Blog posts
Uneven crumb -- proofing or other problem?

I made these loaves based on the San Joaquin recipe by dmsnyder, but I upped the whole grain content to 50% (mostly wheat, but also a significant amount of rye), and raised the hydration (by an unmeasured amount, but it ended up feeling higher than I had intended). I only cut one of the loaves so far, but as you can see, the crumb was pretty irregular. Is this a sign of a particular part of the process I can improve on? Proofing? Something else? Or is it just normal variation? It seems a little too drastic for that last option.
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- Esopus Spitzenburg's Blog
Spelt Whole Wheat Rice Ricotta Bread

Since I started my new job in the big city I have not had a lot of time to bake. Last weekend I found enough time to whip this one together. I used mostly freshed milled and sifted flours for this bake and added a little KAF Bread flour for some extra strength. I have grown to love adding cooked rice to the bread. You don't taste the actual rice but it adds a great texture to the crumb and helps promote softness as well. The ricotta cheese also helps create a soft and moist crumb which this one certainly had.
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- Isand66's Blog
Tinned H5GL with AYW

I decided to bake Hamelman's 5 Grain Levain in a tin and mix in some AYW. This was in an attempt to get more oven spring, and prevent sagging sides. I used 20% AYW of total water, and shaped (somewhat unsuccessfully) for a tin. The result was quite pleasing, but I suspect the tin resulted in a slightly gummy crumb, so next time I will remove the loaf and bake free-form for the final 10 minutes. I also used baking spray on the loaf top to prevent the plastic bag from sticking during retard. This resulted in a very dark top crus
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- Portus's Blog
Sourdough Danish Rye/Rugbrød på surdej

Lovely recipe by Stanley Ginsburg from his site theryebaker.com
Stage 1 sponge (day one, morning):
- wholgrain rye flour 63g
- warm water 63g
- whole rye starter @ 100% hydration 7g
Left to mature for 10-12 hours.
Stage 2 sponge (day one, evening):
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- Anonymous's Blog
1-2-3 Third Attempt

Decided on upping the starter to 150 so...
Starter 150g
Water 300
Flour 225 AP/225 BF
12g of salt
Mixed it all up, let it rest for an hour
Looked at it and folded it every 2 hours for 6.5 hours
Wonderful marshmallow texture when I put it in the bowl
Let it go in the fridge for 22 hours
Baked at the usual 450 for 500, I did forget to dunk the parchment paper in water.
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- Valdus's Blog
3-Way Oat Sourdough

This bread was so good, I thought it was worthy of creating my first blog! The original recipe came from Rose Levy Berenbaum's site, here; she cites original recipe from Chef Andrew Meltzer. The version she posts is a yeasted loaf and was spectacularly good. I made it as she posted and below is the result. The dough contains an oat porridge, toasted oats, and the loaves are rolled in oats before baking. I was obviously a little more successful in rolling one
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- fcbennett's Blog
Whole Grain Sourdough Bread. 3

Week three and bread three. Last time, i felt the structure of the dough was lacking, so I did a few more stretch and folds before shaping. To facilitate fermentation, I also did some more folds early and slightly decreased the salt. In this i was certainly right, for the first time, the dough doubled in bulk overnight and proofed very well.
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- Joseph's Blog
Forbidden Rice Sourdough with Honeyed Barley and Hemp Hearts

This was inspired by both Ian and Cedar Mountain.
Recipe
Makes 3 loaves of ~735 g cooked weight each
Add-ins
100 g black rice
50 g barley flakes
50 g hemp hearts
50 g honey
30 g yogurt
50 g water
Dough
100 g high extraction rye flour (115 rye berries, milled and sifted)
200 g high extraction Selkirk wheat flour (230 g Selkirk berries, milled and sifted)
700 g unbleached flour
700 g filtered water
22 g salt
250 g levain
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- 10 comments
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- Danni3ll3's Blog
Larraburu Brothers Method

I was six when the Larraburu Brothers Bakery shut down. I don't recall what the bread tasted like, and I'm not even sure I ever had any. But I'm fascinated by the history and how widespread and adored this bread was. The number of loaves, the loaves shipping around the world, even to France, indicates that it wasn't just a small group of aficionados that were keen on this bread.
I grew up on Colombo rolls and sliced bread, Oroweat rye, and 'artificial' sourdough baguettes from Safeway. And I always had a Boudin bread bowl with clam chowder whenever I visited San Francisco.
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- mikedilger's Blog