watercolor branch on sourdough

 

This was my fourth experiment with watercoloring on sourdough. For the first experiment check out watercolor blue leafs on sourdough.. That post contains tips and tricks.

I was testing out when to flour the loaf when I watercolored this loaf. I was wondering if the flour affects the visibility of the watercolors. Should you flour and then watercolor or watercolor and then flour? I floured this one after watercoloring, and found that it muted the colors a bit compared to the other loafs.

Interested to know what recipe I used? For the full review go here.

 

ingredients

  • red food gel

  • green food gel

  • 2 ounces of vodka

 

steps

  1. Prep Watercolors. Squeeze food gel into a small prep bowl. I recommend using no more than 1/4 teaspoon to start. In a separate bowl put 1-2 ounces of vodka.

    • Pro tip: If you are interested in a lighter version of your color, I would recommend getting a second bowl with half the amount of food gel.

  2. Prep bread. About 30 minutes before your dough is ready to go into the oven, it is time to do the painting. Turn out your loafs from your banneton as you normally would. Dust with flour or not, it is a preference thing.

    • To Dust with Flour: Lightly dust with flour using a sifter. Yes, you are putting on flour pre-painting. If you plan on having an intricate scoring design with your watercoloring, I would recommend it.

    • To Not Dust with Flour: If you are not a sourdough baker that likes to dust after turning out, you can skip this step. , as dusting after turning out can help enhance clarity for any scoring that occurs. If you plan on having one clean score line, you can always just dust around there.

  3. Watercolor! Using your brush, treat your vodka like water and add to your color. This will make it more viscous and more like a watercolor. Start painting! I recommend making a darker “brown” for your branch than you would typically because of the bake. After you get your branch painted, add your leafs!

    • Pro Tip: If left out, you will notice that you will have to add more vodka as it starts to evaporate. And unlike your normal watercolors, you do need to wash out your paint trays after you are done. It is still food.

  4. Score Loaf. I prefer to score the loaf after watercoloring because the exterior of the loaf is taught. After scoring, the loaf starts to relax and shift, making it a moving target to paint.

  5. Bake according to your recipe.

    • Fun Tip: I baked this bad boy on my Traeger grill.

Enjoy!

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