The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

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mcs's picture

Back Home Bakery internships 2011

March 21, 2011 - 8:39pm -- mcs

Here we go again.  Just when you thought I had faded away into a cloud of flour, I'm back with another proposition for you eager bakers. 

I'm looking at having 2 internship positions for the beginning of the summer and 3 towards the end of the summer.  All 5 positions are for 1 week each and all are during the 'busy season' so if you're thinking about it, be prepared!  These are the dates:

Session 1:  May 29 - June 4
Session 2:  June 5 - June 11

Session 3:  August 14 - August 20
Session 4:  August 21 - August 27
Session 5:  August 28 - September 3

BKSinAZ's picture

My very first loaves of french bread & some lessons learned.

February 20, 2011 - 8:29am -- BKSinAZ

I finally decided to break free of my bread machine and hand make my bread for the first time. I really never liked the look of the loaves that came out a bread machine and felt more of a reward for doing it all by hand. I did use the same machine recipe (3 cups of Flour, salt, sugar, yeast, shortning, water)

sustainthebaker's picture

Powdered Dry Milk vs. Scalded Milk vs. Reconstituted Dry Milk

January 17, 2011 - 8:56am -- sustainthebaker
Forums: 

I have not had time to run any tests, but thought I would throw out the question.

Is reconstituted dry milk any better than milk?

Is it better to use dry milk powder mixed straight into the flour?

Should I scald the reconstituted dry milk to break down the yeast inhibiting enzymes (I forget the name at the moment) before baking?

Has anyone used King Arthur's Baking Dry Milk? How is it?

 

coreyjan's picture

Bread doesn't rise as well in the winter. Is it the lack of humidity?

January 11, 2011 - 12:13pm -- coreyjan
Forums: 

I've noticed that during the winter weather, my whole grain bread doesn't rise as well as it does in the warmer months. Could it have something to do with the relative humidity (or lack thereof) in my house and kitchen? It gets VERY dry in the winter here. 

If so, what's the solution? Should I put a pan of water in the oven? Change my baking temperature? Change the ratio of any of my ingredients? Something else?

I welcome any and all input. Thanks!

 

Corey-Jan

arlo's picture
arlo

The ramping up for the holiday sales started about two weeks ago, but this week was definitely the bulk of it all. Each day started at the crack of the middle of the night, 1 a.m. when I awoke to get ready for the big days of baking starting promptly at 2 a.m. all this week. That meant going to bed at about 5 p.m at night, and focusing on being rested for those 12 hour days of baking.

We (the four bakers) gathered around and tabulated sales from last year to decide what should be made for the day. When that was done, roughly taking thirty minutes, we began the mixing and sponge/poolish prep.

But for me, most of the time it started with the dry mixes for the scones and cookies;

Egg nog scone ready for the mixing, just add your liquids : )

Which an hour or so later led to some rum frosted and finished egg nog scones I was rather proud of!

Then I moved on to some pumpkin batter bread and muffins, the muffins ready to go in the oven;

Then to some Oatmeal Chocolate chip walnut jumbo cookies! Scooped and ready for the oven, made about 400 jumbo sized cookies, a bunch of small ones too!

Into the oven they go! Please don't forget to pin them to prevent burnt cookies : ( No one would want that!

In the mean time, I mix up some batter breads, including a candied rum batter bread, brownie, a few muffins, and did I mention very, very large cinnamon rolls!

While all that is going on, I am helping with the sponge and doughs for the day too, in fact the first dough was a large sweet white bread for swirls;

Which was mixed till shaggy, anyone ready for those stretch and folds? Trust me, it is difficult.

I won't bore you with all the pictures I took, but we did about twelve different doughs; the first seen here;

Those are going to be cinnamon swirl breads which I made about 200 of just today alone. But why did I chose to try and document this on the busiest day of the year? Because when the next dough is ready, it is ready regardless if you are not.

Seen there is the pecan bread being dumped and ready to be shaped, although I still had a good amount of swirls to go. Working in a bakery is about being efficient and effective.

Here are a small chunk of the swirl breads I did, later on during the morning. Sorry these were all taken on my phone.

I also made rolls...so many rolls of so many kinds it is really hard to imagine. Even if I were to try and put it into prespective, it really can't be concieved unless you saw the amount personally. We would fill up a mixing bowl with dough just for rolls alone, then repeat it again later in the day. Repeat this with about six different doughs over and over again. People just love rolls.

Here are some cheese garlic rolls hitting the oven, it is one of the few breads I can still smell when at the bakery!

Of course with twelve hour days, you wonder, is it any fun? Well...I still manage to have fun with dough out of work and even at work!

I pretty much put my own little touch on the loaves you could say!

 

But in the end that was just a touch of my busy day today at the bakery. It would have been too hard on the other bakers if I stood around taking pictures of every dough, every kind of loaf and so on. Although I did make, cinnamon bread, cinnamon raisin, cheese, pecan, honey wheat, white, 9-grain, stollen, challah, lots of muffins and cookies and more today, and well everyday I am there! It's a labor of love and I am willing to go to bed at 5 p.m. to be able to work at 2 a.m. each day! Not many people can say that, but I certainly am glad I have found something I love! Next week will be a bit easier, bed time will be adjusted to 6:30 to 7:00 and work will start right around 3-3:00 a.m.

Of course, there is the part of the job no one talks too much about but anyone interested in this profession needs to be aware of, and that is the cleaning and lifting!

Those are easily 55 pound steel mixing bowls that need to be lifted up to a sink and rinsed, scrubbed and dried numerous, and I mean numerous times every single day. Also 50 pound bags of flour and ingredients being hussled left and right every second too.

So it is work, it really is. But I find it enjoyable and never a chore, and that is the secret I believe!

GRNutrition's picture

Can i ask another silly/novice question

December 19, 2010 - 2:25pm -- GRNutrition
Forums: 

Hi everyone.

 

Very helpful forum here.

 

I would like to know the answer to this please, i'd like to bake my own bread, and think it would be good to know how to do it.

 

If for example, i wanted to make a 300g loaf of French bread, how do i go about making sure the quantities are correct in the recipe, so that the end product ends up as 300g?

 

Is there some form of formula you use or some percentages which will result in the bread being 'x' grams?

 

Any information would be great.

 

Spattznatt's picture

Problem:Degasing bread during transfer

December 12, 2010 - 9:29am -- Spattznatt

Greetings,

 

I was wondering if anyone had recommendations/suggestions on the best way to move bread after the final rise. I find that my dough always degases some during the transfer to the peel. What is the best way to avoid this from happening?I am slowly seeing improvements in my bread since finding The Fresh Loaf and I want to thank everyone for their input.

 

S

breitbaker's picture
breitbaker

Hi everyone...I've been MIA the past few months...certainly not from baking, but mostly from commenting on this site. I still consider this an invaluable resource though!

Somehow, summer overtakes.

I have begun blogging at a separate domain though, so come on over and see what I've been up to! It's my adventures in the kitchen along with snippets of the things I grow and create....

See ya there!     http://www.brightbakes.wordpress.com

Cathy B.pane siciliano.JPG

BellesAZ's picture

How to start a baking co-op? Need advice and guidance!

September 3, 2010 - 11:04am -- BellesAZ
Forums: 

Hi all,

I need some help in determining the advantages of starting a cooperative for bakers.  Believe it or not, I live in the 5th largest city in the USA and there are NO decent baking supply stores here.  The only one that really comes close is Shar's and she sells grain mills and whole wheats to grind your own.  I'm not really interested in that yet.. and really, I'm just looking for a good source of flours and other baking ingredients that I don't have to buy in 50 lb bags.

RachelJ's picture

Baking Bread In Pans Over Open Fire Or In Fireplace?

July 30, 2010 - 10:06pm -- RachelJ

Hola! It's me again... I have a couple more things to ask.

Has anyone ever made bread in a fireplace? Like in pans? Or maybe they did it over an open fire?

I've still no oven, no grill, and no toaster oven either. :( I'm outta luck here, people, and I'm stuck with flatbreads, so if anyone has anything, PLEASE let me know! :)

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