Blog posts
New Year’s Pizza a Few Days Late

We always have pizza on New Year’s Eve, every year ……… for years and years. But this year we didn’t….. at least not homemade pizza. We got a take out from Oregano’s and it was good but it just cannot compare to homemade pizza – sorry to Oregano’s.
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- dabrownman's Blog
Basic Everyday Sprouted Multi-Grain Sourdough

It has been 3 weeks since we last baked a loaf of bread proving that IBBA (Insane Bread Baking Addiction) can be controlled to some degree – but I did bake some rolls 2 weeks ago - for Christmas / Hanukkah. We never did get around to baking fruitcake and panettone for the holidays either…..Lucy is getting pretty lazy if you ask me
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- dabrownman's Blog
Amber waves of grain 2: a batard year in review

No batards were harmed during the making of this blog entry. All were proofed in a couche under retard. Considering how much time I spend on baguette baking, I'm surprised at how many batards were part of the year. A partial list...
Son of SJSD, Alfanso Style with 75% hydration mixed flour Levain.
Forkish Field Blend #2 with 75% hydration mixed flour Levain.
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- 25 comments
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- alfanso's Blog
[2017-05] Sourdough with Spelt Levain

Unrelated to this loaf, I am planning on baking a loaf for a coworker who has some wheat issues. She's had modest success tolerating a very long-ferment sourdough loaf that I prepared for her (taking pains not to incorporate any unfermented flour along the way), and I'd like to now try an all-spelt loaf for her as an experiment. Thus, I needed to split off my wheat-based starter into a spelt variant, and rather than waste precious spelt, I thought I would make the most of the transition.
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- 10 comments
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- Modern Jess's Blog
Spelt, hemp seed flour and sesame

Some time ago I bought about 250g of hemp seed flour and today I made the first attempt to use it. Recipe was simple: 20% wholegrain spelt flour, 9% hemp seed flour, rest was AP flour, hydration 70%, 8% of starter @100% hydration, 5% white sesame seeds, 2% salt (all bakers percents).
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- joc1954's Blog
My first baguettes

Some time ago I promised alfanso to make baguettes once and they are here. Not really very nice, but not too bad at all for the first time. Definitely I have to learn baguette scoring.
I used Alfanso's recipe with a small change that I was using 100% hydration starter, the rest was the same.
I was baking them in my steam oven at 230 dC and high steam for about 25 minutes and at the beginning I dropped 2 ice cubes on a hot skillet to generate a steam blast.
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- 7 comments
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- joc1954's Blog
I recently started baking

Internet blows at the new house so I started reading about sourdough in november, ordered bunch of shit from amazon and started baking mid december.
last two batches i've been mixing einkorn into the wholewheat/bread flour and adding stuff like chestnut puree/raisins/nuts. came out pretty good!
Here are some loafs I've pulled out of the oven from the latest to the first loaf of bread i ever baked.
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- whathelll's Blog
Buckwheat Porridge Sourdough with Hemp and Flax

You are all going to think that I keep posting the same loaf of bread over and over again because they all look so much alike! Ha ha! I promise that they are all different.
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- Danni3ll3's Blog
[2017-04] Artichoke Cheese (hold the garlic)

My previous attempt at an artichoke loaf had too much garlic (in fact, I should just call it a very successful garlic bread) and not nearly enough artichoke hearts. The cheese (a mix of shredded parmesan, romano, and asiago) worked really well.
For this attempt, I roasted the artichoke hearts (maybe a bit too much) with Italian seasoning and olive oil. I also used a lot more of it, and omitted the garlic altogether. Because the cheese in the last one was just right, I used more of it in this version. :)
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- Modern Jess's Blog