Traditional Sourdough Pandoro - Merry X'mas!
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- txfarmer's Blog
Today, I had some cheese curds leftover from making a gouda cheese, along with some recently dried dill weed. It was time to make cottage cheese onion dill bread from The Tassajara Recipe Book. The recipe makes two light and airy loaves. We enjoy a slice toasted and buttered at breakfast along with some scrambled eggs.
From a very wet UK, I'm sending out my very best wishes to all of you over the holiday season, and I hope 2013 is a fine one too.
Here's a photo of the Bread and Roses stall last Friday at the Christmas Market. It was a really good time, but would have been frantically busy had there been even slightly better weather.
All good wishes
Andy
The formula you posted for the potato/ricotta bread was a winner !! I am so glad that my refridgerator contents contained all that I needed . I made a couple changes . I used leftover scalloped potatoes that contained some bits of ham and onions. I mashed them with some milk to what I hoped was a good consistency. You were right about the dough being goopy :) Whoa...it was. I had already put in all the water , I am used to working with really wet doughs, but I still thought perhaps this was too wet. I added about 1/2 c more flour as it was working in the KA.
Thought Experiment #2: What is the difference between a starter and a bread dough?
One question I like to ask new apprentices is, what's the difference between a starter and a bread dough? Or, for that matter, between a pre-ferment and a bread dough?
I have never received a satisfactory answer, and I think because there isn't one. Not an answer, a difference.
Hello fellow Fresh Loaf'ers.
I would like to announce that today is my birthday. Thanks to everyone here that has made me feel welcome in this wonderful forum. This is a great community full of enthusiastic bakers and I wouldn't be where I am today without you all.
Cheers and Merry Christmas.
Thought Experiment #1: Data Points
Parameter-based Thinking
What is the difference between a car mechanic and an automobile engineer? Right off the bat we know the second job title sounds fancier. Why? We assume you have to be “smart” be the latter. “Smart” really just means educated, in this sense. Doesn’t a mechanic have to know about cars, too? Of course!
Ask Questions, More Importantly Know the Answer
I think about bread a lot. This idea is very hard for me to convey to people. Then, again, many of my ideas are hard to convey. This is typical of somebody with Asperger’s, even more so when the co-morbid obsession is bread.
I forget other people don’t know what I know. It also irks me when people ask me to give more explanatory background on something I consider to be plainly obvious.
So in response to a recent post, I decided to try Beth Hensperger's Sennebec Hill bread for myself, to see if the original recipe was problematic as I initially suspected. This is an enriched multigrain bread with 3 different flours, as well as rolled oats and yellow cornmeal.