Blog posts

Spelt Kamut Peasant Bread

Profile picture for user Danni3ll3

I got my shipment of grain from Daybreak Mills. It was time to reorder as I was literally at the bottom of my storage buckets. I chose to make this so the grains could be the star. 

 

 

Recipe:

 Makes 3 loaves

 

125 g spelt flour (125 g Spelt berries)

125 g rye flour  (125 g rye berries)

125 g Kamut flour (125 g Kamut berries)

820 g Strong Bakers unbleached flour

50 g freshly ground flax (50 g flax seeds)

865 g filtered water + 25 g

24 g Himalayan pink salt

30 g local yogurt

Old French Fries never looked so Good!

Profile picture for user Mini Oven

You've been there.  Nibbled on cold french fries but they were "ok, but could be better" you tell yourself.  Then they end up in the trash or soup but not really outstanding shriveled up and cold. No? Wait. What happens if they get chopped up and tossed into roll dough?  Ha!  I did it.  And with cheese on top!

30% Rye Seeded Onion Sourdough with Dark Malt Beer

Profile picture for user Cedarmountain

This year's CSA organic grain share has arrived and it was a good harvest despite pandemic and incredible summer heat and wildfire challenges.  I received several bags of organic rye, a bag of Canadian Marquis heirloom wheat and a bag of Manitoba wheat, a cultivar of Marquis. Marquis was first developed as a cross between Red Fife, Canada's oldest wheat variety and a variety from India called Hard Red Calcutta; it combines the best traits of both parent lines and by the early 1900's was grown on over 20 million acres, about 85%of the wheat acreage in North America.

First Bake - Sourdough

Profile picture for user icarrillo89

I am new to this forum and am excited. I have many questions.

Starter: I used T85 flour for my starter and maintain it using a 1:1:1 ratio. Now, I have not been tracking the rises nor quantifying it. I have just been feeding the starter everyday at the same time for the past month. Starting out, how much should my starter rise before replenishing it? Is consistency key here or handled day to day? My environment doesn't change too often. 

 

Bake: my bakes have been frustrating because they come out looking dense. I'm not sure how to fix this issue. 

20211012 100% whole-grain (wheat+rye+quinoa) Lebanese paper-thin bread with CLAS

Profile picture for user Yippee

 

To learn more about concentrated lactic acid sourdough (CLAS), please see here and here

 

 

Traditionally, to make paper-thin bread (khobz marquq), Lebanese bakers thinly stretch the dough on a bread pillow and cook it on a heated convex metal disc (saj). I have neither device, so I rolled the dough out as thin as possible and baked it in the oven.

Bernard Clayton's Chopped Apple Bread

Profile picture for user pmccool

Although, really, I think it would be better named “Apple Chopped Bread”.  One could almost treat it as a pull-apart bread but it toasts up so nicely that I prefer to slice it.  As its appearance suggests, flavor matters more than beauty for this bread. 

some recent baguette attempts

Profile picture for user technically_bread

 

I’ve got a backlog of breads I’ve been making, so I’m going to start from the most recent and maybe work my way back a bit.



I love baguettes / French bread but I’ve never made them consistently – I just have times when I obsess about them for a week or two, not get them quite how I want them, and decide it’s not worth the effort.


Obviously there’s a lot of subtlety to making them well – the shaping and baking especially – that they benefit from the really consistent routine and environment of a bakery.

Olive Bruschetta and Parmesan Sourdough 

Profile picture for user Danni3ll3

 

Olives are something that I would never eat although with time, I will now have the occasional one. That being said, it’s odd that I quite like the Sardo Olive Bruschetta mix. I’ve used this in other breads but this time, decided to pair with shredded Parmesan cheese. No crumb shot as they all sold, even the loaf I usually reserve for us. 

 

Recipe

 

Makes 3 loaves

 

Add ins:

175 g Sardo Olive Bruschetta, undrained 

100 g Parmesan 

 

Main dough:

800 g Strong Bakers Flour