This is one batch of dough. It had sponge of about 8 hrs.+, and then mixed to include about a tablespoon of oil and a teaspoon of ground flax seed. The first rise was in the 'fridge overnight and then at room temperature until doubled (about 3 hrs. on the kitchen counter). At that point, one loaf was docked and baked, the rectangular loaf.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg7uQAwZzb63TTh0E0iA4E8RBRTg8XW_NkrSnDjPXBzR5H5VMTqvM2sBzFgNrb0zSxN6QbexOgTzIdKumsEmHgX2eENVocBMVOUJPE_1lrCV8zKCiZa8cbsgwUzhCpgFeiLK31luEv_HTk/s400/072+September+2011+133.jpg)
The other half of the dough was punched down and shaped into an oval, and had a second rise on the counter, at 73F. After almost doubling, it was then docked and baked. Both loaves were baked for 35 minutes in a 400F oven without steam.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhOkm-myfSop3mM8QUR6CuJ6ygtECNRAsMeXMvulGXsULSFQxRMjBqpkRo5xGf2qsThNezHpDPFIHHY_MPheK3bi0kMsTwGN8E57DpQm9t2XsBD1CpKdPHkvJDMONPCNX2nCMq9NRZjVTg/s400/072+September+2011+128.jpg)
The flavor is only slightly more sour in the oval loaf. The size of the holes in the crumb is the same. The big difference is in the crust. After a single rise, the crust is pale and soft, like most Americans (and my kids) like bread. After two rises, it's darker and crunchy, in a more European style crust.
In this one experiment, I learned 3 useful things: 1) this sourdough is strong enough for a sponge and two rises, 2) a second rise = more crunch, and 3) if I want to make it dramatically more sour or get big bubbles, I'm going to have to work hard at it. And for #3, I probably won't bother because my kids hate real sour with holes the jelly can fall through, and I'm okay with that. It tastes great, and I'll probably only do a second rise if that's more convenient to the schedule of the rest of my life.