Blog posts
Chest Thumping and Distinctions without a Difference
I have been looking at bread and pastry recipes since the days when Louis Diat was still chef at the Ritz - call it 60+ years. I see progressively more detailed and pedantic recipes. I think some of that is an effort to sell the newest edition of the latest cookbook.
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- agres's Blog
16th bake. 1/2/2020.
Jan 2, 2020.
Close to #14. 625 g total flour, 87.8 % total hydration. Mostly HWSW, a little Kamut, a little quinoa flour, a tablespoon of BRM GF flour. A little molasses in the soaker. Used 1/4 vit C tablet, 125 mg , and 2 tsp vital wheat gluten in soaker too. Added 2 tsp dried malt extract when added levain. Got good oven spring. Nice light springy crumb, but not too open.
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- idaveindy's Blog
Hawaiian Sourdough Pizza
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- Benito's Blog
pain de campagne - revisited
For a very long time, I have been fascinated by “pain de campagne”. In the cookbooks, it is made with mostly white bread flour, to which some (20%) whole wheat flour is added. Sometimes it is made with yeast, and sometimes sourdough and sometimes something in between. I have tried a bunch of these recipes and variations on them. Then, there are stories and rumors about great breads made of fresh ground high extraction flours (e.g., https://breadtopia.com/whole-grain-sourdough/ ).
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- agres's Blog
A Journey of a Thousand Muffins...
Or something like that...
To be honest, I'm just starting out as a baker. I've made a few loaves of bread, some cookies, and some dinner rolls.
I originally tried out baking as a way to relax on my days off. Something about the mindfulness associated with the whole process - mixing, kneading, waiting, working, baking, enjoying - really appeals to me. I don't have a lot of time or money, and so my baking is done "by appointment". I block out time, find some recipes or plan my day in advance, and do most everything by hand. No mixers, no scales.
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- Jeff P's Blog
Two loaves from the exact same bulk dough, but somewhat different crumbs
Prepped 130g of levain (100% hydration, 70F in the microwave with the light on). At the same time, autolysed roughly 650g of flour (255g Central Milling ABC+, 70g hard white, 70g semolina) with 520g room-temp water.
5 hours later, added all the levain (rose about 2.3x) to the autolysed dough and mixed
45 mins later, added 16g Maldon salt
1 hour later, divided dough (at this point, 650g each)
1.5 hour later, coil fold
1 hour later, coil fold
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- TwoCats's Blog
Celsius to Fahrenheit conversion
For handy reference. Courtesy of Duckduckgo.
Celsius Fahrenheit
- 180 356
- 185 365
- 190 374
- 195 383
- 200 392
- 205 401
- 210 410
- 215 419
- 220 428
- 225 437
- 230 446
- 235 455
- 240 464
- 245 473
- 250 482
- 255 491
- 260 500
C x 1.8 + 32 = F
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- idaveindy's Blog
New Year Breads
I've really been enjoying reducing my levain to 10% and doing a longer bulk ferment this winter. I wanted to make some loaves to give away and to serve at a party, so I tried mixing dough for 6 loaves at once. Boy, that was a mistake! My scale couldn't handle the weight so all of my measurement were thrown off, but somehow the breads may be my best ever (at least visually).
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- ifs201's Blog
Couronne Bordelaise
This is my first time attempting the couronne Bordelaise. I followed the instructions given by Susan at Wild Yeast Blog, using her Norwich Sourdough recipe as well, though I scaled the recipe down by 25% to produce two (roughly) 750 gram loaves. I did a test run two days ago, which turned out pretty well, though I had some problems with execution. I rolled the center disk out too much, and that piece didn't separate to produce the "crown" effect. The first of the two I baked this morning similarly failed to crown thoroughly.
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- Rhody_Rye's Blog