Double experiment - using plain flour and creating a crust that won't go soft and making a smaller loaf.
300g plain flour : Pantry brand from Lidl 9.1% protein compared to the 12 of bread flour.
65% hydration, salt, scoop of that fake butter for cakes.
It took all of the water straight away and stayed as a sausage in the mixer I had a touch and it was a tacky and I knew I didn't need to change it.
After the first mix it window-pained easily without any lumps but the window teared if you pulled it wide. You could tell the gluten was different. Stretching and window pain testing was much easier than bread flour which got me worried that it was too weak. When I did some stretch and folds it really toughened up. Left it, stretch and folded again, made a boule, then got a pyrex bowl to used as a banneton aaaaaand no clean cloth so I used a pair of knickers from the clean washing pile.
Preheated the dutch oven (hate that term, it's a bloody stew pot!) turned the dough out onto a silicone liner thing from the Poundland that are fantastic. Screw that parchment malarky. Cross slash with a razor blade, dropped in the pot, lid on, bosh.
20 minutes full with lid on, 10 minutes with the loaf on the shelf on 75% power, then 10 minutes FULL POWAH!
There it is on the right next to a 400g bread flour loaf. When I first opened the lid I thought rah! And later when I picked it up it felt light and that's when you know it's not going to be a stodge bomb.
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Aaaand the crumb. I'm not comfortable with that term either but hey-ho.
Left mine - right - a tiger loaf from Asda I managed to snatch out of the hands of an old woman and hail-mary to my friend who was waiting at the self-service checkout. A 46 metre throw, a personal best. I also took silver in the baguette javelin.
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Mine's a bit more open. Wooohooo. So you can use plain flour if you have to.
It's still early doors for me and bread but what I've learned is knead more, rest and do it again. Learn to know when it's hydrated enough by getting enough water for the hydration you want and leaving a little bit back. Get a feel for when it's risen enough. I more than often let it go too far so it would fall back. Less will mean it'll grow in the oven anyway. And the shaping, the tension - that loaf would have been a puddle with promise if I hadn't learned that
But - I still have to use the stew pot to get a good loaf. My tinned loaves are still crap! Yes, I've got a huge steel bakestone, do the water tray, spray, ice cubes and I'm still rubbbbbish at it. Got something left to learn, though, innit boss. Which is nice.
Look for Bake With Jack on youtube. He refuses to use cups as a measurement which means already I would give a few of my spare kidneys to him if he 'kneaded' them and he's the one that showed me adding flour while kneading is bad. I hate having sticky hands so if you stir things together with a spoon and leave it as a 'shaggy mass' for 15 minutes it immediately like you've kneaded it for a bit and got the horrible bit already done.
And I'm shutting up - this is just a loaf of pigging bread after all.