Walnut & Blue Cheese Sourdough Bread Recipe - Strayed from the Table (2024)

  • ByLizzie Moult
  • February 4, 2015
  • 7 Comments
  • 06 Recipes

When Roy comes back from workI always want to make him something special for while he is home. This swing home I have played with sourdough recipes to create a walnut and blue cheese sourdough bread, two of Roy’s favourite foods. Am I good wife or what.

I love making bread, there is something very therapeutic from mixing the dough by hand and then later forming it. Nurturing it to keep it warm, out of the wind all in hopes that it does rise for you. Sourdough is like a baby it can’t express what it needs to help it grow, yet you keep checking on it all the same. From my experience the one thing that will help is warmth. Even on a hot day I will cover my loaf of bread with a plastic container followed by some towels or a blanket to keep that warmth in. It is really important to not let your sourdough get cold as it will take even longer to prove.

When adding the yummy bits to your bread, in this case walnuts and blue cheese, it is important to do this at the end of kneading. You want to keep your blue cheese chunks large and the walnuts whole. If you add them too early the cheese will melt and then just be dispersed through the bread. I prefer to see the chunks of cheese so I can enjoy them.

Later this month I will be running a Sourdough Workshop for eight people at the farm. You will learn to make your own starter and a loaf of bread. It will be a hands on morning along with eating some yummy breads. Click here for more info.

If you want to kick-start making your own sourdough here is a recipe to make your own SOURDOUGH STARTER.

How to make your own SOURDOUGH STARTER– Click Here

WALNUT & BLUE CHEESE SOURDOUGH RECIPE

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Author: Lizzie Moult, www.strayedtable.com

Recipe type: Bread, Sourdough

Serves: 1

Ingredients

  • 3 cups (575g) Sourdough Starter
  • 1 cup (250 ml) Water
  • 4 cups (600g) Plain flour
  • 1 cup (150g) Plain flour
  • 7g Salt
  • 1 cup (100g) Walnuts
  • 100 g Blue cheese, crumbled

Instructions

  1. In a large mixing bowl place your sourdough starter and add a cup of water. Mix to combine. (At this stage I feed my starter and set it aside for later use)
  2. Add four cups of plain flour to the starter and water mixture in the bowl. Stir to combine but do not overwork. Allow to rest for two hours.
  3. Returning back to the sourdough it may have grown a little in that time but not overly. I add an additional cup of flour along with the salt. I then bring the dough together.
  4. Sprinkle a little flour on a board and pour out the dough, lightly need the bread for a few minutes.
  5. Stretch out the dough to a flat rectangular shape and spread with walnuts and blue cheese.
  6. Continue to fold the dough to mix through the chunky bits through.
  7. Shape your bread, I like to make a round shape then cut a square on the top. At this point place your bread on to a baking tray lined with baking paper. If making a round shape I add a couple of rolled up tea towels around the dough to support it as it grows. i place them under the baking paper so the dough doesn't stick to it.
  8. Allow your bread to rest for 4 - 5 hours in a warm place covered with plastic. If it is extremely hot you will find your bread wont take as long to rise.
  9. Pre-heat your oven to 200'c. Then bake your bread for 45 - 55 minutes, checking that it sounds hollow when taped from underneath. Allow your bread to cool on a rack before slicing.

Walnut & Blue Cheese Sourdough Bread Recipe - Strayed from the Table (5)

Lizzie Moult

Planning, cooking, chasing kids & running an online business; it might seem like there is a lot going on. Yet Lizzie is all about living simply and creating a flexible lifestyle that enables plenty of travel, adventure and quality time. A lifestyle writer and photographer for over 10 years for numerous publications, working online for over 14 years Lizzie also works as Cognitive Behavioural Therapist to help people live a life with passion & purpose without people-pleasing, imposter syndrome and seeking approval at www.lizziemoult.com.

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7 Responses

  1. Homemade bread is the best! We make it often, but never with walnut and blue cheese. Sounds like something we should try, yes? Yes. 🙂

    Reply

  2. I’m not a fan of blue chees, but I really want to be! I think this bread would be perfect shaped into a baguette and cut really finely to accompany a cheese plate! Yum! Just spread a slab of quince paste!

    Reply

    1. You are a genius, that sounds like a great idea to form the bread like that.

      Reply

  3. I’m proving bread now and I wish I’d thought of this before now! We’d love this bread.

    Reply

  4. In my sourdough experience, if you up the moisture hydration to say 75%, you will get a much airier bread with the crumb full of holes. Bake it in a Dutch oven as well

    Reply

  5. Is 3 cups of sourdough starter correct ?

    Reply

    1. For this recipe yes, I used a very thick sourdough starter not runny at all

      Reply

Walnut & Blue Cheese Sourdough Bread Recipe - Strayed from the Table (9)

Welcome

We are Roy & Lizzie an Aussie couple, who started food & travel blogging back in 2008, documenting our adventures, food discoveries, different cultures, and the natural world. We are here to inspire more people to leave their table and explore the world.

We are currently based in Fort William, Scotland, UK.

Got questions? Let us know!
> contact us here <

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Walnut & Blue Cheese Sourdough Bread Recipe - Strayed from the Table (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to sourdough bread? ›

The secret to sourdough is simple: water. The more water you add to your dough will affect how open the crumb (bigger holes and softer texture) will be once it's baked.

What is the most expensive sourdough bread in the world? ›

The Roquefort and Almond Sourdough

The bread is the finest one can buy in the Britain's Harrods for £15 (US $24.50).

What is the secret behind the sour of sourdough bread? ›

A sourdough starter is made up of wild yeast and bacteria working together. The bacteria is where the sour flavor is coming from! Lactic Acid Bacteria are most active in the mid 80-90 degrees F, but that speeds up the wild yeast which prefer a more mild temperature of mid 70s F.

What happens if you do too many stretch and folds? ›

However, it is possible to overfold dough. When this happens you could create too much tension and your bread will bake with a tighter crumb. The worst-case scenario is overworked dough may tear.

Why do you put vinegar in sourdough bread? ›

In fact the acidity is a dough conditioner that softens the texture of whole grains and makes the bread more pliable. Hack: apple cider vinegar. I often add about a tablespoon of ACV to bread as a dough conditioner.

What is the best flour for sourdough bread? ›

The best flour blend for creating a new sourdough starter is 50% whole-meal flour (whole wheat or whole rye) and 50% bread flour or all-purpose flour. I recommend a 50/50 mix of whole wheat flour and bread flour.

Is Panera sourdough bread real sourdough? ›

The Panera website lists the full ingredients of its "Classic Sourdough Loaf," and they're a far cry from true sourdough's minimal lineup of flour, water, salt, and live culture. In addition to wheat and malted barley flour, the sourdough starter contains folic acid.

Is Aldi sourdough bread real sourdough? ›

ALDI has “real” sourdough bread (no yeast). Being somewhat gluten intolerant, I have found “real” sourdough works for me, no bloating etc.

Is grocery store sourdough real sourdough? ›

Despite the fact that traditional sourdough ingredients are flour, water, and salt, many store-bought versions include added yeast, ascorbic acid, vinegar, and oil. So, although many grocery stores may carry bread labeled “sourdough”, more often than not they are in fact fake sourdough.

What makes sourdough taste better? ›

The sourdough starter is the real secret to getting a good fermentation going. Essentially your sourdough starter is old dough, which has already pre-fermented and contains Lactobacillus culture. Lactobacillus culture has a sour taste and is an active culture that lives off natural yeast spores from the air.

What flour makes sourdough more sour? ›

Whole Grain and Rye Flours. Whole grain and rye flours provide minerals and enzymes that can influence acid production in sourdoughs. The higher mineral content of whole grains acts as a buffer in the dough so that more acid can be produced during extended fermentation.

Why doesn't my sourdough bread taste like sourdough? ›

In general, more minerals yield more sour taste. Using flours with more ash, or mineral, content, will yield more sour taste. If you can't get enough ash, adding a bit of whole wheat flour to your recipe, which is what is done with the 20% Bran Flour, will boost the sour of a bread.

What is the Rubaud method? ›

The Rubaud method is a popular method of hand mixing the dough. The Rubaud method develops gluten strength up front in the process. In the Rubuaud method, you gently lift and pull the dough in a bowl, mimicking the motion of a diving-arm mixer (or perhaps the diving arm-mixer is mimicking the Rubaud method!)

Why don't you knead sourdough? ›

When done correctly, stretching and folding sourdough will strengthen the gluten and gently incorporate air into the dough without the need for kneading. It will also give your sourdough loaf a lofty high rise and more open interior crumb.

Can you let sourdough rise overnight on the counter? ›

You can cold ferment or cold proof your sourdough overnight because the cold temperature of the fridge stops the dough from over fermenting. If you were to leave your shaped dough on the counter overnight, you'd wake up to a soupy mess (unless it was freezing in your home).

What makes sourdough bread better? ›

Sourdough relies on a mix of wild yeast and lactic acid bacteria, rather than baker's yeast, to leaven the dough. It's richer in nutrients, less likely to spike your blood sugar, contains lower amounts of gluten, and is generally easier to digest than bread made with baker's yeast.

What makes sourdough bread more flavorful? ›

Longer fermentation

As your dough proofs, the good bacteria eats up sugars and starches in the flour. This decreases the sweet undertone and creates a more sour undertone. The longer you ferment, the more starches and sugars the bacteria eats, and the more sour your bread will be.

What is the secret to fluffy sourdough? ›

Keeping the lid on for the first part of baking allows steam to expand between the gluten fibers to rise the bread and create a fluffy loaf. Step 4: Remove the lid and bake for an additional 12-14 minutes or until the crust is crispy and golden brown. Once you take the lid off, the bread likely won't rise anymore.

What makes sourdough bread unique? ›

Sourdough gets its signature sourness from its ingredients – specifically, the lactic acid. The yeast within the sourdough produces carbon dioxide gas, which leavens the dough and the lactic acid bacteria produces lactic acid, which is what gives sourdough its sour flavour.

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