The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Baking FAQ

See these ingredient specific FAQs:

 

How do I make crusty bread?

One word: steam. Lots of steam in the first five minutes of baking. But be aware that many home ovens are not designed to handle the kind of steam required to make really crusty bread, so try it at your own peril.

What is the best way to store a loaf of bread?

Crusty bread: paper. Soft breads: air tight plastic. It is that simple. Either type of bread can be wrapped in plastic and frozen, though I don't find crusty breads ever to completely recover.

 

Baking FAQ

Comments

Christina's picture
Christina

I have a question: When I make a free-form bread, I am always afraid that when I have a slightly moister loaf, the dough will spread and not have the correct shape. By slack, what consistency would I look for? I made the baguettes from the "Artisan Baking" book for New Year's Eve, and even though I added more flour than it asked for (thus creating a slightly firmer dough) the holes were wonderful and the texture was amazing. I also made the English muffins from "The Bread Book" twice, one with a soft dough (what the recipe called for) which spread, and one a bit firmer, which didn't. Even though I have been baking bread for a while now, I am still wary about the soft doughs. What do you do?

Floydm's picture
Floydm

At the moment I am a huge believer in "the wetter, the better." Wet doughs and folding have resulted in huge improvements in the quality of my breads.

(I am actually in the middle of writing a piece preaching the merits of slack doughs, so check back in a day or two. For the moment I'd direct you here for a good bit on it.)

I say some day when you are baking a batch of bread make another batch and leave it much wetter than you think you should. Use a lot of flour on your hands and your work surface and give it a shot. I bet you'll be pleasantly suprised with the results.

I've yet to make a standard French Bread dough that was so wet I couldn't bake it. The two or three batches of overly wet dough I've made have been either contained potato, which actually releases moisture as it ferments, or been sourdoughs, which I still don't have a handle on.

jimhaas3's picture
jimhaas3

Does all the hydration result in an overly sticky dough? How do you manage that? I've been trying to make Pan au levain using the autolyse technique and so far I've been ending up with incredibly sticky doughs.

Any comment? 

Jim Haas, Kyiv Ukraine

Christina's picture
Christina

That sounds good, I'll try that next time. But what do you do to keep the dough from spreading too much?

Floydm's picture
Floydm

Folding, as they mention in the link above (and as I will mention in my next article) tightens the loaf up a great deal. 90% of the time two or three folds are enough to tighten a dough up sufficiently that it'll hold its shape.

If it isn't there are a few options: one is to let the dough rise in a brotform, as seen here. I fake a brotform by using a couple of small, round baskets I picked up at Goodwill for a buck each. Flour them well before placing the dough in them though or it'll stick.

Another trick is to use tea towels or something to hold the loaf in place while it is rising. I did that this weekend: I put a sheet of parchment on a baking sheet and sprinkled some semolina flour on top. I then rolled up three tea towels and placed one down each side and one down the middle. I sprinkled some flour on them and then placed my two log shaped loaves in the channels between them. I put the entire thing inside a plastic bag for the final rise and then removed the towels and slid the parchment onto my peel to transer them to the oven, baking them on top of the parchment on a baking stone. The towels forced the loaves to rise up instead of spreading out. The resulting loaf was very nice.

timtune's picture
timtune

I find that what really helps for the bloom and shape too is to develop a good surface tension when shaping french bread dough. ;)

Floydm's picture
Floydm

Agreed. But one of the bests ways I've found to achieve good surface tension with really slack doughs is by folding. Each time I fold though surface tension gets a little bit greater. For final shaping I just need to repeat and preserve that.

melnikne's picture
melnikne

Agreed

jmcbride's picture
jmcbride

I have been very impressed with the difference folding makes. It is a technique I read about here and found it can make a huge difference on the final bread. It is amazing how the slow and gentle method for developing the gluten helps the shaped loaf keep its shape. I tried a sourdough last weekend, and forgot that as the dough ferments it often seems to loosen up, thus causing flat loaves. However, with a slightly extend fermentation and an extra fold or two I had no problem with the loaves holding the shape.

If I feel the dough might be a little too "runny" I will also use the tea-towel trick

Jeff

mzublin's picture
mzublin

Can you please help me to create those wonderful holes in your bread?  I tried your online technique but didn't work (5 times).

This is what I think is happening:

1.  Mix your dough and let it rise.

2.  When it 2x the size fold it like a letter on all sides.

3.  When it 2x the size again fold it once again.

4.  Let it rise to 2x the size and shape?

Any directions would be very helpful.....

mzublin

kaseylj's picture
kaseylj

I find that a longer rise makes bigger holes.  Not sure how long the doubling takes, but try leaving it out for several hours  (ex. 4 or 5) even if it's already risen 2x.   Also when you shape it, try and be as gentle as you can, and then let it rise again after shaping (an hour or two). before going right into the oven.   I think you should have lots of big holes then. 

 

 

bakerb's picture
bakerb

Hello...I'm looking for the name of a baked product my mom baked years ago...I remember it required rolling cold sweet yeast dough into a rectangle, spreading butter on it, folding it up, then repeating several times...this made the rolls or what-ever very flaky & rich...she eventually made a snail-looking thing and I think she put some kind of pineapple preserve in the center, or perhaps cream cheese, then baked after rising...seeing a pic of the Cream Cheese Snails, reminded me of this product...does anyone have a clue or recipe?

Thanks, Beth

KipperCat's picture
KipperCat

This sounds like puff pastry, which has another name which I can't remember right now.  I think it's also how croissants are made.

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

KipperCat is right. There is all kinds of info if you search under "croissants" in here.

Also known to me in German as: Klassische Blätterteige, Falscher Blätterteig, Blitzblätterteig, Hefeblätterteig, Plunderblätterteig, or Quarkblättereteig depending upon the ingredients and amount of butter.

I have recipes where flour is combined with the butter (50g flour to 120g Butter or 100g flour to 250g Butter (for use with 500g bread dough) and shaped into a brick before being covered with yeast dough and rolled out, chilled and repeated.

The dough can be cut also into stripes and wraped around metal forms & funnels, and stacked to be baked and filled with creme de whatever good and rich, tasty, messy and fun. Chocolate drizzle and/or powdered sugar dusted, popular toppings both.



 

 

gutschke's picture
gutschke

I had always been intimidated by croissants, but felt annoyed by the poor quality of most of the store-bought products. So, I finally decided to take the plunge. I found a good recipe that I have now made a couple of times. It is amazingly fool-proof and results in the best croissants I have ever had. You are in for quite a treat.

I have since cleaned up the instructions a little bit and converted them to metric weights, which makes them more reproducible than volume measurements.

It's still a good amount of work, but not really any more than making a nice loaf of bread. In fact, I can make croissants at the same time that I can make bread. The various waiting times nicely interleave.

Note: When the recipe calls for European-style butter, it isn't kidding. European-style butter is much softer when chilled than American-style butter. That makes working with it so much easier. I don't think I would attempt this recipe with American-style butter. My local grocery store carries Kerry Gold, which works fine; but other European brands should be OK, too. If possible, try to buy unsalted butter.

bakerb's picture
bakerb

Thanks for your help...I'll research these ideas!   Beth

Arlette's picture
Arlette

Hello my friends,We are going away this weekend, I am cooking and baking bread, and I am interested to know how long the bread keeps the fresh flavour and the top crust stays crunchy if it’s baked couple of days in advance.Since I am cooking and baking, I thought to start with the bread first, I always bake and eat the bread fresh, if I have extra I freeze them. I don't want to waste my work and end up with stale bread  Appreciate a reply soon,   Thanks for the great work every one!!! Arlette   

 

ejm's picture
ejm

Excuse me for replying to this older thread. I am searching for something else and the title caught my eye.

We freeze crusty bread all the time. I usually make two loaves at a time. There are only two of us so we can only eat one of the loaves. We double plastic bag the other loaf (removing as much air from the bag as possible - without distorting the loaf). This is done after the bread has cooled completely. Then into the freezer it goes.

Floydm wrote:

Either type of bread can be wrapped in plastic and frozen, though I don't find crusty breads ever to completely recover.

We have not found this to be the case.

To refurbish unsliced crusty bread that has been frozen, thaw the bread on the counter in its freezing bag. Once it has thawed, remove it from the bag. Preheat the oven to 500F. Turn the oven OFF. Put the bread on the middle rack of the hot oven for about ten minutes.

Using that method, the crust and crumb are virtually the same as they were when the bread came out of the oven on the day it was initially baked.

-Elizabeth

fancypantalons's picture
fancypantalons

Agreed.  In fact, if I'm impatient, I'll follow Reinhart's instructions in the BBA and place the loaf in the oven at 400F, covered by a damp towel, for ~15 minutes (re-wetting the towel to ensure it doesn't score) to defrost, then another 10 minutes uncovered to crisp up the crust.  The result is as good (or, at least, good enough to be essentially indistinguishable) as if it came straight out of the oven, at least in my experience.

sybram's picture
sybram

Hello.  Have any of you used a regular floor tile for your baking stone.  I read you could use an unglazed one.  I have some 14 X 14 tiles left from when we built our house, but they do have a glaze on them.  Any suggustions or advice? 

Thanks, Syb

Paddyscake's picture
Paddyscake

Hi Syb..no do not used glazed tiles, unglazed only or purchase a baking stone.

Betty

Muffin Man's picture
Muffin Man

I am trying to build a sourdough starter ala Peter Reinhart, but am unable to find diastatic malt.  My local homebrew store has malt powder, but it does not have the active enzymes needed.  A local health food store cannot get it as it has a very short shelf life.  Can anyone recommend a source for this ingredient?

Dale's picture
Dale

I buy it on Amazon. Just search for diastatic malt. pretty cheap, lasts a long time. Also I buy the big package of yeast the same way.

 

Gourmand2go's picture
Gourmand2go

Hi mickylee102

I live in an extremely hard water area and use Britta filters to remove the softener salts before I use the water to cook or to make coffee or tea.  For my kettle or coffee maker, I use water that has been softened and then put through two Britta filters.

For cooking, I use soft water that has been filtered once through a Britta.  I wouldn't want to risk a batch of bread with soft water, but the soft water is easier on the filter than hard water.  I'd imagine you will get more consistent results from the yeast with filtered water.

Overdue, but hope that helps!

Marion

Mebake's picture
Mebake

Hi, Ombra. I have successfuly used seitan (obtained by washing and draining a dough) in wholewheat based recipes, it works just fine. Only, make sure to cut the seitan to small pieces and distribute them evenly throughout your dough and knead them properly in, otherwise you'll have unblended strandes of gluten.

However, you could do just fine without added gluten, if you good wholemeal bread flour with protein level 11.5% or greater. Try to incorporate a preferment, and a soaker. Search  in this website for the epoxy method dicussed in depth by famous Master Baker Peter Reinhart in His book " Whole grain breads.

Khalid

Mebake's picture
Mebake

I have no clue OMBRA..use only sparingly, as excessive gluten can make your bread rubbery. I'd use a maximum of about 50 grams of seitan for an 850 grams dough. Try 35grams for a starters, and work your way up in future bakes. Remember though, your have to mix really well to get seitan to incorporate well.

VonildaBakesBread's picture
VonildaBakesBread

I wanted to read about slack dough, but the link is broken? And what does "folding" look like?

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

(right up there at the top of the comments)  

meanwhile:  slack doughs,  what does folding look like?  a mess!  Lol!   Actually the idea is to turn a mess into something constructive.  Scrape or plop the dough (top side down) out onto a floured surface and pick up the edge of one side with finger tips and pull upward and outward quickly and plop it over onto the other sticky dough lying there.  It should look like a folded half round sticky object with two layers.  brush off any excess flour that may prevent the next fold from sticking.  Now take the opposite side of the fold and pull it up and out resting it on top of the dough.  Then do the ends.  That is one round of 4 folds.  (some will call that "one fold")  Now flip the mound of folded dough over and keep track of the top.  Place back into the bowl to rest or just cover and rest.  As you fold, the wet dough will tighten up and be a little bit higher each time you complete a round of folds.  

ejm's picture
ejm

A while back, I did a post about kneading slack dough that includes my understanding of "folding":

http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/4365/kneading-slack-dough-hand

-Elizabeth

edit: Here is the FreshLoaf's Lesson Five, Number 6: Folding & Shaping with a very nice photo essay showing folding: http://www.thefreshloaf.com/lessons/tentips_6_fold

This is another good way to strengthen slack dough: http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/27392/incontainer-folding-la-tartine-develop-dough-strength

ejm's picture
ejm

This video archived on PBS "Baking With Julia: Decorative Loaves with Steve Sullivan" (http://video.pbs.org/video/2250834031) is fabulous. Go to 08:34 to see the section on folding.

-Elizabeth

Leamlass's picture
Leamlass

I have read that a person can double a recipe, but my question is, do you double everything including yeast or starter ?  Thanks.

pmccool's picture
pmccool

To get twice as much out, twice as much has to go in.  It's easiest to work with baker's percentages and weights, since the proportions stay the same regardless of how the quantities change.  Volume measurements can be harder to work with.

Paul

laakecd's picture
laakecd

My bread is tasty with a soft crust, which is what I want, but very dense. I'm using a recipe in "The Bread Baker's Apprentice" ( Variation 1, p.266). It contains powdered milk, eggs, and butter. How can I "loosen up" my bread? Is my problem the flour/ liquid ratio, knead time, or what? Baking is my new hobby, so I'm just feeling my way. But I'm having a lot of fun with it. Thanks for your comments.

pnpakdi's picture
pnpakdi

How to add raisin to the bread?

 

HappyBear's picture
HappyBear

I tried several different ways, but the one that seems to work best is to disguise the raisins as flour.  I do this by adding raisins to the weighed out flour before mixing it together (assuming that you are using a couple of different flour types that you mix together), then I add the flour with raisins in it to the leven and water before the autolyse stage.  Almost every bread that I do now has some fruit in it and this seems to be the best way.  I am still struggling a bit with fresh fruit though!

LindaBackus's picture
LindaBackus

Can the authors or anyone give me an idea of conversion of amounts to Australian.  ie I converted USA cups of flour to Australian cups and thus  into grams. However, because the flour isn't compacted in your cups in the master recipe,  it means I have added way too much flour.  Then just guessing water. Any ideas please? Could someone tell me how much a cup using sweep and level method actually weighs... in grams?   Thank you.

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

and any volume measurement is that they can vary from one cup to the next, even with the same person, cup and flour.  When I convert American cup recipes, I tend to go with 125 to 130g and see where that takes me then adjust with the second round of that recipe.  Weighing water and flour in grams will save a lot of guess work in the long run.  An american cup of water is, well,  I use 240g.   Metric cups are also available with one cup of water 250g.  

You could take any vessel and use as a "cup."  A cup of flour weighs roughly about half a cup of water.  If the cup flour amount is twice the cup water amount, that is too much water or roughly 100% hydration in the recipe.  Most flours are not absorbent enough for that much water.   A 50% hydrated dough would be 4 cups flour to one cup of water, roughly, and that may be a very stiff bagel or pretzel dough.   

Those are the parameters.  For four cups of flour, water can be anywhere from one cup (50%) to two cups (100%.)  

So the suggested method is to add the one cup of water to the flour, stir and then splash in as much as is needed from the second cup while stirring to moisten most of the flour, let the dough rest before adding more water.   Most likely less than half a cup more water is needed for most doughs.  Most wheat doughs are between 50 to 70%.

granny's picture
granny

Hi All,

I am a newbie to baking without a Bread machine.

I only have a Countertop Oven hopefully I will be able to put a photo on.

I have been working on making Baguettes again a photo?

These are the ones I made this morning, they don't seem to get the scores to open up.

I would appreciate any help on the running temp of the oven... I have been running it at approx 200c.

I hope this is ok.

Regards Granny

 

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

They look good from here!  

Might want to rethink scoring.  When ready to score.  Think of a toy train track running down the top length of the dough, not quite one inch wide between the tracks.  Take your blade and rotate your hand until it looks like you want to slice off that track.  

You want to score inside that train track about four inches long.  Start your score at the upper right edge of the imaginary track and cut toward the left track reaching it about 4 inches down.  Back up a good inch, maybe one and a half inches and make a second score from the right track to the left track leaving a thin strip of connecting dough between part of two scores.  Watch your blade angle keeping it flattish, back up an inch, back to the right train track and score again ending on the left track. Finish.   

With the second loaf, you can space the lines better to your liking, but the trick is to score with the length of the loaf not square across it.  And to leave thin enough stripes between the scores to just hold the rising dough together in those spots while the openings expand.  There are videos here but I can't seem to figure out how to post a link using my iPad.  Site Search:   Scoring baguettes.   

Have Fun!

granny's picture
granny

These are the fourth day of trying.

Thank you for the info I will have a look for scoring and practice on tomorrows tryout.....

It is Fun isn't it?

granny's picture
granny

Hi all,

Decided to have a go at sourdough...

Made my starter on the 18/2 and this Morning made 4 Baguettes from it.

It is a great shock to one that tried handmade bread a 100 yrs ago and brought a bread machine instead....couldn't handle the little bricks I was getting by hand..

Anyway fast forward a 100 yrs and found this site while surfing and decided to give hand made another go.

I was pleasantly surprised with the result see prior pics..

So now Sourdough Baguettes NEXT the WORLD...

country blonde's picture
country blonde

Good Morning,

I have baguette dough fermenting in the fridge that went in at 4:00 pm yesterday.  It is supposed to double by 4:00 am to 4:00pm.  So far I see no movement in the Camco container at 7:00 am.  My question is, does the long ferment help mostly with building flavour.  The sourdough starter was really active when I started and I could see signs of fermentation when the dough went into the fridge.

Thank you for your thoughts, I am new to this fine craft.

pancakeguy's picture
pancakeguy

After autolyse my dough has a really good extensibility but when mixing in the levain, it looks good initially then the dough starts to look lumpy and loses a majority of its extensibility. After resting for 30 mins it looks smooth and i add the salt then it goes back into being lumpy after mixing a bit longer. Help!!! 

Mike Hendra's picture
Mike Hendra

My normal bread mix at 60% hydration 8min knead takes about 50min to rise and double in size. The same recipe but 80% hydration without kneading but using stretch and fold takes 4 hours to rise and double in size. Any idea why there is a difference?   

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

Kneading tends to raise dough temps.  Did you measure the temps of both doughs during the comparison?

PeterHall378's picture
PeterHall378

I am trying to dry it in the oven at 250 F.  Any suggestions?

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

heat heads straight for the water

or slit open and grill or bake again     How wet?

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

The Fresh Loaf

 

Dear friends in bread-making. I began bread making when my two daughters were starting school and today the youngest is in her late forties, how time flies. A few years ago the Robin Hood Flour company introduced their 100% Whole Wheat Flour and gave a simple recipe on the bag. I tried repeatedly to get this recipe to work but I could only manage a ¾ rise. This is a full grain flour and I suspect it is slow in the flour absorbing the water and possibly the autolyse method will help in this regard. The recipe on the bag is as follows: Water 471 g, Flour 748 g, 1 egg, Butter 42 g, Maple Syrup 51 g, Salt, yeast & sugar 10 g each. The bread is good, but I am disappointed in the rise, and suggestions.  Bob Smith Nova Scotia Canada

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

maple syrup are both listed.  What kind of yeast is being used?

I figure the hydration (water and flour) is 63%.  With the egg, 69%. Looks pretty hydrated. I wonder what would happen if you blended the egg white with the water and stirred in the flour letting it autolyse for a couple of hours before adding in the rest of the ingredients.

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

Sounds like a good plan so will do as I make braed tomorrow. Because I am using 100% all grain whole wheat flour I am shooting for 70% hydration. I do us some while flour for dusting and a bit, maybe a cup in the recipe after the autolyse. The bread  is good, but could be better, maybe your idea will do it

 

many thanks

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

As any member tried the Roger’s 100% Whole Wheat recipe found on their site 

https://rogersfoods.com/about-us/

 

This is a very well thought out recipe and one thing that caught my eye was the use of Lemon juice - Lemon Juice is a natural dough enhancer.  “When making dough products it is added to increase the elasticity of the dough which in turn allows for a better rise”.

 

Everyone who has tried making a sandwich bread with this flour known a good rise is questionable, so we try autolyse and other tricks, but lemon juice is new to me.

Bob1936

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

If I add seed to my recipe, does this add to the solids in the recipe and must be corrected by adding equal weight of liquid. Otherwise whould not the Baker's percentages be thrown out. At prent my recipe is 176% and a hydration of 73% which works wekk for 100% all grain flour.

Bob Smith

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

and if it is raw, roasted, whole, cracked and type.  Is the seed ground fine enough to be part of the matrix? 

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

I propose to lightly fry the Flax 33g and Sesame 33g prior adding to recipe and I do belive I shouls offset this 66 g with and equal weight in liquidsm to thus balance the recipe and retain the Baker's percentages.

Bob

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

Soak the roasted seeds in the water you intend to add to the recipe for 30 minutes, then drain saving the water.  If the seeds soak up the water, fine. If the seeds dont soak up any water, weigh this roasted flavoured water as part of the recipe liquid and don't change anything.  

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

Thank you

in the pan, on the stove, 5 minutes until start to change colour and ready to pop into my recipe. Thanks

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

Is it possible to substitute butter ina a sanwich bread recipe with peanut butter? And can peanuts be added to a recipe as I have never seen peanuts used except as peanut butter?

Bob Smith

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

 very good Many thanks as I will try one of these peanut breads and se what happens

Bob S

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

Has anyone experimented with using Steel Oats in a bread recipe? I have failed with seeds, and most other add-ons but somehow these steel oats are just begging me to throw them into a bread recipe and enjoy the hutty flavour.

Hope someone can help

pmccool's picture
pmccool

You can:

  • Use them in a cold soaker
  • Use them in a hot soaker
  • Use them in porridge 

The idea with each of those is to soften the oats before they are added to the dough. 

Paul

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

I have just heard that one should not cut the dough with a lamb blade if you are using a full grain whole wheat flour. Has anyone else heard this and is it true?

Bob Smith

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

what is it?   :)

pmccool's picture
pmccool

Lame?

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

Yes my spelling while ttyping leaves a lot to be desired. I make my bread with all grain whole wheat flour and I was told not to cut the dough with a lame. Yet for the many times I have used this recipe I decided not to score the dough and what happened on one loaf the crurst bulged, so I feel I should definitle keep scoring the dough. Any suggestions?

Bob S

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

one, but I do go by dough feel, how the skin on the loaf is behaving.  I tend not to score wet squishy loaves. Nice skin is begging for a score.  :) 

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

This time I did not score and the crust bulged and the dough below it did not rise. However I will again score the crust over each end, small cuts, and see if this works. I am using full grain whole wheat flour and to ensure I get a good rise I use 15 g of lemon juice as directed my one of the leading flour companies out west "Roger's". I sure appreciate all those who have given me hope and suggestions

 

many thanks

 

 

Bob Smith

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

"...the crust bulged and the dough below it did not rise."

Was there a large bubble under the crust?

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

I have read everything I can find on using the lame and all the ways to make decorative cuts but no where can I find anything the say "do not use the lame on whole wheat bread. 

So I agree with you the fault lie elsewhere. I know my dough was very moist, but otherwise was soft and elastic, but why my loaf turned out so bad is a mytery and tomorrow I will be making bread again ............. can't stop

Bob S

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

A trapped large bubble during the shaping can give the impression of a nicely risen final loaf when it hasn't proffed much at all.  Bubbles like that are easy to feel if you gently lay the flat side of your hand along the length of the loaf before scoring. Give the loaf a little juggle and you can detect  the bubble to pop and collapse. They give the rising loaf more time to proof before scoring.  

Bob1936's picture
Bob1936

In a simple recipe
Whole Wheat for bread flour, yeast, salt, veg oil,  sweetener (say Maple Syrup) 

To get the most out of the Maple Syrup, I wish to add a tsp of sugar to activate the yeast, then when activated I add the Veg oil and maple syrup, and lastly the salt. I do not want to use the maple syrup to activate the yeast as I wish the properties of the syrup all go into the texture, taste toi lift up the finished bread. Does this make sense?

Bob Smith

Halifax NS

Aug 31, 2023