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Submitted by PiPs on October 31, 2011 - 4:44pm Micropost – Spelt experiment I (50%)Formula
Method
___ This bread will be taken to work for a lunch gathering so I have no crumb shot to show nor time for photos this morning or I will miss my bus :) Cheers, Phil Submitted by Earlybirdsf on January 12, 2011 - 3:26pm Central Milling aka Keith Giusto Bakery Supply (Petaluma, CA) has movedJust made a trip out to Central Milling, which is actaully called "Keith Giusto Bakery Supply". They have moved into a new location. 755 Southpoint Blvd, Petaluma, CA. 866-979-2253 They have a very large selection of organic bulk flours. Now, you can call ahead, and they will pack 5lb bags. They ask that you please call ahead though, otherwise, you will wait for some time. If you are buying in 25 or 50lb bags, no problem. Under construction, is a Bakery School, on site, that will be open soon. Please email me your contact, if you are intersted in bulk flour. We were told that if enough of us order, they will deliver to SF, as they deliver to the Ferry Bldg twice a week. Earl
Submitted by dmsnyder on December 31, 2010 - 11:18pm Country Bread with fresh-milled flours
I've read with great interest discussions of home milling flour since I first joined TFL, but not wanting to get into the more arcane techniques of grain tempering, multiple graduated sifters and the like put me off. My interest was boosted by MC's interviews with Gérard Rubaud, who uses fresh hand milled grains to build his levains. (See Building a levain "à la Gérard": step 1) My recent experience chopping rye berries by hand did it though. I ordered the grain mill attachment for my KitchenAid Accolade mixer. I'd been looking at grain mills for some time. I considered the Nutrimill, but I don't need to grind pounds and pounds of flour, and, from what I've read, it does not grind as coarse as I'd like to make cracked and chopped grains. Hand-cranked mills look cool, but my tiled kitchen counters don't work with appliances attached by vises. So, the KitchenAid attachment was a nice solution. I used it today for the first time.
KitchenAid Grain Mill Based on my reading of reviews of this device, I ground some hard red winter wheat and some spelt berries by putting each through three passes of increasing fineness. I just ground about 200 g of each. There was no indication that this strained my mixer motor in the least. Each pass took 30 seconds or less. The resulting flour was a tad coarser than what I buy already milled, but finer than, say, semolina.
Fresh ground spelt flour
Fresh ground hard red winter wheat flour My formula and procedures take off from Chad Robertson's “Basic Country Bread” in Tartine Bread.
*Note: The small amount of WW and Dark Rye in the levain are not calculated separately in the Total Dough.
Procedures
Boules after baking 15 minutes, covered
Boule, cooling
Crumb Chewy crust and tender crumb. Whole wheat dominates the aroma of the bread sliced still warm but the flavor is sweet and mellow without any perceptible sourness. I'm looking forward to tasting it toasted tomorrow morning. David Submitted to YeastSpotting
Submitted by dlt123 on April 7, 2009 - 5:15pm Bread Books for Home Milled FlourHello, just a quick question which I don't think I've seen addressed here, but are there any Bread cook books that are targeted for those of us who mill our own flour at home? Thanks, Dennis ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- My Website: http://www.roadtobetterliving.com Submitted by bwraith on January 13, 2008 - 2:08pm Home Milling and Sifting - Two More TriesBelow is a photo of my third attempt at home milling and sifting, which resulted in a flour very similar to my favorite "high extraction flour", Heartland Mills Golden Buffalo flour. The processes used on my second and third tries are explained further below. Additional photos of the process have been posted. Submitted by bwraith on January 13, 2008 - 11:06am Cream of Wheat Middlings for Breakfast
My home sifting project resulted in "middlings", a term I may be using incorrectly. What I mean by middlings is the stuff I sifted out that is finer than bran but was coarser and darker than I wanted for the flour being produced. Submitted by bwraith on January 12, 2008 - 8:49pm Home Ash Content MeasurementRecently, I've been attempting to grind and sift my own flour. The grinding is straightforward with a Retsel Mil-Rite, an excellent home stone buhr mill or my new Meadows 8-inch stone mill. However, the mysteries of sifting the flour have been less straightforward. A subsequent blog entry will deal with my progress on grinding and sifting my own flour. The sifting project motivates the need for measuring the ash content of my flour. Ash Content Submitted by mbecktel on August 16, 2007 - 11:09am Adventures of a "Real Food' virgin 8/16/07Okay, the say confession is good for the soul. I confess there are two foods that for some reason confound me. One is Jello. For love or money I can't make Jello. It's either unset, runny, hard as a rock, separating, or won't come out of the mold. Mom soon learned not to ask me ever to make it.
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