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Merge pull request #292 from hendricius/wheat-chapter
Wheat chapter small fixes
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@@ -1,9 +1,11 @@
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\begin{tabular}{@{}crr@{}}
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\begin{tabular}{@{}c
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S[table-format=2.0]
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S[table-format=2.1]@{}}
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\toprule
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&\multicolumn{2}{c}{\textbf{Amount (\%) of a starter}}\\
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&\multicolumn{2}{c}{\textbf{Amount (\%) for a starter}}\\
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\cmidrule(rl){2-3}
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\thead{°C / °F} & \thead{Recently fed} & \thead{Starving}\\ \midrule
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30 / 86 & 5 & 2.5 \\
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25 / 77 & 10 & 5 \\
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20 / 68 & 15 & 10 \\ \bottomrule
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\textbf{°C / °F} & \textbf{Recently fed} & \textbf{Starving}\\ \midrule
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30 / 86 & 5 & 2.5 \\
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25 / 77 & 10 & 5 \\
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20 / 68 & 15 & 10 \\ \bottomrule
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\end{tabular}
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@@ -18,14 +18,14 @@ making this type of bread requires a lot more effort, patience,
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and technique than other types of bread. You have to perfectly
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balance the fermentation process. You cannot ferment for too
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short and also not for too long. The techniques you need to
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learn to require a bit more skill. It took me several attempts
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learn also require a bit more skill. It took me several attempts
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to get this right. One of the challenges I~faced was that
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I~had the wrong flour. I~didn't properly know how to use my oven.
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When should I~stop the fermentation? There is a lot of information
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out there. I~dug through most of it and have tried almost everything.
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In many cases the information was wrong; in other cases, I~found another
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valuable puzzle piece. Aggregating all this
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information was one of my main motivations to start The Bread Code.
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information was one of my main motivations to start \texttt{The Bread Code}.
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My key learning was that there is no recipe that
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you can blindly follow. You will always have to adapt the recipe
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to your locally available tools and environment.
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@@ -209,7 +209,8 @@ Find below an example recipe for 1 loaf including baker's math calculation:
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\begin{itemize}
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\item \qty{400}{\gram} of bread flour
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\item \qty{100}{\gram} of whole-wheat flour
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\item \textbf{\qty{500}{\gram} of flour in total}
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% Manual unit so we can use emphasis
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\item \emph{500~g of flour in total}
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\item \qtyrange{300}{450}{\gram} of room temperature water (\qty{60}{\percent} up to \qty{90}{\percent}). More on
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this topic in the next chapter.
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\item \qty{50}{\gram} of stiff sourdough starter (\qty{10}{\percent})
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@@ -223,7 +224,8 @@ recipe would look like this:
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\begin{itemize}
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\item \qty{1800}{\gram} of bread flour
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\item \qty{200}{\gram} of whole-wheat flour
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\item \textbf{\qty{2000}{\gram} of flour, equaling 4 loaves}
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% Manual unit so we can use emphasis again
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\item \emph{2000 g of flour}, equaling 4 loaves
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\item \qty{1200}{\gram} up to \qty{1800}{\gram} of room temperature water (60 to \qty{90}{\percent})
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\item \qty{200}{\gram} of stiff sourdough starter (\qty{10}{\percent})
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\item \qty{40}{\gram} of salt (\qty{2}{\percent})
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@@ -231,7 +233,7 @@ recipe would look like this:
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This is the beauty of baker's math. Simply recalculate the percentages, and you
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are good to go. If you are unsure about how this works, please check out the
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full Chapter~\ref{section:bakers-math} which looks at the topic in detail.
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full Section~\ref{section:bakers-math} which looks at the topic in detail.
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\section{Hydration}
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@@ -390,8 +392,8 @@ difficulty.
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\section{How much starter?}
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Most bakers use around \qty{20}{\percent} sourdough starter based on the
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flour weight. I~recommend going much lower,
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to around 5 to \qty{10}{\percent}.
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flour weight. I~recommend going much lower, to around
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\qtyrange{5}{10}{\percent}.
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By adjusting the amount of pre-ferment you can influence the time your dough
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requires in the bulk fermentation stage. The more starter you use, the faster
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@@ -787,7 +789,7 @@ this is not an option for an inexperienced baker. As
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you make more and more dough, you will be able to judge
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the dough's state by touching it.
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My go-to method for beginners is to use an \textbf{Aliquot jar}.
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My go-to method for beginners is to use an \emph{Aliquot jar}.
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The aliquot is a sample that you extract from your dough. The
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sample is extracted after creating the initial dough strength.
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You monitor the aliquot's size increase to judge the
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@@ -1610,8 +1612,8 @@ banneton should now be facing you.
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\label{fig:artistic-scoring}
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\end{figure}
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The scoring cut for done at a \qty{45}{\angle} angle relative to the dough's
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surface slightly off the dough's center. With the \qty{45}{\angle} angle cut
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The scoring cut for done at a \ang{45}~angle relative to the dough's
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surface slightly off the dough's center. With the \ang{45}~angle cut
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the overlaying side will rise more in the oven than the other side.
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This way you will achieve a so-called \emph{ear} on the final bread.
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The ear is a thin crisp edge that offers intriguing texture
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@@ -1621,7 +1623,7 @@ a good loaf into a great loaf.
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\begin{figure}[htb!]
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\includegraphics[width=\textwidth]{bread-scoring-angle}
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\caption[Scoring angle]{The \qty{45}{\angle} angle at which you score the
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\caption[Scoring angle]{The \ang{45}~angle at which you score the
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dough is relative to the surface of the dough. When scoring more towards
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the side, you have to adjust the angle to achieve the ear on your
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bread.}%
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