Blog posts

Dried apricots and nuts biscotti

Toast

It is my first try to make a biscotti.I tried it with a fear whether it'll comeout well or not.My cousin came to help me,i added the ingredients and she mixed it and we baked them.......oh...well well well......the result was sooo good.I never expected that my first try would be a big sucess.I took American style vanilla biscotti and done my variations.I think u all would like it.


Ingredients:

Flour- 2 cups

butter-6 tbsps

vanilla extract-1/2 tsp(i used vanilla pod it gave a good texture in the dough)

baking powder-11/2 tsp

Another blooming boule, Forkish style again

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Total flour 300 grams, strong bread flour

Total water 231 grams

Sweet levain @ 100% hydration 25 grams

Yeast water levain @ 100% hydration 25 grams

Salt, 1 tsp or about 7 - 8 grams, should have spent the extra five bucks on the digi scale that gives me the decimal. .  I once again took extra care when pre-folding and folding the boule, making sure the full length of the fold was tucked in nicely.

last leaves

Hello everyone,

The leaves are a blaze of color this fall, but quickly dropping from the trees, some trees already bare.

This afternoon, despite the breeze, there were a few brightly-colored leaves hanging on.
 

Mixer musings

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I baked for many years without using a mixer or any special gear. I really enjoy mixing and kneading by hand, and think it is a great way to get to know about dough.

Sourdough Boule

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Sourdough Boule (adapted from Wildyeastblog's Norwich Sourdough)

Yield: 2 large boules

Time:

Mix/autolyse: 35 minutes
First fermentation: 2.5 hours
Proof: 1.5 hours, then retard for 2 – 16 hours
Bake: 45 minutes

Ingredients:

900 g all-purpose white flour
120 g whole rye flour
600 g water at about 74F
360 g mature 100% hydration sourdough starter
23 g salt

Method:

Fig Anise Bread

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Recently a customer asked me to bake a fig anise bread.   She had bought a loaf from Standard Baking in Portland Maine, and loved it, but doesn't get up there often.   At first I was a little reluctant to go down this road, as I thought figs?   anise?   really?   but then decided to see what I could come up with.   A search on TFL revealed that there was just such a bread in Nancy Silverton's La Brea book.    As this has been on my list forever, I bought a copy, procured some dried black mission figs and anise seed,

La Cloche - Broken

Toast

Hi all, does anyone have any tips to repair my cloche? The bottom part has cracked into  2 pieces, its a clean break so wondering whether there is any way to stick them back together with a non toxic heat resistant glue.

 

Is this my fault for placing the cloche in a hot oven from cold or is this a defective cloche?

I've only used it 3 times! So iit works out at £15 per loaf - joy!!!

Spent Grain Bread

Toast

Got quite a bit of spent grains from a friend who is into Homebrewing and decided to try making a bread out of it. The grains (mainly barley) were roughly cracked using a hand grinder before being heated for about 2 hours to create a malt extract from them. This means that they are no longer sweet but still lend a nice texture to the bread.