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Recipe · Country Loaf · Same-Day

82% Hydration Same-Day Country Loaf

The pain de campagne approach: not pure white, not aggressively whole-grain, but a balanced mix that bakes into something with depth. Slightly tangier than a plain loaf, slightly sweeter than pure sourdough, and a workhorse for the kitchen.

Total time

5 hours

Active

60 minutes

Hydration

82%

Difficulty

⌬⌬⌬

A high-hydration dough wants to flatten on the counter. You manage it with folds instead of kneading, with a banneton instead of free-standing proof, and with a hot Dutch oven or stone that can hold the shape until the spring sets.

Same-day means start to finish in roughly four to six hours. The recipe leans on commercial yeast at a higher percentage and a warm bulk fermentation. You won't get cold-ferment depth, but the loaf is on the table the day you decide to bake.

Ingredients

1000g total dough. Yields 1 country loaf, ~900g baked.

Ingredient Grams Baker's %
Bread flour 367 g 75%
Whole wheat flour 123 g 25%
Water 402 g 82%
Salt 9.8 g 2%
Active sourdough starter (100% hydration) 98 g 20%

Schedule

  1. Hour 0
    Mix flour, water, yeast. Autolyse 20 minutes.
  2. Hour 0:20
    Add salt, mix until smooth.
  3. Hour 0:30
    First fold.
  4. Hour 1:00
    Second fold.
  5. Hour 1:30
    Third fold.
  6. Hour 2:00
    Bulk ferment until visibly puffy.
  7. Hour 3:30
    Final shape into a boule, proof in a floured banneton 45-60 minutes.
  8. Hour 5:00
    Score the loaf. Bake at 475°F covered for 25 minutes, then uncovered for 20 more minutes.

Method tips for this style

Hydrate the whole-grain portion separately for 30 minutes before adding the white flour. The whole grains absorb water more slowly, and pre-soaking them gives a more even final hydration in the dough.

What to expect

A dramatically open crumb with large holes throughout. The crust crisps and blisters at high temperature; the interior reads as professional artisan bread.

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