Shared by Jessamyn Rodriguez
Pâte Fermentée
Yield: 1 ¼ cups (risen and deflated)/300gThis recipe was shared by Jessamyn Rodriguez. Read more about her family in "Homemade Challah Left Its Mark on A Future Baking Queen" and try her recipe for traditional challah.
Pâte fermentée is an ingredient in many recipes in the lean and enriched doughs chapters. You need to make it eight to twenty-four hours before you bake your bread. This extra step extends fermentation time and allows you to achieve a light, flavorful loaf with less yeast. Pâte fermentée contains the ingredients of simple French bread dough—flour, water, yeast, and salt—so, in a pinch, you could bake and eat it. Unlike other types of pre-ferments, such as levain, pâte fermentée does not impart a sour flavor to the bread. Instead it adds depth of flavor and extends the shelf life of your bread. If you make bread often, you can save the trimmings from lean doughs to use in your pâte fermentée. For this Traditional Challah recipe, you will mix a batch of the pâte fermentée the day before, then refrigerate it until you are ready to bake.
Ingredients
- ½ cup plus 1 teaspoon/120 g
- Lukewarm water
- ⅔ teaspoon active dry yeast
- 1 ⅓ cups plus 1 tablespoon/180 g bread flour
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
Preparation
Step 1
Put the water and yeast in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a dough hook, then add the flour and salt. Mix on low speed for 2 minutes until combined into a shaggy dough. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and let stand at room temperature for 30 minutes.
Step 2
Refrigerate the mixture for a minimum of 8 hours and a maximum of 24. (There is no need to return it to room temperature before using.)
Step 3
If you’re measuring the pâte fermentée rather than weighing it, be sure to deflate it with a wooden spoon or with floured fingertips before measuring.