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Spent Grain Bread

Posted: Thu May 10, 2012 00:47
by HamnCheese
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Bread made from 'spent grain' - the leftovers from beer making. Many thanks to Appalachian Brewery for the raw product. Also made veggie burgers, flour and cookies! All in all an interesting afternoon in the kitchen.

Lynn

Posted: Thu May 10, 2012 01:27
by ssorllih
Nice crumb! nice uniform texture. The flavor should be wonderful. Nice malt coloring, Good crust.
Recipe is requested please.
We have a local micro brewery that would benefit from this.

Posted: Thu May 10, 2012 01:29
by Chuckwagon
Wow Lynn, that looks marvelous! I like the coarse texture and color too. Care to share the recipe? What kind of a sandwich are you going to make? :razz: Yum!

Best Wishes,
Chuckwagon

Posted: Thu May 10, 2012 01:59
by JerBear
A buddy of mine makes some spent grain cookies, it's a great bonus for helping make a batch of beer!

Posted: Thu May 10, 2012 02:08
by HamnCheese
Started with 2 cups whole wheat flour, 1 teaspoon dry yeast, 2 tablespoons beet syrup (could substitute molasses) and enough water to make a pancake like batter. Let that mixture sit for five hours or so.

Added 2 cups spent grain, two cups artisan white flour, one more cup whole wheat, one more teaspoon yeast, 2 teaspoons salt and enough water to make a sticky dough. Let it sit for 1/2 hour. Kneaded with a little more white flour to create a gluten coat. Raised it for two hours, then did an envelope fold and shaped back into a round. Raised another hour, shaped into loaf pans. Raised 45 minutes and baked in a 400 degree oven for half hour. Lowered the temp to 375 and baked to an internal temperature of 200 degrees.

Made the whole thing up, so there aren't exact measurements....sorry!

The dough was delightful to work with and the bread has a nutty sweet taste with a little bite from the grain...it actually smells a little like the feed room in a stable!

Lynn

Posted: Thu May 10, 2012 02:26
by ssorllih
Lynn, I like your method! Whole wheat flour benefits from an extended ferment. If I may make a suggestion. If you will start weighing your ingredients and keeping notes you will be able to duplicate your results in later and or larger batches.
I will get myself down to the DuClaws Brewery very soon for s spent grain.
I often make 25 % whole wheat bread with a 24 hour preferment for the whole wheat flour.
Thank you for the recipe.

Posted: Thu May 10, 2012 03:09
by HamnCheese
Ross, you're right, of course. I was kicking myself halfway through for not taking notes! I've been meaning to get a kitchen notebook, and here's a good reason to have one.

Thanks for the nudge.

Posted: Thu May 10, 2012 04:35
by ssorllih
Lynn, There is a system of "baker's percentages" where all of the flours are taken as 100 % and water is measured as a fraction of that. So flour would be 100 and liquid would be 67% of the weight of the flour, salt might be 1.5 % of the weight of the flour , etc.

Working this way makes it easy to make five loaves when in the past you made three. Or you made one loaf and a dozen rolls.

Posted: Thu May 10, 2012 12:47
by HamnCheese
Hey Ross,

I generally do weigh my ingredients as a percentage of flour. I had four projects going simultaneously and just decided to wing it. Not my best idea, but there you go. I also made an amazing batch of cookies and didn't write that little jewel down, either.

You'd think by now I would have learned my lesson.

So today I'm going to bake again, while the process and general percentages are still fresh in my mind, and I'll let you know how it turns out! If it's terrific I'll repost.

I wrote a note to the brewmaster thanking him for the grain and he said, come by any ol' time. So I will. Yesterday the grains were from a batch of Hefeweisen. I'm looking forward to porter or other dark beer grains to see what they contribute.




Lynn

Posted: Thu May 10, 2012 23:54
by DLFL
Here are a couple sites that have bakers percentage calculators.
Calculator

Cal 2 downloadable

cal 3

Posted: Fri May 11, 2012 00:40
by ssorllih
if you passed eighth grade arithmatic you can handle baker's percentages.
There are also sausage maker's percentages. salt and cure are are just as critical in sausage as water, salt and yeast are in bread.

Posted: Fri May 11, 2012 02:39
by HamnCheese
Thanks, Dick, for posting the calculators!

Lynn

Posted: Fri May 11, 2012 03:06
by DLFL
Ross, why do you keep telling people they are stupid if they are not friends with math?

Posted: Fri May 11, 2012 03:31
by ssorllih
dick, I apologize. I didn't realize that it was coming across that way. For me figuring percentages is as easy as counting as counting the change in my pocket.

Posted: Fri May 11, 2012 13:33
by HamnCheese
Hey Dick,

This morning I had more time to poke around on the calculator sites you shared. I really appreciate the Food Artisan link - wow! What a find!

Thanks again,

Lynn