Any of you guys make breads from non modern methods? Maybe this should be in the cooking sub forum, but it's more conceptual and not really recipe orientated.
I used to be a homebrewer and for about 10 years before I quit drinking, made amazing adult beverages. Had my own yeast ranch, worked for a university Bio Chem deprtment, and I have an AoS in culinary arts....figured how hard could it be to make bread without modern yeast?
I've been experimenting and not having good success. My fisrt attempts at collecting wild yeast ended miseably with a stinky dough that wouldn't rise after a couple of days.
Tried making a starter with just flour and water, got no where with that. Tried flour, water, and a little malted wheat for a sugar kick and still nothing came of it. That second attmept seemed to ferment, not the clean fermentation of a good batch of beer but a stinky sour fermenation, so thought maybe I fjnallh had a sour dough starter. Bread still wouldn't rise after two days.
Third attempt was essentially making a small batch of beer. Made up a mash, extracted the wort, etc. Put it jn a mason jar with a cheesecloth covering. Took a while and eventually fermented...again stinky and sour. Whatever grew in it still wouldn't raise a batch of dough.
Tried a fourth attempt at the beer starter method but dropped in some grapes. I've heard that the white film sometimes found on grapes is wild yeast. Still a no go.
So for a control, I made other batch of the beer, and added a little commercial ale yeast. It fermented as expected, with a nice clean smell. Made a batch of dough and it rose, albeit much slower than commercial bakers yeast, and the bread turned out fine.
Anyone else experiment with breads? Any input? This is really frustrating.