The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

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adnan174's picture
adnan174

NEED HELP

Hey there. 

 

so basically i am surprising my mother with something that she has always wanted in life and has never got round to doing it, it is baking obviously haha but at a serious level where by i would like to surprise her and open up a actual patisserie shop on her name "Kam's Patisserie" 

it has always been my mums long ambition to take her hobby to the next level and has never got round to it as she was always busy trying to support the family. 

i have started a small kickstarter account where by i can receive help to one day open and surprise my mother with something she always wanted and thought she would never have. 

i have also created my mother her own account where she can show off her skills, please take a look :) 

https://www.instagram.com/kamspatisserie/

https://www.facebook.com/Kamspatisserie/?fref=ts

 

Kickstarter account:

 https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/2042852277/kams-patisserie

 

thank you everyone for your love and support

if you would like to get in contact with me please email me at: adzmahamood@hotmail.co.uk

pmccool's picture
pmccool

Buns and fun

Hey, it's a baking site; enough with the sniggering already.

So I had this post about half-written and managed to blow it away with an ill-placed click of the mouse.  Since I don't feel like recreating it, this will be the condensed version.

It's warm enough for grilling and smoking to begin in earnest.  That means buns are coming to the fore again.

Sunday's bake featured Kaiser rolls, built from the Medium Vienna dough from Inside the Jewish Bakery.  One small lapse of attention resulted in using too much diastatic wheat malt but the rolls came out wonderfully in spite of that.  If anything, the aroma and flavor benefitted from the malt and I dodged a bullet in that it did not cause gumminess in the crumb.  Shaping is a whole 'nother story.  Despite the illustrations and instructions in the book, not to mention a video on TFL of Norm klopping out some Kaiser rolls, mine look messy.  Ah, well, it was the first attempt.  The next one will be better.  The remarkable thing was how fast the dough fermented at every stage; during kneading, the bulk ferment, and the final ferment.  The malt is apparently a turbo booster for the yeast because my kitchen temperature was only 72F.

The brioche rolls were a derivative of a post on Flour Arrangements, which is itself an adaptation from The Joy of Cooking.  I opted to reduce the eggs in the dough from three to two and to reduce the butter from 3/4 cup to 1/2 cup, as well as using all bread flour.  Since I chose to make this by hand instead of using the mixer, the butter additions (I did four at 2 tablespoons each, rather than eight at 1 tablespoon each in the instructions) made for some interesting times as the dough came apart and then started absorbing the butter.  With each addition, the dough got more and more jiggly.  The gluten was developed well enough that it held its shape but the texture felt increasingly pillowy.

Here's a picture of the finished rolls:

The brioche buns benefit cosmetically from an egg wash and a steadier hand with such a basic shape.  The Kaiser rolls, well, did I mention that they taste really good?

I'm sure that there will be more of each as the summer rolls along.

Paul

flbaker1's picture
flbaker1

Cast Iron Alternatives

I tried to make my first boule today (still baking) in a Lodge Cast Iron dutch oven. It's VERY heavy and I don't like the way it sags the oven wire racks. Secondly, the bit about it rusting at the drop of a hat and the seasoning is something that I don't want to have to do. 

 

Can you recommend something that would be as effective and lighter to help bake my sourdough boules? Are there non-cast iron dutch ovens that work?

taurus430's picture
taurus430

FWSY- Overnight Country Blonde

After baking several loaves of Tartine Country Loaf, I decided to start with Ken Forkish's FWSY, and go right to sourdough. I was well pleased with the looks as well as the great taste of this bread. Trying to compare this to the  Tartine Country Loaf, it's a toss up. I do believe the longer bulk ferment with this loaf gives it a bit better flavor.

Georgerudd92's picture
Georgerudd92

New bakers oven need help

Hi there I am getting my own baking space and I haven't got a oven need to know what oven to get new or used my budget is 500 pound I am in uk what you guys think about this one http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/B00PWAP0C6/ref=mp_s_a_1_10?qid=1460730023&sr=8-10&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_FMwebp_QL65&keywords=bread+oven cheers bakers need oven for baking Farm house loafs and artisan bread all help would be amazing thanks and the best place to buy baking equipment in uk thanks all george

Felila's picture
Felila

Video of traditional French bakery with wood-fired oven

jims's picture
jims

Fabulous Five Points!

If you are ever in Pittsburgh, PA, run (don't walk or you will miss the croissants) to the Five Points Artisan Bakeshop. We were in Pittsburgh recently and had dinner at Legume, very nice, great food, and super bread. Probably the best bread I have ever had in a restaurant in the US. I asked the server where they got the bread and he said "Five Points". The next morning we went there on our way out of town. Got there too late for the croissants, but soon enough for their wonderful sourdough, ciabatta, and a few other goodies. 

The owner, Geof Comings, was really friendly and informative. He showed us his ovens, mixer, etc and talked bread for some time. He opened less than two years ago but is doing really well. Not surprising considering the quality of his breads. He said he spent a lot of time on this site before he decided to open Five Points.

Jim

Five Points Artisan Bakeshop | Family Owned and Operated Artisan Bakeshop in Pittsburgh, PA

 

crumb breads's picture
crumb breads

Croissant Advice

I need some help with an issue we are continually getting with our croissants collapsing internally during baking.

I have been moving the baking parameters around to account for this by lowering bake temp and baking longer but I am getting a thick crust and still at times small amount of collapsing in the centre. I am currently pre-heating convection oven to 210.c and then actual bake temp is 195.c for 16 mins. On the outside the croissants at this temp look fantastic and have perfect colour and a nice shattery thin crust.

We used to bake at around 188.c for 17 mins but we were getting a harder/drier/thicker crust.

Could this  be due toshaping or the amount of proofing under or over be a part?? Most people have suggested its more to do with bake time?

 

Any advise would be much appreciated to help stop this from happening

Thank you

 

Obsessed Croissantier

G

GregS's picture
GregS

High fiber loaf?

Fiber slows the absorption of sugars which helps diabetics cope with "spikes" of sugar. I'm looking for a high-fiber loaf that has good flavor and reasonable "lightness". I could add something like wheat bran and a recipe with a high percentage of wheat flour seems logical. Could any of you fine folks suggest recipes or other strategies to maximize the fiber in a SD loaf without making it too dense?

Many thanks,

GregS

Adam_S's picture
Adam_S

Multi grain sourdough recipe

Hi!

Just baked a nice multi grain sourdough and thought I'd share recipe and method here as I was pretty happy with how it turned out (nice and chewy and sour). The timings are mostly a result of trying to get the bread to fit into my evening plans:

80g Wholemeal Flour
75g Spelt Flour
100g Rye Flour
245g Strong White Flour
300g Water
200g Levain (White - 125% Hydration)
12g Salt

- 5pm into bulk ferment
- 21.5C dough temperature
- Kept it in a warm-ish place until about 7pm with a couple of stretch and folds, then moved it to a cold place (c. 16C) until 12:30am
- Shaped, bench rested, shaped and put in a warm-ish place for half an hour or so
- Put in the fridge for 6.5 hours
- Taken out of the fridge and put in a warm-ish place for 1.25hrs
- Baked for 40mins with steam

 

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