
Fruity Sourdough Tea Bread
Preparation Time | 270 mins
Cooking Time | 45 mins
Total Time | 315 mins
Servings | 10
By Stacey Hall
The Leaven and Fruit
Ingredients
- 2-3 tbsp of your Sourdough Starter
- 75g of Bread Flour
- 75 ml of Water
- 475ml of hot, black Tea
- 1 tbsp of Honey
- 80g of Currants
- 80g of Sultanas
- Zest of 1 Orange
- 1 tsp of Nutmeg
- 1 tsp of Mixed Spice
- 1 tsp of Cinnamon
Method
Step 1
The Leaven - In a bowl, mix 2 to 3 good tbsp of your sourdough starter, 75g of strong bread flour and 75ml of water. Once combined, cover with clingfilm and allow to ferment for 5-7 hours.
Step 2
An hour or so before your leaven is ready to use, add your fruit, orange zest, honey and spices to 475 ml of black tea.
The Dough
Ingredients
- 700g of Bread Flour (organic, ideally)
- The same 475 ml of Black Tea you have stewed your fruit in
- 50ml of water
- 1 tbsp of Salt
Method
Step 1
Drain your fruit from the tea and set aside
Step 2
Pop your leaven into a bowl or your mixer if you want your dough hook to do the work for you, along with 475ml of brewed tea. Mix until your leaven has dissolved.
Step 3
Add 700 g of strong bread flour to your leaven water and either knead with your hands or use your dough hook and mixer. Once combined, you should have a very sticky dough. Cover with a cling film and leave to rest for an hour.
Step 4
Whilst your dough is resting, combine 1 tbsp of salt and 50ml of water. Leave to dissolve whilst your dough rests.
Step 5
Let the stretching and folding begin - Pour your salt water into your dough - it won't absorb on it's own so you now need to stretch and fold your dough 4 to 6 times every half an hour.
Step 6
On your last stretch and fold, add your mixed fruit.
Step 7
After stretching and folding, your dough will still be quite wet - don't worry! Lightly dust your counter with flour and cut your dough in half. Shape your two loaves by folding the dough again. Cover and leave for half an hour or so
Step 8
Whilst your dough is resting for the last time, prepare your bread baskets. If you don't have bread baskets, you can use a bowl and a tea towel. Rub some flour into the fabric of your bread baskets or tea towels - ensure you cover all the fabric (this is to ensure your dough doesn't stick whilst it rises).
Step 9
Complete one final fold and shape of your loaves, cover and pop your dough into your bread baskets. Cover with clingfilm and pop them in the fridge to rise slowly overnight. Be sure to leave them in the fridge for 12-15 hours. You can leave out on the side overnight, but this will make the dough very soft and scoring it will be tricky.
The Bake
Method
Step 1
Prepare your Dutch oven. All your need is a cast iron pan (like a Le Creuset casserole pot) with a lid. Pop your pan in the oven and crank it up to 260 degrees. Let your oven preheat and your Dutch oven warm.
Step 2
To avoid your loaf getting stuck in your Dutch oven, turn one of your loaves out onto a piece of parchment paper and carefully lift your loaf into your hot Dutch oven. Using a sharp knife, score your dough with a cut down the middle (you can make a fancy pattern if you want- scoring will not ruin your loaf).
Step 3
Pop the lid on your Dutch oven and bake at 260 for 20 minutes.
Step 4
Turn your oven down to 220 and bake for a further 10 minutes.
Step 5
Take the lid off your Dutch oven and bake for a further 15-18 minutes.
Step 6
Remove from the oven and place your sourdough loaf onto a wire rack. Allow your loaf to completely cool before you slice, otherwise you will end up with huge gaping holes.
Step 7
Repeat the baking process for your other loaf. Top tip - Once both your loaves have cooled, slice them and freeze. That way, you can simply take as much out of the freezer as an when, and all your hard work won't go stale!