with, and can be reused many times too.
Eva
My first and second rise went well but once in bread pan, it didn’t rise at all.. even after 2 hours .. ended up with a very dense bread ?
Any clue what could have gone wrong
Vaishali
Depending on the warmth in your kitchen, it could have needed more time. Sourdough breads usually need longer rise times than regular yeast breads do, and also depends on how strong your sourdough starter was to begin with.
Elena
Hi!
Can you please give me an estimate of how much 2cups of starter in grams?
Thanks!