600 ml lukewarm water
70 g white flour
70 g common sugar
10 g salt
Put them in a plastic basin, in that order, don't mix. Cover
with a cloth.
After 24 hrs, mix gently 2x a day.
After 5 days, there is a lot of activity.
Take 200 g of the mixture above, put it in a loosely covered
jar (I used a 1 liter plastic coke bottle with a loose plastic top)
and add
400 g warm water
70 g white flour
70 g sugar
5 g salt
Mix well.
The next day it's fermenting so fast you can make bread with
it, as long as you add a generous amount of sugar to the recipe.
It smells yeasty, sweetish, and slightly alcoholic, but not
sour.
Anyone have any idea what the biological agents are ?
TIA
[]'s
In article <2kmtobp0ofnmtb3j9n4elsrs7ecd35jvk9@4ax.com>,
Shadow <Sh@dow.br> wrote:
600 ml lukewarm water
70 g white flour
70 g common sugar
10 g salt
Put them in a plastic basin, in that order, don't mix. Cover
with a cloth.
After 24 hrs, mix gently 2x a day.
After 5 days, there is a lot of activity.
Take 200 g of the mixture above, put it in a loosely covered
jar (I used a 1 liter plastic coke bottle with a loose plastic top)
and add
400 g warm water
70 g white flour
70 g sugar
5 g salt
Mix well.
The next day it's fermenting so fast you can make bread with
it, as long as you add a generous amount of sugar to the recipe.
It smells yeasty, sweetish, and slightly alcoholic, but not
sour.
Anyone have any idea what the biological agents are ?
It seems similar to the Herman friendship cake/bread thing, although
some of them also have milk in.
600 ml lukewarm water
70 g white flour
70 g common sugar
10 g salt
Put them in a plastic basin, in that order, don't mix. Cover
with a cloth.
After 24 hrs, mix gently 2x a day.
After 5 days, there is a lot of activity.
Take 200 g of the mixture above, put it in a loosely covered
jar (I used a 1 liter plastic coke bottle with a loose plastic top)
and add
400 g warm water
70 g white flour
70 g sugar
5 g salt
Mix well.
The next day it's fermenting so fast you can make bread with
it, as long as you add a generous amount of sugar to the recipe.
It smells yeasty, sweetish, and slightly alcoholic, but not
sour.
Anyone have any idea what the biological agents are ?
600 ml lukewarm water
70 g white flour
70 g common sugar
10 g salt
On 19-Jul-16 19:12, Shadow wrote:
Wow! Not at all sure. Never heard of a scheme like that. If you've
600 ml lukewarm water
70 g white flour
70 g common sugar
10 g salt
Put them in a plastic basin, in that order, don't mix. Cover
with a cloth.
After 24 hrs, mix gently 2x a day.
After 5 days, there is a lot of activity.
Take 200 g of the mixture above, put it in a loosely covered
jar (I used a 1 liter plastic coke bottle with a loose plastic top)
and add
400 g warm water
70 g white flour
70 g sugar
5 g salt
Mix well.
The next day it's fermenting so fast you can make bread with
it, as long as you add a generous amount of sugar to the recipe.
It smells yeasty, sweetish, and slightly alcoholic, but not
sour.
Anyone have any idea what the biological agents are ?
TIA
[]'s
made it, how's it doing?
Shadow <Sh@dow.br> wrote:
600 ml lukewarm water
70 g white flour
70 g common sugar
10 g salt
The inclusion of salt is surprising. Shouldn't it inhibit the >micro-organisms, at least a little?
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