Blog posts

WW-Spelt Egg Bread w/Smoked Cheddar and Cherries

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12Apr

Who doesn’t like cheddar cheese and cherries? Make it smoked cheddar and add egg yolks and 80% fresh milled flour, and I’m in heaven.

I used one of my favorite grains from Barton Spring Mills called Butlers Gold which is a hard red winter wheat, and mixed it with some fresh milled spelt. The whole wheat was milled and sifted with a #30 drum sieve and remilled and sifted with a #40. The spelt was only sifted with a #30 and milled twice.

beet bread

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beet bread boule

crust like it emerged from a caveman's campfire, taste/aroma that makes you feel like you're picking fresh produce, and look at that glowing solar-flare-crumb:

Staring at this boule for too long can give you a sunburn! Better to eat it.

from Sarah Owens' book Sourdough.

First Colomba batch 2025

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Colomba

I baked the first batch of Colomba this year, to try out my new 1 kg size paper pans, and to think about new flavor combinations. Also, the tweaks I’ve made to my lievito madre, mixing and fermentation techniques as they pertain to Colomba. 

I’m also using a different flour this year - Mille Bolle from Molino Pasini; this is easily the best panettone flour I have tried, and it really worked well for this batch.

Thin crust pizza with wild mushrooms and black garlic squid ink salami

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Pizza

So my wife is starting to get the 'Pizza again? Really?' look in her eye, so I may wait a few days for the next experiment :)

This is still a grocery store dough ball rolled out to 2-3mm, but I replaced the store jar with homemade no-cook sauce. The salami is homemade, as is the shredded gruyere. Mozz balls from the store, basil from the garden. The wild mushrooms were a mix of Blue Oyster, Lion's Mane and Chestnut mushrooms, cooked way down in olive oil until they gave up most of their moisture, but hadn't started to get crispy. 

Panettone Saga Step 4 (Colomba) ...

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Colomba in the oven

Continuation of the panettone saga with a seasonal change: colomba, classic recipe, just substituted 20% candied orange peel with dark and milk chocolate.
 

The LM showed good balance, the primo tripled in size within 12 hours. The secondo was pretty sluggish, taking its time to rise. It didn't took off until I increased the temperature from my usual 27C to 29-30C. That made me quite skeptical.

 

I'm not very good in documenting the process. Only some random pictures.

After about 20-25min in the oven:

John Dough has an infection

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Unfortunately John Dough my trusty starter of many years has a fatal infection.  Finally returning home after 3 months away, I found grey mold on top and some orangey discolouration.  That orange mold is said to be quite dangerous so I tossed the whole thing.  Fortunately, I had dried him over the past 2 years and kept the dried flakes of starter in ziplock bags in the freezer.