The Food Nobody Wanted: Sourdough Bread

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  • čas přidán 10. 02. 2024
  • Old Dough bread, or Leaven, was the Sourdough bread of the 18th century. This bread was born out of necessity and was not altogether popular with most folks. Why were they eating it? What was the process? How is this Sourdough? Take a look to find out!
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Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @darkfoxfurre
    @darkfoxfurre Před 4 měsíci +967

    Another reason for boiling the water- You have to remember that people were getting their water from wells, ponds, rivers and streams. There's lots of other microbes other than yeast that will spoil the yeast starter/mother. So it helps to remove all the bad microbes, and then dope your concoction with the good ones (yeast).

    • @jrturner7707
      @jrturner7707 Před 4 měsíci +75

      Was going to comment something similar. There's also the question of the microbes/fungi that may be in the flour itself. Flour milling back in the day would not have met modern food safety standards, and an illness-inducing bacteria or fungus might start growing first from the flour. I remember hearing one of the theories for the level of paranoia in Salem was an especially damp year that may have tainted grain stores with a fungus that in sufficient quantities would have induced hallucinations. At the end of the day, yeast for bread is a 'good' microbe that we're trying to make sure outcompetes microbes we wouldn't want in our food.

    • @SwaAusch
      @SwaAusch Před 4 měsíci +20

      The water could also be too cold

    • @F0XD1E
      @F0XD1E Před 3 měsíci +37

      This was my thought as well. I've seen people (Cody's Lab) trying to grow food mushrooms and when he didn't sterilize the media, the mushroom spores would get out competed by unwanted mold. Starting with a sterile mixture would likely be more consistent back then.

    • @homelessrobot
      @homelessrobot Před 3 měsíci +29

      it also sounds like they had figured out that the rye flour needed to be added after the boiled bran cooled. So why not before? Because the culture they wanted was on the rye.

    • @RogerS1978
      @RogerS1978 Před 3 měsíci +12

      @@jrturner7707 as thinking the same, the fungi your talking about is Ergot which grew on grain that was stored with too much moisture. Thinking about a flour mill you often have a large wooden building covered in flour dust...that would be a haven for fungi so spores were probably high in there.

  • @benjaminlammertz64
    @benjaminlammertz64 Před 4 měsíci +888

    To add:
    A dough made out of pure rye flour will not properly rise if you use yeast as leavening.
    It NEEDS the lactic acid from sourdough.
    That's why in regions where rye was THE grain used for bread (like northern Germany, where i'm from) sourdough was pretty much the norm for your everyday bread.
    Only the much more expensive white bread that was made with wheat would be made with yeast.

    • @mum2jka
      @mum2jka Před 4 měsíci +15

      That is so interesting. I made my first sourdough pumpernickel bread last week but it tasted to chocolatey for my liking so going to try another recipe. But it's interesting seeing the variety of sourdough pumpernickel recipes out there.

    • @slwrabbits
      @slwrabbits Před 4 měsíci +15

      Why is that? What does the acidity do to the rye flour? Curious to hear.

    • @lukasr.5839
      @lukasr.5839 Před 4 měsíci +22

      Ist in Franken/Bayern nicht anders. Mit Weißbrot können wir nicht viel anfangen! :D - Same in Southern Germany.

    • @AlkonKomm
      @AlkonKomm Před 4 měsíci +32

      thats actually not correct, at least not anymore, modern rye flour will work just fine with bakers yeast. doesnt taste nearly as good though.
      with older strains (like Waldstaudenroggen) you should use sourdough though cause otherwise the enzyme activity is too high and it will probably turn out gummy/dense.

    • @zhiracs
      @zhiracs Před 4 měsíci +61

      @@slwrabbits from Wikipedia: "Bread made from 100% rye flour... is usually leavened with sourdough. Baker's yeast is not useful as a leavening agent for rye bread, as rye does not contain enough gluten. The structure of rye bread is based primarily on the starch in the flour as well as other carbohydrates... however, rye amylase is active at substantially higher temperatures than wheat amylase, causing the structure of the bread to disintegrate as the starches are broken down during baking. The lowered pH of a sourdough starter, therefore, inactivates the amylases when heat cannot, allowing the carbohydrates in the bread to gel and set properly."
      Amylase is the enzyme that breaks starches down into simpler sugar molecules. From my understanding, lactic acid acts as a sort of "emergency brake" so the long starch chains have a chance to build the bread's structure before the heat of an oven sets everything in place.

  • @AMKB01
    @AMKB01 Před 4 měsíci +437

    When my mother was a child, she lived in a tiny village in pre-WWII Poland. She remembers her mother would bake bread once a week - about a dozen loaves. No one had yeast. She remembered her mother removing part of the dough for the next baking day, and stored it buried in the flour, not in salt - they rarely had salt even for the bread dough. The old dough would dry in the flour, and her mother would take it out the day before bread baking day, break it up and soak it in water.
    I've experimented with making bread as she described it to me from memory. It was basically the old dough, flour and water. If they had salt, they would include a bit. What I couldn't recreate was the flour. They grew their own wheat, then took it to a mill to be ground into their year's supply of flour. It may even have been rye instead of wheat - they grew both.
    I can't say the bread tasted all that good, but the experiment did work.

    • @heidimisfeldt5685
      @heidimisfeldt5685 Před 4 měsíci +6

      Add things like a bit of flax seed, a bit of sunflower seeds, a bit of rolled oats, dried cranberries, raisins, walnut pieces. Or make another batch with kitchen herbs, granulated garlic, granulated onion, some parmesan cheese. 🧀 🍞🍞🍞

    • @AMKB01
      @AMKB01 Před 4 měsíci +44

      @@heidimisfeldt5685 I was recreating my mother's bread. The only thing on that list my mother would have had is the sunflowers; they grew enough to take it in and get pressed for their year's oil.
      I certainly did experiment with it more, after the first few recreations. Simply adding some salt made a huge difference.

    • @thebravegallade731
      @thebravegallade731 Před 4 měsíci +26

      ​@@AMKB01salt is the single BIGGEST factor in anything tasting good.

    • @srebrnaFH
      @srebrnaFH Před 3 měsíci +16

      Burying it in flour gives the same result as you would get by eg. spreading it on parchment and letting it dry into flakes. That's what my husband does, when he wants to share the starter with someone, or wants to store it when we are absent for a while and don't want to rely on it surviving in the fridge. It needs a bit more time to rehydrate & start when you want to bake, but it is, in fact, a perfectly usable solution to lack of cold storage.

    • @Mustang-wt1se
      @Mustang-wt1se Před 3 měsíci +4

      May have to use bread flour or something whole grain. All purpose flour isn’t the whole wheat grain ground up

  • @suburbanhiker5975
    @suburbanhiker5975 Před 4 měsíci +1470

    Given our country's history with beer, I'd guess the brewer was EVERYONE'S best friend!

    • @natviolen4021
      @natviolen4021 Před 4 měsíci +70

      Brewing is time- and cultureless 🙂
      Update: it seems that I chose an unfortunate wording. I meant that brewing is timeless and intercultural.

    • @chrisd7287
      @chrisd7287 Před 4 měsíci +11

      hell yeah 🍻🍻

    • @suburbanhiker5975
      @suburbanhiker5975 Před 4 měsíci

      INDEED!@@natviolen4021

    • @CowboybubPercussion
      @CowboybubPercussion Před 4 měsíci +54

      @@natviolen4021 but yeast is a culture lol

    • @FurikuriYugi
      @FurikuriYugi Před 4 měsíci +32

      Yeast is a culture what lives in a society.

  • @TheFrugalScotsman
    @TheFrugalScotsman Před 4 měsíci +570

    Our best friend's sister just passed along a TWO HUNDRED YEAR OLD sour dough starter from Italy that she received from the descendents of the family that brought it from Italy, and made it's way to the Chicago area. Delicious!

    • @yowayde
      @yowayde Před 4 měsíci +158

      Old sourdough starters are cool, but ultimately gimmicks and not any different from a starter you make at home. The starter's bacteria will adapt to your kitchen's ecosystem and through feedings and use, will become basically the same as your neighbor's starter that he made himself using King Arthur flour and water and letting it sit on the counter. Research shows that maturity and flavor of starter has a "cap" so whether it's a few months or 200+ years old, it doesn't make a difference.
      Also, the microbes on the baker's hands affect the outcome too, so unless you're 200 years old, using the exact same flour, in the exact same kitchen, your starter isn't 200 years old; it's uniquely yours and adapted to you and your environment.
      If you want it, go for it! But if you think it's going to give your baking an edge or make more delicious bread, you're wasting your money.

    • @user-tn8rl1lc8l
      @user-tn8rl1lc8l Před 3 měsíci +31

      @@yowaydealso, aren’t starters only as old as the last feeding?

    • @aramdeara1
      @aramdeara1 Před 3 měsíci

      America has no history as usual

    • @addammadd
      @addammadd Před 3 měsíci +46

      My favorite kind of killjoy is the kind that reminds people that they’re not really the same person they were 7 years ago on account of how their atoms are all replaced.

    • @alvareo92
      @alvareo92 Před 3 měsíci +14

      @@yowayde I very much doubt that it will be "not ANY different" than just making a brand new starter at home. It's a living bacterial culture that has been through many places and eras and strains of bacteria. However, if they're charging "vintage" money for it instead of just giving it away, then I agree, "save your money".

  • @mateuszgrzyb1181
    @mateuszgrzyb1181 Před 4 měsíci +222

    My grandma had something called "dzieża" (dictionary translates it as "kneading trough "), which was wooden vessel for making sourdough. It was customary not to wash it ever since it was new, but only scrape it, because residue of old sourdough helped with making new bread. She made bread once for whole week, because of amount of firewood owen consumed, but bread was fresh all along because of horseradish leaves or linen rag used as cover.

    • @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
      @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim Před 4 měsíci +16

      Very cool, thank you for sharing. Especially I did not know about the horseradish leaves or linen.

    • @tero920
      @tero920 Před 4 měsíci +11

      Same in Finland with making rye bread. The tub or "trough" as you call it is shown right at the beginning of this video czcams.com/video/ghRWeViG4Zg/video.html . The tub is called "korvo" in Finnish. Its also rarely cleaned, probably only if some mice etc would get into it. At the end the presenter says also that the bread stays correct softness in the korvo covered with linen.

    • @tero920
      @tero920 Před 4 měsíci +5

      Maybe its better shown in the beginning of this one czcams.com/video/AVQAD7QyPN4/video.html . Although she is making more of western finnish style bread that is flatter/thinner and has holes for storing it on wooden racks in the ceiling of the house. The first one I posted was about eastern style, storing in a "aitta" (small storage barn) in a korvo.

    • @Fylgum
      @Fylgum Před 4 měsíci +4

      Same with the wooden vessels in the bakeries in Denmark up to the mid 80'ies 🙂

    • @akaelalias4478
      @akaelalias4478 Před 4 měsíci +5

      My grandma grew up in Rural Greece, she to describes them using a trough in this way.

  • @Yormolch
    @Yormolch Před 4 měsíci +150

    Sourdough bread is the favorite bread of Skandinavians, Germans and the Maori, according to a pole from a few years back. And as a german myself I can only support that notion. Nothing better than a fresh sourdough bread that is half wheat, half rye, even better if it has 5% full corn. Have it fresh from the bakery, with a nice crispy crust and a warm, soft inside and spread soft butter on it. Marvelous stuff.

    • @antonakesson
      @antonakesson Před 3 měsíci +8

      Yeah, as a Skandi all I could think of when I saw the title was breakfast XD

    • @elias.t
      @elias.t Před 3 měsíci +15

      @@antonakesson"The food nobody wanted". Nå, those guys were very wrong then!

    • @trijezdci4588
      @trijezdci4588 Před 3 měsíci +8

      Sourdough is not what you think it is. Sourdough does not equal sour dough. Not even in Germany. Look up the German definition of sourdough in the "Deutsches Lebensmittelbuch". It says nothing about sourness. Instead it says sourdough is any dough that contains active living or revivable microorganisms that will cause the fermentation of the dough. No acidity required. And thus, not all sourdoughs are sour. Italian sourdough for example is specifically maintained using techniques that keep acidity out. And yet it is sourdough and Italian artisan breads are made from it. Their bread doesn't taste sour either, but it is sourdough bread. Similar with other sourdoughs in countries where wheat and not rye is the staple grain. The reason why bread in Northern European countries is traditionally sour is that the climate wasn't ideal for growing wheat and rye was the staple grain there, but rye is very enzymatic and that causes a rye dough to go overproof and collapse very quickly. Acidity throttles the enzyme activity and thereby reduces that problem. As a result, leaven in these countries has traditionally been made to be sour, but it doesn't have to be this way.

    • @Yormolch
      @Yormolch Před 3 měsíci +4

      @@trijezdci4588 Thanks for the clarification. I actually wasn't entirely sure myself, so I looked it up after I watched the video and wrote the comment. I actually know what sourdough is though, I was talking about my personal favorite flour mixture and the countries that favor mixed sourdough bread over white wheat bread.

    • @trijezdci4588
      @trijezdci4588 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@Yormolch The point is, sourdough bread isn't necessarily sour. And also, you can make white bread with sourdough. For example, Italian ciabatta is typically made with white flour and Italian sourdough. French baguette is typically made with Type 55 flour (white flour) and levain (French sourdough). Factory bread and supermarket bread and the like, whether white or not is generally not made with sourdough.

  • @stankmcdankton6204
    @stankmcdankton6204 Před 4 měsíci +247

    If I had to guess, boiling the bran turns some of the starch into simple sugars that are easier for the yeast in the air to break down and begin the fermentation process. Kind of like how adding sugar to yeast and warm water today helps speed up the "wake up" process for dried yeast.

    • @snosibsnob3930
      @snosibsnob3930 Před 4 měsíci +29

      I don’t think this is it. Starches don’t break down into simple sugars from heat alone, they need enzymatic action on them.
      If I were to guess, boiling the bran instead gelatinizes the starches, which makes them potentially available for bacteria to break down. From my reaserch, yeasts do not normally produce enzymes that can break down sugars any more complicated than disaccharides.

    • @D-Vinko
      @D-Vinko Před 4 měsíci +18

      @@snosibsnob3930 Starches DO transition between sugar types due to heat.
      Not from starch to sugar; but from starch to resistant starch, or any other variety after it's cooled. Cooling it for a long time is the important part.

    • @snosibsnob3930
      @snosibsnob3930 Před 4 měsíci +5

      @@D-Vinko Yeah but thats not being called for here, just boiling.

    • @duncansh81
      @duncansh81 Před 4 měsíci +21

      @@snosibsnob3930 The instructions said to cool it to just above room temp (the temp of milk from the cow?) which is probably enough to convert the starch to resistant starch. It's the same with baked potatoes. So, I agree the above could be true.
      I would also guess that the water used in those times could easily come from contaminated sources and if you didn't use boiled water you could easily start a batch with all sorts of bacteria types (e.g. E. coli) that you didn't want rather than the yeast and good bacteria that you do want.

    • @filmscorefreak
      @filmscorefreak Před 4 měsíci +12

      Maybe they boiled the bran to mimic what brewers did - boiling the wort.

  • @codysmith4513
    @codysmith4513 Před 4 měsíci +108

    Boiling the bran softens it to make it less likely to tear the gluten network and also extends the shelf life a little bit. It acts similar to the acids present in sourdough cultures.

    • @clmalbful
      @clmalbful Před 4 měsíci +14

      Will also help starches in the bran to gel as it cools which will improve texture.

    • @codysmith4513
      @codysmith4513 Před 4 měsíci +7

      @@clmalbful Yep! No different to modern tangzhong, yudane or scalding.

  • @joshuahawkins8828
    @joshuahawkins8828 Před 4 měsíci +30

    This kind man reminds me of my brother. And I miss my brother. It always makes me sad yet so greatful

  • @ThePhobosAnomally
    @ThePhobosAnomally Před 4 měsíci +137

    This is my favourite channel. It's getting me through very rough time right now. Thank you for making my Sunday better. I love what you do!

    • @thegribblereport8383
      @thegribblereport8383 Před 4 měsíci +4

      It’s so good isn’t it ❤

    • @growitheflow
      @growitheflow Před 4 měsíci +1

      It’s so wholesome! 🍞

    • @terryt.1643
      @terryt.1643 Před 4 měsíci

      Perks me right up, too! Glad you are finding uplifting and hope that it continues to make your day better. Think I may make some bread today.

    • @Big_Glizzy.
      @Big_Glizzy. Před 4 měsíci +2

      You'll be ok, life is like a tough hike, all you gotta do is keep one foot in front of the other and you'll get to where you need to be, not necessarily where you want

    • @Toxus8
      @Toxus8 Před 4 měsíci

      If you just keep one foot in front of the other, you are standing still my boy. Last sentence also makes no sense my philosophical friend

  • @gatheringbaskethomestead9942
    @gatheringbaskethomestead9942 Před 4 měsíci +56

    This was the best Townsends I’ve seen. Very well explained, the Ryan comes across as very enthusiastic and believes in his story. Very well done!

    • @SlothfulJim
      @SlothfulJim Před 4 měsíci +5

      The Ryan, The Batman of 18th century cooking😅

  • @vibk2744
    @vibk2744 Před 2 měsíci +7

    I like this guy, you can clearly see and hear that he is passionate about the subject. Listening to him is enjoyable.

  • @Hato1992
    @Hato1992 Před 4 měsíci +109

    Sourdough is popular in eastern/central Europe for centuries. And I can't even imagine to not eat bread made out of it. I just need from time to time eat that kind of bread. In Poland we also do soup made out of it, żurek for example is most famous national soup.
    Żurek is made out of oat sourdough mainly. And for a good one, you need also some fat pork, like becon and good smoked sausage.

    • @NKDuisburg02
      @NKDuisburg02 Před 4 měsíci +8

      Sourdough bread is the best. When he talked about how maybe the french like it but not english or americans I took that personally and wanted to make a comment about the child palate of americans in particular and the absolute car crash of a palate of the english. ;)

    • @bryanleeyf87
      @bryanleeyf87 Před 4 měsíci +5

      It's called clickbait.
      I like Townsends, but he does not need to resort to generalization and clickbait for views. Pity he had stoop low on occasions.

    • @Hato1992
      @Hato1992 Před 4 měsíci +9

      @@bryanleeyf87 Well he talks about American settlers, he explains it at the beginning of video.

    • @mindstalk
      @mindstalk Před 4 měsíci +17

      @@bryanleeyf87 It is not clickbait to say that Americans have mostly preferred white yeast bread to sourdough. A simple walk down the grocery store aisle shows that it's fact, not bait. This is the country that invented Wonderbread and liked it.

    • @luigizantaplatamone3255
      @luigizantaplatamone3255 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Isn't zakwas na żurek made from rye?

  • @MapleRhubarb
    @MapleRhubarb Před 4 měsíci +67

    The warm light as Ryan mixed the dough together in the first few seconds was magic!

  • @X-atm092
    @X-atm092 Před 4 měsíci +32

    This man is a wonderful presenter and teacher. I always smile when he shows up. Be well out there, folks.

  • @timl.b.2095
    @timl.b.2095 Před 4 měsíci +15

    I like Ryan's delivery so much. I found this calming, which I needed.

  • @fishinghole333
    @fishinghole333 Před 4 měsíci +16

    Ginger was used to help with rising the dough. I've made sourdough bread with it, and it seems to work.

  • @P_RO_
    @P_RO_ Před 4 měsíci +36

    I don't care for rye bread, but I love sourdough. The best I ever had came from a lady down on the S. Carolina coast whose house we were painting, and she made lunch for us every day. She said her batch could be traced back the the great San Francisco earthquake where her family had a bakery. When the fires raged afterward the bakery was about to be engulfed, and there was little time for anyone to do more than run for their life, but someone had the presence of mind to grab the starter on the way out. The bakery never re-opened but the batch had been kept alive in her family since then and at the time there were only three people left making the bread, which to keep it alive needed a loaf baked every few days. She was as happy to bake it as I was to eat it, and offered to share her starter with me. But alas, I was a young man not interested in baking so I never did that. Years later I found out that she'd passed away and to this day I still wonder if that batch which was 90 years old plus however long it had been around before the earthquake, was still being continued by anyone. Thank You Mrs Long!

    • @ssmith5127
      @ssmith5127 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Beautiful story. Thank you for sharing it. I'm so grateful that my young son decided to rent a room from a man who baked sourdough bread regularly. It set the example that eventually brought sourdough into my life after decades of eating store bought white bread. That college education really paid off lol!

    • @jeromethiel4323
      @jeromethiel4323 Před 4 měsíci +5

      After that amount of time, the yeasts would have mutated anyway. Microorganisms evolve fairly quickly, as the generations are so short lived. This is a huge problem in the brewing industry, as it's hard to keep a yeast strain "pure." And the yeast effects the flavor.
      So a very long lived sourdough starter has evolved over time. This is not necessarily a bad thing, but it means that 90 year old starter wasn't the same starter. I always wonder if that doesn't make the starter better, as i just don't know.

    • @dembro27
      @dembro27 Před 3 měsíci

      ​​@@jeromethiel4323 Indeed, the classic thought experiment: Theseus's Sourdough Starter.

  • @Birchwood1976
    @Birchwood1976 Před 4 měsíci +14

    Sour dough bread to me is a bit nostalgic, when I was about 10 and on a family vacation we went to a restaurant that made fresh sour dough bread every day in clay ovens like you use, it was the best bread I've ever eaten in my life, so much that I remember it over 35 years later.

  • @peasant8246
    @peasant8246 Před 4 měsíci +10

    His enthusiasm is infectious. :)

  • @theintrovertadventurer9640
    @theintrovertadventurer9640 Před 4 měsíci +9

    I wonder how the prohibition affected the baking industry.

  • @rolux4853
    @rolux4853 Před 4 měsíci +23

    I live in Germany and my Father in law is a master baker and has its own bakery.
    He is the fifth generation of master baker in his family and they still have the original sourdough that they started in the pre industrial era.
    I just love visiting him and eating his bread.
    His bakery is in a small mountain town that exists only because of a mine that was started there a few hundred years ago and his ancestors followed because they thought they could make good money feeding the miners with proper bread.
    It worked out for them and they lived a decent live until today.
    He is already above sixty and will close down the shop, since nobody wants to keep the store after him which is really sad to me.
    Unfortunately the mountain town is to far away from from big cities and there’s not enough tourism there (even if it’s super lovely with so many historical sites to view and a fairytale forest from the brothers Grimm.
    I really enjoy to be there and always plan my summer holidays around it.
    I wish that era would have lots of tourists or more modern people move there who value the traditional German bread culture.
    Unfortunately it’s mostly aging and somewhat poorer people living there, who prefer cheap and convenient bread from the supermarket, which is an absolute shame!
    It’s incredibly sad to me that globalization kills of a traditional German craftsmanship of five generations..
    If the bakery would be inside or near a big city it would be flourishing, since artisanal bread is trendy again, unfortunately this trend didn’t arrive in that little mountain town.
    It’s very sad the people there don’t get it yet, but will cry in 30 years that this traditional bakers family went away silently..

    • @buddyrojek9417
      @buddyrojek9417 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I am interested in this, I am now living in carpathian Ukraine and the route to the ski village has lots of wealthy customers. This bread could work. Please tell me how I can get some information and I can pay for it

    • @bassrooten2217
      @bassrooten2217 Před 2 měsíci +2

      You need to get proactive to help save the shop

    • @uploader-de7614
      @uploader-de7614 Před 2 měsíci

      How tf is globalisation to blame for skimpy locals who don't get what they're losing??

    • @emilydelano555
      @emilydelano555 Před 18 dny

      Where is the village and how is the bakery called? Would love to visit - i'm from northern Italy

  • @paulsuplex
    @paulsuplex Před 4 měsíci +118

    Sourdough did remain quite popular from antiquity all the way to today in parts of Europe, so I would not be surprised if "levain" (as in levitate, rise; hence "leavening") was commonplace in the French strip from Louisiana to Canada.

    • @IamOutOfNames
      @IamOutOfNames Před 4 měsíci +17

      Can confirm, here in Finland traditional rye bread is still made with sourdough and entirely from rye flour so it's dark brown, I had to do a double take when Ryan called that white bread a "rye bread"...

    • @jdiz7081
      @jdiz7081 Před 4 měsíci +9

      they did mention on another video about bread that it was the English who preferred the sweeter barm-bread, while the French preferred the older sourdough method.

    • @Melindrea
      @Melindrea Před 4 měsíci +7

      @@IamOutOfNames Same! Swedish here, but that white bread is *not* rye bread

    • @kamilpotato3764
      @kamilpotato3764 Před 4 měsíci +7

      Whole Eastern Europe loves sourdough bread.

    • @MikehMike01
      @MikehMike01 Před 4 měsíci

      why, sourdough is disgusting

  • @shrimuyopa8117
    @shrimuyopa8117 Před 4 měsíci +10

    My wife makes sourdough bread, with intricate designs carved into them. She sells out everytime she makes them, people can't get enough of it.
    This is a great video, I loved seeing the differences between then and today. Thanks!

  • @debrickashaw9387
    @debrickashaw9387 Před 3 měsíci +249

    I just realized the reason so much bread from the middle east is flatbread is because they didnt brew beer and had no/less access to yeast. Wow

    • @seanbeadles7421
      @seanbeadles7421 Před 2 měsíci +44

      They definitely brewed ales in the ancient Middle East

    • @thegreenmage6956
      @thegreenmage6956 Před 2 měsíci +23

      It’s just really easy/quick to bake a flatbread (on a simple griddle) in primitive contexts. It’s why kids do it for school projects.

    • @DanielWilczek-nu7ff
      @DanielWilczek-nu7ff Před 2 měsíci +29

      @@seanbeadles7421 That's the issue friend, we're discussing a time post-formation of Islam. The Ancient Middle East is several thousand years earlier than late Medieval / Early Enlightenment Europe (if not 10,000+) whilst being dominated primarily by cultural/ethnic groups that hadn't existed in 1000's of years by the time relevant to the video. In other words your point makes 0 logical sense to anyone with a grasp of early history. This is indeed why flatbreads are far more common after the life & death of the prophet. (Late 500's-623AD)
      Reading comprehension is valuable.

    • @juanmanuelfahey9434
      @juanmanuelfahey9434 Před měsícem +20

      Egyptians did. Sumerians INVENTED beer.

    • @PeaceIsYeshua
      @PeaceIsYeshua Před měsícem +11

      @@DanielWilczek-nu7ff
      The OP may very well have been talking about an _ancient_ culture, and that’s what I took from it. Perhaps read their comment again? Sean also was talking about an ancient culture specifically, not the time period of the video, and he believes they did have ales. You disagree?
      Like you said, reading comprehension is valuable. :) But you know what’s even more valuable? Kindness. Why call someone a friend and then go on to be sarcastic, rude and insulting? Could you have figured out a way to make your point with love? There’s no reason to be so rude. Let’s do better.

  • @johnzhytamyr8840
    @johnzhytamyr8840 Před 4 měsíci +6

    The boiling of the grain serves to help convert the starches to simple sugars. Yeast can only eat simple sugars so more simple sugars mean a larger more healthy colony of yeast.

  • @townsends
    @townsends  Před 4 měsíci +46

    Bread Playlist czcams.com/play/PLD1F368B5848077C3.html

    • @dolnanaka
      @dolnanaka Před 3 měsíci +2

      i totally expected it to be music to bake bread to for some reason

  • @h.j.m4013
    @h.j.m4013 Před 4 měsíci +36

    They might been boiling the starter to only get the yeasts out of the air and avoid the yeast from inside the water.
    Kinda like how it can take up to a week for the good yeast in your starter out compeats the bad yeasts.

    • @devilslamp7306
      @devilslamp7306 Před 4 měsíci +10

      Came here to say this. The microorganisms in the water would give an unpleasant taste and odor, without much rise, and would probably out-compete the yeast that's naturally on the flour and in the air. Also, boiling the bran releases more of the nutrients that yeast needs - specifically nitrogen, which isn't present as much in the flour.

    • @teareese
      @teareese Před 4 měsíci +7

      There are many wheat (and other grains) fungus and bacteria that our modern day fungicides and pesticides farmers use to keep managable. Killing them would be a good reason to boil the bran. Boiling the water also kills pathogens in there and this allows the bran sugars to be released and available for the yeast to feed on. Adding the ginger too acts as a small sugar source and mild pesticide besides being a flavorant.

    • @jacobforsman3897
      @jacobforsman3897 Před 2 měsíci

      ​teareese I've read that good quality ginger, the kind that hasn't been treated with microbe destroying chemicals, such as organic ginger, naturally harbors wild yeasts. It's possible that it could've been a reliable way to inoculate the cooked bran, water and molasses mixture with yeast.

  • @jreneewolf885
    @jreneewolf885 Před 4 měsíci +6

    My sourdough starter is approximately 35 years old and I love baking sourdough baked goods. I know it's a "modern" sourdough per se, but I still find a lot of enjoyment working with it.

  • @johndayan7126
    @johndayan7126 Před 4 měsíci +105

    Fascinating! I've made sourdough bread, kept the culture alive, etc., and just keeping a piece of dough back sounds so much more manageable. Great video! Thank you. 🍞🥖🍺💖

    • @feliciagaffney1998
      @feliciagaffney1998 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@ConontheBinarian there's lots of things you can make with discard. Some people love making crackers out of it.

  • @terryt.1643
    @terryt.1643 Před 4 měsíci +21

    In the 70s we used airborne yeast that made a sweet “Herman” sourdough. I think they were boiling to just use airborne yeast, since their palates liked the sweet taste. Think I’m going to try the original recipe but with regular flour and see if it tastes like the Sweet Herman I remember so fondly.

    • @DrDIY1
      @DrDIY1 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Boiling kills yeast. It wouldn't introduce more yeast

    • @Russo-Delenda-Est
      @Russo-Delenda-Est Před 4 měsíci +2

      ​@DrDIY1 there is yeast in the bran, and in the air. If you boil the bran, only yeast from the air that gets in after boiling will grow. This would probably change the flavor, but I don't know enough about the subject to say for sure.

    • @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
      @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim Před 4 měsíci +1

      Well airborne yeast is not what makes one SD more "sour" than another.

    • @DrDIY1
      @DrDIY1 Před 4 měsíci

      U want sweet SD? Add sugar

    • @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
      @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim Před 4 měsíci

      I have had SD bread fed a lot of sugar that still tastes sour. Two of the biggest factors are how hydrated the starter was and how long was the fermentation time of the dough and levain. @@DrDIY1

  • @jarmokankaanpaa6528
    @jarmokankaanpaa6528 Před 4 měsíci +15

    Sourdough rye bread is the staple bread in Russia and Finland and has been so for hundreds of years. I personally much prefer sourdough rye to "sweet" rye bread or tastless deep pan wheat bread, and it's also much healthier. In the old days and still at farms today, sourdough cultures were treasured family heirlooms that were maintained over generations. Before commercial yeast and baking soda were available, sourdough was the only method of leavening bread.

  • @jeffeppenbach
    @jeffeppenbach Před 4 měsíci +6

    Sourdough was popular on the frontier. It also doesn't need refrigeration. We never refrigerated ours. My grandfather was an old time sourdough man, and kept his on the counter in a jar, with a cloth cover.
    He was a camper, and would make sourdough pancakes for the camp.
    I personally think it helped give flavor to otherwise bland rations when on the hike or wagon train. But, when you were settled, you could get other flavorings and cultivated yeast, so the sourdough was forgotten.

    • @marblemunkey
      @marblemunkey Před 3 měsíci +2

      I spent my youth in Alaska, and sourdough was absolutely integral to the pioneer experience in Alaska. They would keep a jar of starter inside their coat while on the trail; sourdough pancakes are easy to make with the "discard" of the starter, and would also feed their dogs.

  • @johnfreeman2956
    @johnfreeman2956 Před 4 měsíci +56

    I have a theory as to why they boiled this mixture, and it ties into a video from 4 years ago.
    John Townsend made a video at a campfire where he was brewing beer. He said that back then, people thought that the boiling of the liquid is what gave beer its bubbles. Here, we are talking about bread, and again we have yeast and the bubbles that they make.
    My totally uneducated guess is that their thought process back then was something like "well, when we do yeast in beer, we gotta boil it to get bubbles. Here we got yeast and we need bubbles, so obviously we have to boil it to get it to work."
    edit: ok so I found the video! It's called "Colonial Army Rations: Beer Every Day! - Spruce Beer In Early America", go to 9:38.

    • @rtyria
      @rtyria Před 4 měsíci +4

      That's fascinating. Thanks for the video recommendation. I'll have to check that out.

    • @DrDIY1
      @DrDIY1 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Funny, I just watched that vid and thought the same thing!

  • @joshuat770
    @joshuat770 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I really enjoy watching educational and laid back videos like this. Thank you Townsends.

  • @ericarobbin
    @ericarobbin Před 4 měsíci +7

    I love sourdough bread. Great video Ryan, you explain so well. Everyone on this channel is so good at their job. Extra special to see the town bartender discussing supply chain and dynamics of brewer's yeast. I'm excited to see how the starter will be doing in future!

  • @Blondie42
    @Blondie42 Před 4 měsíci +3

    Probably been covered on this channel, and many already know it, but measuring ingredients, as we know it today, didn't become "standardized" until 1896 in Fannie Farmer's The Boston cooking-school cookbook.

  • @HallowedHavenHomestead
    @HallowedHavenHomestead Před 4 měsíci +14

    This was one of the best sourdough videos I have seen on the internet, and I’ve seen…umm…a lot. 😆🙈Thank you for all of your hard work and diligent research you put into each topic! ❤

  • @saron95662
    @saron95662 Před 4 měsíci +5

    I think the boiling of the grain might’ve been carried over from the brewing process for beer. And it also helps with providing additional nutrients for the yeast culture.

  • @tessie7e777
    @tessie7e777 Před 4 měsíci +8

    Love your clear calm explanations!

  • @dwaynewladyka577
    @dwaynewladyka577 Před 4 měsíci +33

    At that time, bread was a very important food staple. It sustained a lot of people. My maternal, great grandmother was working for a bakery, in Prague, in the late 1800s, as a teenager, before coming to North America in 1900. Bread is also connected to farming, and if there was a bad harvest, it would affect so many people. These days, many people take farmers for granted. I'm originally from a very large farm, and I know how important farming and farmers are for us all. That bread looked great. Cheers!

  • @SilntObsvr
    @SilntObsvr Před 4 měsíci +29

    Beer was boiled -- and yet it clearly would start to ferment not very long after it cooled (a day or two and the bubbling would start). Boiling the wheat bran was equivalent of boiling fresh wort, and while we now know that adding the rye flour was what introduced the wild yeasts into the starter, to the 18th century baker it was just a case of reproducing what the brewer had done to start the beer from which came the barm.

  • @mystra13
    @mystra13 Před 4 měsíci +19

    Boiling the grain makes it softer/ more easy to digest. My guess is at some point some discovered the yeast/fermentation process was shortened by boiling the grain first. I would think simply letting the grain sit in water over nite would have the same end result but it would just take longer.

  • @ElectricalPrepper
    @ElectricalPrepper Před 4 měsíci +22

    I started making sourdough the first of the year and it's been incredibly rewarding.

  • @joshsetzer8786
    @joshsetzer8786 Před 4 měsíci +18

    My favorite sandwich is sourdough bread with beef, sourkraut, and German mustard.

  • @jimdawdy6254
    @jimdawdy6254 Před 4 měsíci +2

    You guys are just killing it with these videos. Your channel and Max Miller's are my favorite history channels.

  • @coffeelover7687
    @coffeelover7687 Před 4 měsíci +10

    It took me a long time to master sourdough and there's still stuff I'm learning, but it's one of the most rewarding experiences. I even make sandwich bread with my starter and gift to to others.

    • @WholeBibleBelieverWoman
      @WholeBibleBelieverWoman Před 4 měsíci +1

      Me too. In fact, these days I make my sourdough ONLY as sandwich bread (and skip all the "artisan" steps of using steam, starting with a higher-temperature oven, etc., etc.). Cooked at 350 degrees F for about an hour (until internal temp is 200-210 degrees) has been working great for us. I make a really large loaf (using a USA large-sized Pullman pan) every week and mill my own grain. We have found it to be health-giving as well...!

    • @coffeelover7687
      @coffeelover7687 Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@WholeBibleBelieverWoman I did my own take on the bread recipe I got. It calls for AP flour but I replace a quarter of it with whole wheat. I also do a ton of customizing with the sourdough cracker recipe I got and make them my own like adding cinnamon and sugar or parmesan and black pepper.

  • @lorensims4846
    @lorensims4846 Před 4 měsíci +35

    Thirty years ago, when I moved to California, one of the things I was looking for was San Francisco sourdough bread.
    When I finally found some at Trader Joe's, it was wonderful. Quite sour, but very tasty. I was hooked.
    That experience is hard to find here in Central Ohio, where suburban tastes prefer a less sour sourdough.
    So, with time on my hands during the pandemic, I decided to learn to make my own sourdough. And it was wonderful!
    Yes, I've always thought of sourdough as what you do when you can't get real yeast, so it really doesn't make a lot of sense in these modern days. But, oh, it tastes so good!

    • @WholeBibleBelieverWoman
      @WholeBibleBelieverWoman Před 4 měsíci +15

      Some people who are "gluten-sensitive" and find bread hard to digest find they have no problem eating (real) sourdough. I mention "real" because most sourdoughs sold at regular supermarkets are NOT really sourdough but dough they have made sour in other ways.

    • @Saraphina_Marie
      @Saraphina_Marie Před 3 měsíci +1

      Whenever you get back, look for either Colombo or (my FAVE) Semifreddi.
      I also made my own sourdough during the pandemic but I made everything *but* bread! Gotta say that sourdough crumpets and waffles are amazing though!!!

    • @darcieclements4880
      @darcieclements4880 Před 3 měsíci +1

      It's not just preference. The cultures composition changes when you move it to the great lakes area and always loses the punch eventually. The mild sourdough is as signature to the great lakes as the strong ones are to the west coast. I had a relative try moving the san Francisco starter multiple times before they gave up even though they had been warned.

  • @sweaterdoll
    @sweaterdoll Před 4 měsíci +13

    I would think boiling the wheat bran would soften it and break down the plant cell walls. Rye is used because it has a lot of natural yeasts in the grain, so it is probably the warm, broken down starch giving the rye yeast a home to grow. I've made the sour loaf already described on this channel. it's a lovely personal loaf. My husband and I share one for a meal and it just uses the yeast from the air. One day, I hope to have him carve out a bread bowl for me to use. I will definitely give this a try. I actually DO love the taste of sourdough. More than sweeter bread.

  • @coasterbrookie
    @coasterbrookie Před 4 měsíci +2

    Very well done, Ryan! I’m going to see if I can get my own sourdough starter going. Thank you for the time that you put into this video to bring us information of the baking in the 18th century.

  • @toddmeier9743
    @toddmeier9743 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Very well presented. Id take a class in eighteenth century cooking from you anytime!

  • @madmh6421
    @madmh6421 Před 4 měsíci +5

    From my minuscule glimpse of bread history, you nailed it well! This carried over in the times of my ancestors in the mountains of now days SW and West Virginia well into the 20th century. I know, as I have childhood recollections of such breads as West Virginia corn pone bread loaf, salt rising, winter (slow rise) bread, sponge, and other types being made.
    There is/was a recipe for West Virginia corn pone on the internet that is mostly forgotten, which is not a so called johnny cake, just saying to spread the word. It is not a deep south, nor a more northern version. My friend's Mom's made it, so it wasn't just a family thing.
    Went something like this. Pour more than you might think of scalding water over meal in a loaf pan and left to ferment behind the wood cook stove at least overnight (to sour?), then add baking soda, (baking powder?), salt, egg, bacon grease, and bake. Tthat is about all I can remember. I have a recipe somewhere?
    Left over and fried in butter, runny egg yolks, and perserves the following morning it is at it,s best! Thanks

  • @jamesvatter5729
    @jamesvatter5729 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Good job, Ryan. Really interesting how they "preserved" that for the next batch.

  • @jaedy1124
    @jaedy1124 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Okay, I really like this guy's grasp of the subject matter and relaxed but engaging style. I have been following the channel for years now and apparently, it is only getting better! Nice

  • @samwisegamgee8318
    @samwisegamgee8318 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I love when Ryan does a video. He’s so genuine about the topics he does and has a great voice.

  • @jasondclark
    @jasondclark Před 4 měsíci +20

    I wonder if the boiling was an early stage in learning about malting? Maybe it releases some of the sugars for the yeast?

    • @essaboselin5252
      @essaboselin5252 Před 4 měsíci +8

      I was thinking that - like most discoveries - there was an air of accident around it. Someone boiled some bran for whatever reason, left it unattended when they were distracted and got an early form of sourdough started. They didn't know what was going on, and they found adding other ingredients improved the flavor, but the first step was the boiling of the bran, so they always did it.

    • @merpius
      @merpius Před 4 měsíci +8

      It does break down some of the starch into simple sugar. It also kills mold/bacteria that it may have accumulated in the field and /or storage, so that the local yeasts in the air can get a start without that established competition.

    • @paulblichmann2791
      @paulblichmann2791 Před 4 měsíci +5

      The bran, an agriculture byproduct, was probably funky and full of bugs. The Miller was usually a shifty guy, so boil that bran to be safe.

  • @wiolomatic
    @wiolomatic Před 4 měsíci +8

    I may not be a historian, but Polish people had many things cooked with sourdough starter, like soup żurek, that I can't think of sourdough as 'food nobody wanted'. It might have been for English or American people but for Eastern Europe I think it was more known. The same way English and American people were saying saurcraut is not edible, but Slavic people and Germans knew it is perfectly fine.

  • @grantpflum6844
    @grantpflum6844 Před 4 měsíci +2

    You guys should make a playlist with all of your bread videos!

  • @ordelian7795
    @ordelian7795 Před 3 měsíci +1

    When my grandma was young and still lived at home they had a wooden vat with a lid in which they made their bread dough, it was rye bread as that was a staple food source at the time. When they would start making bread again next week they'd bring the vat inside from the relatively cool storage they had, scrape the dough remnants from the side of the vat, add water and flour, mix it before leaving it in a warm place to rise. I can't imagine the process of making bread in that part of Finland had not been any different for the decades before my grandmas birth either.

  • @DamianReloaded
    @DamianReloaded Před 4 měsíci +3

    I put myself in a low-carb diet and watching this video reminds me of how much I love baking and eating bread. Kudos for the disclosing of how to make a variant to yeast. Looking forward to ep2.

  • @elisabetta_colpi
    @elisabetta_colpi Před 4 měsíci +4

    I really loved this video! Thank you very much for your work and research!

  • @FartSquirel
    @FartSquirel Před 4 měsíci +2

    I don't know where you get your history facts, but I can tell you for the most part of Western Europe, sourdough bread was what was made in every village and city for centuries. In my country, the best bread is basically Sourdough bred.

  • @Vorpal_Wit
    @Vorpal_Wit Před 4 měsíci +2

    In many cases the yeast the brewer is using also "comes from the atmosphere". Anyone thats ever had a "farmhouse style" ale or beer would notice the sour notes. The advantage of getting your yeast from the brewer is only that you don't have to wait around for the culture to develop before you can make your bread - otherwise its essentially the same thing.

  • @VamosViverFora
    @VamosViverFora Před 4 měsíci +21

    Quite interesting. In Brazil (I think it’s colonial times inherited too), it was called “rotten dough”. They use to use in the same fashion.

  • @robzinawarriorprincess1318
    @robzinawarriorprincess1318 Před 4 měsíci +36

    Hello, Ryan! I look forward to seeing how your starter turns out. I'm intrigued!

  • @Flippinger
    @Flippinger Před 3 měsíci +2

    Nothing better than a pure rye sourdough bread. Cheers from Germany, where we're having more than 3,000 different types of bread. 🧡

  • @jdiz7081
    @jdiz7081 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Also, the leaven would preferably not have any salt in it. You would keep a separate starter that you would refresh when needed and add that to your final bread dough.

  • @ravensthatflywiththenightm7319
    @ravensthatflywiththenightm7319 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Love this channel so much 😻

  • @abcstardust
    @abcstardust Před 4 měsíci +4

    Thank you for this informative video. You explained it the best way possible!

  • @VPCh.
    @VPCh. Před 4 měsíci +1

    My guess on the boiling would be to eliminate molds and fungus from the fields or storage. Our grain today tends to be much higher quality and is kept very dry, that likely wouldn't have been the case for them.
    They might have noticed that uncooked grains would result in more unwanted molds appearing.

  • @williameident588
    @williameident588 Před 3 měsíci +1

    An excellent video , so professionally done! So informative, I learned so much. Thank you

  • @timeflysintheshop
    @timeflysintheshop Před 4 měsíci +7

    That was one of your best videos! Everything about it was perfect! Perfect subject! Perfect performance! Perfect editing! Well done! 👍😀😎

  • @jdiz7081
    @jdiz7081 Před 4 měsíci +8

    It's a common notion that yeast and bacteria float through the air waiting for someone's would-be sourdough starter to land on and ferment. However, as you pointed out about the boiling of the bran and how counter-productive it is, most evidence indicates that the yeast and bacteria that we get in our starters come directly from the flours or grains that we use. The microorganisms grow on the grains in the fields and some cells remain in the finished flour even after the milling process (although probably not so if the flour is bleached). This is why a mixture of flour and water in an airtight container, refreshed every day or two, will eventually ferment.

  • @jamesgreeniii147
    @jamesgreeniii147 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I love this channel. I am a bit of a history buff and I am fascinated by the way people lived way back in the day.

  • @THEBOLSHEVIK
    @THEBOLSHEVIK Před 4 měsíci +2

    Not sure if this is already planned, but it'd be interesting to follow the journey of the starter that Ryan separated and see new loaves over time.

  • @VonW0lf3N5t31N
    @VonW0lf3N5t31N Před 3 měsíci +6

    I'm from the Yukon and sourdough is an incredibly important part of the modern history up here. During the gold rush of 1898, sourdough was literally the difference between life and death for those coming through the chilkoot trail, etc. My current starter is about 12 years old and I can't wait for it to be passed on through our daughters.

    • @vidblogger12
      @vidblogger12 Před měsícem

      My family’s sourdough starter is about 100 years old, and my grandparents bought it about 50 years ago from someone in Alaska. (We’re in Ohio.) It’s cool to know that our culture is most likely a branch off from a Yukon culture, and that it’s an important part of the cuisine up there!

    • @VonW0lf3N5t31N
      @VonW0lf3N5t31N Před měsícem +1

      @@vidblogger12 That's amazing! How does your starter taste? Yes, everyone who came to the Klondike gold rush landed in either Skagway, AK or Haines, AK. There were two major routes to Dawson City Yukon and all started there! So early Alaska and Yukon are definitely kinfolk in that history. So amazing you have starter from back then!

  • @firefly5247
    @firefly5247 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Perhaps an idea of why the recipe calls to boil the bran - even without a modern understanding of microbiology, people have known for a very long time that different regions' wild bacteria and yeast strains have different properties when used for brewing or baking. It's even invoked as an illustrative metaphor in the Bible (Matthew 16:5-12), where Jesus warns about "foreign yeast" to mean heretical teachings, and the disciples take it as baking advice. (EDIT: whoops, wrong book/chapter originally - although Mark contains a similar story, Matthew is more candid about the interpretation.)
    The original author of this recipe (Charles Read of New Jersey based on a cursory Google) in the 18th century could have been similarly suspicious of the "rye bran surface" microbiome, intentionally preferring spontaneous fermentation from microbes residing in his town's air and on his own personal kitchenware. New Jersey seems to have been a fairly large settlement for the time, and I'm no historian, but it seems plausible that they'd be importing a lot of their grain from other colonies. The bran could have changed hands several times by the time it got to Mr. Read, or worse, contaminated with ergot fungus from the beginning. Perhaps the only way for bakers to get a consistent product would be to boil it first and rely on the local microbiome for the heavy lifting.
    Fascinating video regardless - I love the intersection of biology and food history 😁

  • @maksphoto78
    @maksphoto78 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thank you, Pen Jillette, for this amazing presentation.

  • @jansenart0
    @jansenart0 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Sounds like we need a part 2.

  • @sumbius1576
    @sumbius1576 Před 4 měsíci +4

    It feels weird to hear sourdough being "strange". It has remained popular in northern Europe especially for rye bread so to me it seems perfectly normal bread but seems like it wasn't as popular among anglos. Interesting

    • @Finwolven
      @Finwolven Před 4 měsíci

      Sourdough process is really quite vital for making bread from what was mainly rye flour - and the yeast lives on quite happily in the wooden troughs used to make the rye dough creating a 'leaven' every time the trough was used.

    • @kamilpotato3764
      @kamilpotato3764 Před 4 měsíci

      Same in Slavic countries.

  • @hairyjohn5825
    @hairyjohn5825 Před 4 měsíci +7

    They made soda bread a lot in the old days!

    • @oldasyouromens
      @oldasyouromens Před 4 měsíci +3

      Much more of a 1860s to 1950s thing, actually. Bicarbonate wasn't popularized in Ireland and England until 1860s. Scones and soda bread became easy to make then. Before then, there would be much inexpensive bread made from potatoes in Ireland and Scotland. Sometimes they used pearl ash, sometimes sourdough, sometimes old dough from the previous batch, and sometimes barm, depending on availability

    • @jlennon1779
      @jlennon1779 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@oldasyouromens Variety is the spice of life... and bread. 😅

  • @Mirokuofnite
    @Mirokuofnite Před 3 měsíci +2

    Out here in California the 49ers brought the sourdough and its been here ever since.

  • @jamesjustus6568
    @jamesjustus6568 Před 4 měsíci +13

    Great history lesson! I have loved sourdough since first learning about it in regard to the Yukon Gold Rush in my youth. There are accounts of the stampeders placing their sourdough starter in their bags of flour to keep it safe and insulated from freezing while traveling to their next camp, without much detail. The method you’ve shown makes a whole lot of sense how it was done now. We’ve kept starter for coming up on 25 years, and beyond using it at home we also use it when we overland/base camp for extended periods. Less for convenience, because honestly a package of yeast or a can of biscuits is of course easier to an extent; more because we’ve done it long enough it’s familiar and no hardship. Of course with modern coolers it’s easy to transport a pot of starter around easily, but now we’ll have to try this for fun.

    • @chrysanthemum8233
      @chrysanthemum8233 Před 4 měsíci

      There's a line in a Jack London novel (White Fang? or Call of the Wild?) that took place in the Yukon Gold Rush saying that some of the miners were called "Sourdoughs" because they had been out in remote areas for so long that they had no other leavener, so they made their bread with sourdough starter.

  • @WholeBibleBelieverWoman
    @WholeBibleBelieverWoman Před 4 měsíci +3

    This is really interesting. It also at least somehow solved a mystery I have wondered about for several years, when someone posted on CZcams on a page teaching about sourdough bread that her great grandmother used to always add 1/4 tsp. ginger for each loaf of sourdough bread. The person who posted had no idea why she did it. And I still don't know -- but at least now I know this was something being done a really long time ago! It's also very interesting that they used molasses instead of honey (which I believe is typical today in some rye breads). Oh! Now I see in the post above mine that someone is saying that ginger helped to make the dough rise. Interesting! (I actually put some ginger in my sourdough bread I am making today (and baking tomorrow after leaving it in the fridge overnight.) I like to extend the proofing time as it seems to help make the bread more sour -- and by using the fridge I don't worry I will over-proof it.

    • @mvv700
      @mvv700 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Ohh! Let us know how it turned out with the ginger! :)

    • @WholeBibleBelieverWoman
      @WholeBibleBelieverWoman Před 4 měsíci

      Came out great, but no way to know how much a part of coming out great the ginger played, but will keep using it. You can't really tell that it is there.@@mvv700

    • @WholeBibleBelieverWoman
      @WholeBibleBelieverWoman Před 3 měsíci

      It came out great -- but darn it, I made another loaf today and FORGOT the ginger!@@mvv700

  • @whysoscared435
    @whysoscared435 Před 2 měsíci +2

    As a German for whom sourdough is the no.1 cultural heritage (together with beer and cars), this is very interesting to watch!

  • @RealBradMiller
    @RealBradMiller Před 4 měsíci +2

    Excellent video!! 130 year old spurdough starter, that is amazing!! I would love to buy an old starter and keep it like a pet!

  • @Brooke2000
    @Brooke2000 Před 4 měsíci +8

    I loved listening to the history of sourdough….the whole video was fantastic.

    • @suupkalvers2244
      @suupkalvers2244 Před 4 měsíci +1

      The history of sour dough is 6000 years old.

  • @Theggman83
    @Theggman83 Před 4 měsíci +3

    My wife is on a sourdough kick. This morning we had sourdough waffles. 🤣

    • @briannawalker4793
      @briannawalker4793 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Oooo, how did they turn out?

    • @Theggman83
      @Theggman83 Před 4 měsíci +5

      @@briannawalker4793 they tasted fine. But lately it's been sour dough bread, and sour dough banana bread, an sour dough English muffins and sour dough donuts... I'm gonna have a sour dough muffin top. 😂🤣

  • @nomadben
    @nomadben Před 4 měsíci +1

    I've recently started baking, so I love these episodes you guys do about bread. Your videos help me ease my anxiety and relax. Great work guys.

  • @andreiachim5981
    @andreiachim5981 Před 4 měsíci +1

    This was just so great and informative! I love these videos where history and cooking intertwine!

  • @allentoyokawa9068
    @allentoyokawa9068 Před 4 měsíci +10

    Tiktok is garbage

  • @beckypennington79
    @beckypennington79 Před 4 měsíci +2

    I really enjoy the live stream but my favorites are the ones where you guys are all doing something from back in the day thanks

  • @PerfectlyImperfectCookingYT
    @PerfectlyImperfectCookingYT Před 4 měsíci +1

    This is exactly the content I watch youtube for. Amazing to be able to experience how life looked like long ago 🥰

  • @dickiepea
    @dickiepea Před 4 měsíci +1

    Microbiologist here. Boiling the wheat bran will help release essential nutrients from the grain including B vitamins and amino acids. This would actually be more relevant to building starters / pre ferments with Barm (beer yeast have pickier nutrient needs) so I wonder if it's a hold over from that method.

  • @madmh6421
    @madmh6421 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Found more pone notes for earlier post:
    No amounts, just have to use common sense to what is below. Add all ingredients after meal has been scalded and had time to sour.
    *small amount of flour, quite a bit less than normal corn bread, more like a dusting at a time, as needed, I seem to recall
    *sugar, or sweetener of choice, we had a small orchard, so raw honey was available, not all years was processed sugar available
    *yes, baking powder
    *buttermilk
    SORRY to be such a bother, yet have such little information to share at this time. I have Mother's more complete recipe packed away in my notes and memory somewhere. I tried this a few years back and worked pretty well for me! Getting too old and infirmed now days!
    Thank-you!!!

  • @TheRockbanner
    @TheRockbanner Před 3 měsíci

    Incredible video. Love the history, love the script, love the presentation. My sincere congratulations and, most of all, thank you for such a great channel, ran by great people.

  • @hranko3143
    @hranko3143 Před 3 měsíci

    I always enjoy seeing this man on your channel. He's a very good speaker.

  • @mojavebohemian814
    @mojavebohemian814 Před 4 měsíci +1

    thank you, one of the best videos on the channel!

  • @debbralehrman5957
    @debbralehrman5957 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Thanks Ryan and Crew👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 Miss you guys on Friday at the Tavern😔