Unverified recipe
Ingredients, amounts, and steps not yet verified with original source recipe.
Pain de Campagne (Country Bread)
Ingredients
| 900 g | King Arthur Unbleached Bread Flour |
| 800 g | tepid water |
| 20 g | table salt |
| 40 g | sourdough starter |
| 100 g | King Arthur Whole Wheat Flour or King Arthur Golden Wheat Flour |
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Directions
Mix
- 1. Combine 900g King Arthur Unbleached Bread Flour, 800g tepid water, and 20g table salt in a large bowl or extra large (6-quart) dough rising bucket.
- 2. It’s fine to use 40g sourdough starter straight from the refrigerator if that’s where you keep it, though it’s best if you’ve fed it at least once in the past week.
- 3. Mix the ingredients by hand until the dough forms a shaggy mass and the flour is hydrated.
Folds
- 4. Cover the bowl or bucket and let the dough rest at room temperature for 15 minutes.
- 5. Fold the dough by grabbing a section from one side with a wet hand, lifting it up, then pressing it down to the middle to seal.
- 6. Repeat this with the remaining three sides of the dough.
- 7. Cover and let it rest for 15 minutes.
- 8. Fold the dough two more times, giving it a 15-minute rest between the two, for a total of three sets of folds in 45 minutes.
- 9. As you perform the folds you’ll notice that the dough smooths out, gaining strength and becoming elastic.
Proof
- 10. Cover the dough tightly after the final fold and leave it at room temperature (approximately 72°F) for about 12 hours.
- 11. It’s helpful to mark the height of the dough (use the markings on the bucket or a large rubber band around your bowl) to gauge how much it rises.
Divide
- 12. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured or greased surface and divide it into two roughly equal pieces.
- 13. Gently form the pieces into rounds, cover them, and let them rest seam-side down for 10 minutes.
- 14. Generously dust two lined brotforms or towel-lined large bowls with whole 100g King Arthur Whole Wheat Flour or King Arthur Golden Wheat Flour.
- 15. Shape the loaves into tight rounds (boules), place them seam-side up into the prepared brotforms or bowls, and cover them with a plastic bag or shower cap.
Fridge Proof
- 16. If your dough doubled (or came close to doubling) during the 12-hour rise period, immediately place the boules into the refrigerator. But if your dough was a bit more sluggish, let the boules rest at room temperature for 30 to 60 minutes to give them a head start on the second rise.
- 17. Let the boules rest in the refrigerator for 8 to 12 hours, depending on your schedule (not theirs!).
Bake
- 18. When you’re ready to bake, place two Dutch ovens or other lidded bread bakers onto a rack set in the lowest third of the oven.
- 19. If you just have one Dutch oven or don’t have room for two in your oven, you can certainly bake one loaf at a time, leaving the other in the refrigerator while the first one bakes.
- 20. Preheat the oven (and Dutch ovens) to 500°F for 45 minutes (you’ll want to ensure that they’re tough enough to withstand preheating; not all are).
- 21. Turn each loaf out onto a piece of parchment paper and slash them with a lame or sharp knife.
- 22. Remove the preheated Dutch ovens from the oven.
- 23. With the help of the parchment, carefully transfer the loaves to the Dutch ovens.
- 24. Cover the Dutch ovens with their lids and place them in the oven.
- 25. Immediately reduce the oven temperature to 450°F and bake the covered loaves for 20 minutes.
- 26. Remove the lids from the Dutch ovens and bake the loaves for 20 to 25 minutes uncovered, until they’re a deep golden brown.
- 27. Remove the loaves from the oven and carefully turn them out of the Dutch ovens onto racks to cool completely.
- 28. If you’re baking one loaf at a time repeat the process with the second loaf, preheating the Dutch oven if necessary.
- 29. Store leftover bread, loosely wrapped, for several days; freeze for longer storage.
Tips from our Bakers
This recipe yields 2 large loaves of sourdough bread. If you'd like to only make one, simply halve all of the ingredients to make 1 loaf. No other adjustments are necessary.
https://youtu.be/UL6ogX38NcY?si=z7kxLPdthoK7xRbc
This recipe comes to us from Maura Brickman, a serious home baker in Connecticut