Blog posts
Sourdough Flatbread and Charcuterie

Hi TFLers! Long time no hear! I've been very busy adjusting to my new career that I seldom bake and post. I hope you still remember me. I made this simple flatbread for my birthday and I paired it with homemade charcuterie (sausages in particular). It feels like a very European thing to do but since no one drinks wine or alcohol in our household, we just washed it down freshly squeezed calamansi juice and hot chocolate.
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- PalwithnoovenP's Blog
Andrew Whitley's Christmas Bread

I am a sucker for fruit breads and decided to try this one. I would highly recommend this recipe, but I had a real issue getting the fruit to be well-dispersed. All of the fruit seem to be on the very top of the loaf which was frustrating. I didn't have fresh yeast so I used 1/2 tsp of instant and then 1/3 cup of fed sourdough starter. I put 5g of starter in the overnight pre-ferment and the rest when I mixed the dough the next day. I decided to make 2 smaller loaves.
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- ifs201's Blog
FWSY Walnut Levain

I got a copy of FWSY a few weeks ago and this was my first attempt at making a levain. My previous 3 efforts all used biga or poolish pre-ferment. I stuck to the recipe, but reduced the proof times somewhat given recommendations on this site and the temperature of my apartment (about 82 degrees). I also used about 75 degree water instead of the 90 degrees recommended since my home was warm. I also reduced the amount of instant yeast from the recommended 1/2 tsp to 1/4 tsp and increased the amount of whole wheat flour to 20% of the total flour used.
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- ifs201's Blog
Saigon Cinnamon Raisin Sourdough

Alan posted delicious looking cinnamon raisin batards (http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/60371/maurizios-cinnamon-raisin-levain-baguettes) so I had to jump on the bandwagon too. I scaled up the original recipe from Maurizio to make three boules of my usual size which is usually around 1100 g of flour.
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- Danni3ll3's Blog
Vollkornbrot from Jeffrey Hamelman's Bread

The challenge for this weekend: Vollkornbrot from Jeffrey Hamelman’s Bread. This is one of my favorite recipes because it’s surprisingly low maintenance for rye bread, and the results are fantastic.
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- 4 comments
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- bakergrun's Blog
RWC SD - 10/10/5 (WW/S/R)

My weekly bake this week, and I decided to go back to my favorite flour mix - 10% WW, 10% Semolina, and 5% Rye. Of course, the WW % is actually higher since I feed my starter with WW flour, but you get the idea! :) I tried very hard to be as gentle as possible with my stretching, folding, and I like the results thus far (still cooling, so haven't cut into them.) In particular, I think these loaves seemed to hold their shape after being removed from the bannetons better than any loaves I have made before. Here are the particulars, and some pics.....
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- rgreenberg2000's Blog
Respect the Miller
I have 4 bins of "wheat" in the pantry. They are all fresh from the vendor, at a moisture content of ~11%. If I take samples of each, mill them, and mix each sample to the same hydration, the result will range from a "brick" (Kamut) to "soup" (spelt).
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- agres's Blog
Everything Bagel Loaf

A basic sourdough, Rye, WW, Bread flour.. then bagelized.
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- Edo Bread's Blog
Poppy and sesame seed sourdough (80% hydration, 80% bread flour/20% khorasan)
I fed my starter, and, at peak, instead of discarding it, I saved it in a jar to use as a "levain" the next day.
This was the resulting bake.
- 255g Central Milling Bread ABC+ flour
- 70g Central Milling khorasan flour
- 260g H20
- A sprinkle of poppy and sesame seeds (untoasted, although I realized I should've toasted these)
Let the oven heat up at 500F for about 1 hour before throwing the bread in.
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- TwoCats's Blog