The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.
Doc Tracy's picture

Finally-Score homerun with new scale, mini RV oven and paver brick

December 22, 2009 - 5:15pm -- Doc Tracy
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After tossing about 3 loaves and a pizza this week and many more hohum loaves in the house and RV I finally scored the homerun! My scale showed up from Amazon (AWS Onyx). I made a "German Rye" off of the KA website. Converted it to grams myself and changed AP to 1/3 WW. (hate white flour). Added 50g VWG and adjusted this by subtracting from AP as well. (was this the right correction?

The only other change was that I doubled the caraway seeds.

vince hav's picture

got a good question

December 22, 2009 - 5:01pm -- vince hav
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ive heard this guy at work state that he never eats bread cause "all bread does is turn to sugar when digested an makes you fat.." well this comeing from someone that wont drink carbonated drinks cause its "bad for ya" but drinks whiskey. haha i just dont understand it. so is he for real?? does it turn to sugar?

AnnieT's picture
AnnieT

Here is my authentic Scottish Shortbread recipe which came from Margaret McLaren, a Scottish friend from when I lived near Atlanta back in 1967.

3 sticks butter (I use Challenge unsalted)room temp.

1 heaping cup powdered (icing) sugar

1 egg yolk

4 cups ap flour

Preheat oven to 300*, cut wax paper circles to fit 8"-9" cake pans. I wonder whether parchment would work?

Sift the sugar into a large bowl and knead in the butter. Add the egg yolk and mix in well. Add the flour one cup at a time. Roll into a lump the size of a jelly roll, cut into 3. Pat onto the wax paper to fit the pans. Prick all over with a fork and crimp the edges, and cut almost through in wedges. Bake 45 minutes to 1 hour - mine didn't take that long. The shortbread should be pale in color. Cool on rack, careful, I managed to crack all of mine!

I also forgot that I wanted to add some rice flour because I had read that it gave a nice crunch. Oh well, next year. Merry Christmas from Whidbey Island, A.

 

 

 

 

CeraMom's picture

Starting a starter in the frigid north?

December 22, 2009 - 3:40pm -- CeraMom

I'm thinking of attempting a sourdough starter, but was wondering if it would even be worthwhile. It hasn't been above frozen here in quite some time ( I'm in Northern Canada ) and it has been down as cold as -46* C! Any thought on whether this will be a fruitless pursuit? I'm not sure I'm ready to have batter going bad on my counter if nothing will happen!

Thanks!

Sarah K.

clairedenver's picture

Advice for not-risen stollen dough

December 22, 2009 - 2:20pm -- clairedenver
Forums: 

I noticed a post re. this very subject of not rising dough.  My situation as it stands...

The sponge was fine, bubbly and doubled.  I mixed all - first time to do this - with my mixer from paddle to dough hook.  Put all this in the bowl in a warm place for rising.  After an hour, nothing!  Not sure how to proceed with this.  Should I give it more time or cut my loses and go buy a stollen for Christmas?  I really don't want to throw out this fruit, nut and time intensive bread dough if I can just give it more time.  Help!

apprentice's picture

Thoughts? Xmas tree bread attempt

December 22, 2009 - 1:39pm -- apprentice

The inspiration for this little experiment was a brochure of seasonal offerings from Boulangerie Au Pain Doré, Montréal. The tree on the right-hand side of the picture (from their website) was made, I believe, with baguette bread dough. The hard copy brochure show a little more of the breads. That's a candy cane on the left and a wreath at the top. The trunk of the tree is a bit longer than shown and looks about mini-baguette size in diameter.

ques2008's picture

starter has risen and now...

December 22, 2009 - 12:43pm -- ques2008

i made my very first sourdough starter based on gaarp's tutorial.  I started thursday.  i had problems in day 3 and onwards, but today, I think I managed to revive it.  It did rise, started at 1 cup and it's now up to 2 cups.  i refreshed it  2 hours ago.  will it get bubbly and frothy in a few hours, and should i leave it on the counter longer?

Ryan Sandler's picture

(Sort of) High volume pizza baking -- please advise

December 22, 2009 - 11:52am -- Ryan Sandler

My in-laws' family has a tradition of doing homemade pizza for Christmas Eve dinner, and this year I volunteered to do the dough and baking, in hopes of a higher quality pizza.  I've got a plenty good crust formula, a great sauce recipe, and I'm sure my mother-in-law will have plenty of toppings.  I'm still pondering, however, how best to bake them.  I'm making 7 personal size pizzas, and I need to figure out a way to get them all baked as fast as possible and finished as close together as possible. I'm hoping some of the wise and kind folks on the forums can advise me here.

buckeyebaker's picture

kitchenaid Pro with all steel gears?

December 22, 2009 - 11:29am -- buckeyebaker

So now that the Kitchenaid Pro has gone back to "direct-drive all steel gears", does that make it more worthy to buy? I know that many in this forum have complained about the plastic gears, but at least on the Kitchenaid website, it appears that the gears are metal. It also appears that the Pro sold on Amazon has the same metal gears model as well. From what I can tell, the William-Sonoma Pro is still the old plastic gears. Since I cannot afford either the DLX or the Bosch, and since with a rebate it would cost $350 to buy the Pro 600 model, does anybody have any thoughts?

Mason's picture

Stollen--All purpose or bread flour?

December 22, 2009 - 10:48am -- Mason
Forums: 

I'm about to make stollen for christmas, and see many recipes using all-purpose rather than read flour.  

With all the dough goes through in adding fruit, I would think that a strong bread flour would help it still rise well.  Is there any reason that one should use all-purpose flour rather than the bread flour I am inclined to use?    

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