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Submitted by Barefoot-Baker on November 3, 2009 - 12:05pm What Happened to my FocaccioFor the last several years I have been baking focaccio using Peter Reinhart's recipe (with some modifiations). The result has been uniformly excellent, until yesterday. Yesterday's focaccia was terrible; and I have no idea what went wrong. Here's the scenario: This is what I did with the latest attempt. I made the focaccio 2 weeks ago, used half (it was delicious) and stored half. Yesterday I took the second half from the freezer, allowed it to come to room temperature; stretched and oiled it, and put it into the refrigerator overnight. Yesterday I took it out, allowed it to come to room temperature, put toppings on it, allowed it to rise, and then baked it. It was awful!! There was no oven-spring; the dough never appeared to rise; and, when baked did not cook properly. One could still taste the flour, and there was no crumb. My question is: What happened? Why was the first half excellent, and the second half terrible? How did all the yeast die (if that's what happened)? Insights will be welcomed.
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I'm guessing ...
The yeast froze to death. You got some rise with warming due to the CO2 bubbles already in the dough but no new CO2 was made during the first part of the bake, thus poor oven spring.
David
My Focaccio
That sounds probable. However, does that mean that I can't store dough in the freezer? Or should I modify my method so that I can take the risen dough out of the freezer, add a small amount of a pre-ferment made while the frozen dough is warming, and proceed from there with a second rise,etc.?
Tom