this post was submitted on 09 Sep 2023
20 points (100.0% liked)
Bready
1176 readers
7 users here now
Bready is a community for anything related to making homemade bread!
Bloomers, loafs, flatbreads, rye breads, wheat breads, sourdough breads, yeast breads - all fermented breads are welcome! Vienesse pastries like croissants are also welcome because technically they're breads too.
This is an English language only comminuty.
Rules:
- All posts must be bread or baking-related.
- No SPAM and advertising posts. If you want to promote your business - contact mods first to get an approval.
- No NSFW content.
- Try to share your recipe with your photos so everyone is able to recreate it.
- All recipes are public domain, recipe books are not. You can post any recipe invented by someone else, but you cannot post copyrighted work. That means no photos of book pages and screenshots of 3rd party web sites. Write the recipe down in text format instead.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Well, sourdough is yeast, just not concentrated. But it also has other microbes working, specifically lactobacilli.
It's the lactobacilli that make sourdough sour.
So, "better" is a matter of your intended results.
Generally, the longer you ferment with sourdough, the more acidic you'll get. And, generally, feeding the starter more frequently slightly reduces that acidity. It's about how populous the lactobacilli are when you start your dough. The lactobacilli aren't quite as fast growing as yeast, so when you feed more often, the yeast is a bit more present, and the lactobacilli a bit less.
Nothing wrong with commercial yeast at all. If that's what y'all prefer, taste wise, that's what y'all prefer. It works faster anyway, which is often preferable for a busy home.