Bread has acidic smell and taste
I made a sort of "starter" to use instead of dried yeast for making bread.
It was basically a loose dough with a tiny amount of dried yeast. When I bake I take some from the box and refresh the starter with flour and water.
It worked pretty well for a couple of months but now my bread has an unpleasantly acidic smell and taste. The start doesn't smell bad. It still has the same smell as before.
Initially I thought it was the flour (I started to add wholewheat to the mix) but today I tried with just plain white and it's still bad.
Is the starter ruined? I can avoid it going bad in the future?
Best Answer
It's highly likely the lactic acid bacteria in your starter (these were living on the wheat in the field, some maybe from your hands) are more active than the yeasts. You need to dilute the acid out of the starter, feed it more often and keep the whole shebang above 16°C, preferably 18-20°C (although you can still store it in the fridge). Low acidity, more feeding and 18-20°C will raise the activity level of the yeasts relative to the bacteria and generally keep the yeast enzymes, bacteria enzymes and wheat enzymes in harmony.
Consider Ed Wood's "washing" process, it's a very effective starter management procedure. It's going to be a bit different for a mother dough method but the ideas are still the same. I've written about this here before but for somewhat different questions.
Don't pour off the hooch. This stuff is the dark liquid that forms on top of a starter when dormant in the fridge. It is protective (acids, alcohols and enzymes) for you and the microflora, and helps the microflora digest food. It actually increases starter activity. Ed Wood says the starter is contaminated if the hooch forms in the middle or the bottom.
Don't worry about weighing exact amounts of flour and water when you're feeding it. Just focus on the sourness and the consistency. A thicker consistency gives a home cook more flexibility with time and it's easier to gauge the activity level.
Molds are really quite slow compared to yeast and bacteria, especially with hooch retention. The starter has to sit there for a long time to become moldy.
Ed Wood's Washing Process
- Stir hooch into starter.
- Increase the volume 3-5 times with tepid water
- Stir until homogeneous
- Pour off 4/5ths of it
- Tip in flour and stir until homogeneous
- If not a consistency you like then add more flour or water and stir.
- Wait until it has risen double or triple, don't worry about how long it takes.
- Repeat several times if it still tastes sour.
Good Luck
Pictures about "Bread has acidic smell and taste"
Quick Answer about "Bread has acidic smell and taste"
But if yeast bread is left to ferment for too long, acids can multiply and overpower the taste of the bread. They can still produce gas therefore the dough will rise, but the flavour of the bread can be sour. Another reason for a sour-smelling bread is too many acid ingredients were used in the dough.Why does my bread have a chemical smell?
Yeast contamination can occasionally occur in bread after baking which can produce a chemical smell that is similar to acetone. Yeast does not survive the baking process, but bread can become contaminated with "wild" yeast during the cooling, slicing or packaging processes (post processing contamination).What does it mean when bread taste sour?
Strange, sour taste or smell Problem: Your bread has a fermented, alcoholic smell or taste to it. Causes: Too much yeast. Over-proofed.Why does my bread smell like vinegar?
Bread giving off a vinegary odour is a common occurrence, and it's nothing to be concerned about. It's caused by over-fermentation of the dough or combining several acidic ingredients in a recipe.Why does my bread smell funny?
A: What you are smelling is yeast fermentation\u2014the conversion of sugars into alcohol and carbon dioxide. When dough overferments, it gives off a stale beer smell. Some of this alcohol will bake off, but some of it may remain in the finished bread.The Taste Song (SINGLE) | Original Educational Learning Songs \u0026 Nursery Rhymes for Kids by ChuChu TV
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Maria das Dores, Chelsey Horne, eric montanah, Kenneth