a San Francisco Tradition
From the time of the California gold rush in 1849, San Francisco has been renowned for its sourdough bread. For decades it appealed to the palates of gold miners, local residents and tourists alike. Closely associated with the bay region, the bread's unique flavor has variously been attributed to the city's fog, climate and local yeast.
Sourdough bread is traditionally made using a starter or sponge, a fermented dough-like mixture of flour and water containing a complex colony of microorganisms, including a wild yeast which leavens the bread. Another microorganism is a lactobacillus which produces the lactic and acetic acids that give the bread its tangy flavor. When making sourdough bread, a portion of the sponge is mixed into the bread dough which is then allowed to proof. During proofing, the dough is held for several hours in a temperature-controlled environment of 85° to 90° F. The remainder of the sponge is refrigerated and used the following day.
During the golden age of San Francisco sourdough, several bakeries in the bay area produced the bread. The names are familiar to long-time area residents: Parisian was made in San Francisco; Toscana, Colombo and Baroni were made in Oakland. Pisano was made in Redwood City. The bread was distributed to regional grocers upon whose shelves could be found a half dozen or more different brands at any given time. In total, the bakeries turned out thousands of loaves and rolls each day.
The area's most popular sourdough was produced by the Larraburu Brothers bakery. Founded in 1896, the Larraburu bakery closed in May 1976. The company had been involved in years-long litigation arising from an accident in which a Larraburu delivery truck struck and seriously injured a small child. In addition, one of the owners had taken on a great deal of debt in order to buy out his business partners. The large amount of debt contributed to the bakery's then-existing financial difficulties, resulting in its ultimate demise.
So popular was San Francisco sourdough that in the late 1960s, Dr. Leo Kline and Frank Sugihara of the USDA Research Center in Albany, California, studied sourdough samples from five local bakeries (Larraburu, Parisian, Colombo, Toscana and Baroni). They identified a naturally-occurring yeast known today as Candida humilis, which leavens the bread. The researchers also discovered a microorganism, now named Lactobacillus sanfranciscensis. It produces the two acids that give San Francisco sourdough its unique flavor. Contrary to popular myth, the lactobacillus and wild yeast are not endemic to San Francisco. Current thinking is that airborne yeast settles on wheat in the field and some is picked up in the milling process. The exact origin of the lactobacillus is uncertain, but it and the yeast have been found the world over. Authentic San Francisco sourdough is made from just three ingredients: white wheat flour, water and salt. No baker's yeast is used; the bread is leavened entirely by the naturally-occurring yeast in the starter. It wasn't until the USDA study that lactic acid and acetic acid were identified as the bread's souring agents.
Beginning in the 1980s, bakeries dating back to the gold-rush era were acquired by corporate entities. Efficiency was introduced to the manufacturing process by cutting corners, changing recipes and shortening proofing times (the traditional manufacturing process typically requires about 16 hours to produce a single loaf of bread). By the early 21st century these bakeries had closed and the legacy gold-rush-era brands had disappeared. One legacy brand survives. It caters mainly to tourists, but in this writer's opinion it is markedly inferior to the erstwhile brands of old.
Among San Francisco's many icons and traditions — cable cars, the bridges, fisherman's wharf and many more — sadly, in the twenty-first century the tradition of genuine gold-rush-era sourdough is largely extinct.
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