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Artisan Bread School 2019 Courses

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Artisan Bread School is running the following courses:

Winnipeg, Canada 1 - 5 April 2019 COURSE FULL

Fattoria degli Usignoli, Tuscany, Italy 6 -10 May 2019 PLACES AVAILABLE https://www.artisan-bread-school.com/course/five-day-course-at-fattoria-degli-usignoli-italy-may-2019/

Fattoria degli Usignoli, Tuscany, Italy 14 - 18 May 2019 COURSE FULL

Taking a stroll out of my comfort zone

Toast

I'd mentioned to Abe that I was thinking of rosemary and onion for my next bake (working on shaping and scoring) and he came back with a suggestion for this lovely recipe for tomato bread by Emmanuel Hadjiandreou.

Of course, why not?

The first surprising thing was the quantity of levain: 300g of 100% levain for 400g of flour! And since I wanted two 700g-ish loaves, I found myself building 450g of levain over the course of two days, after which I left it to retard in the fridge.

French Fields

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The various Rosellas in our garden loves eating the lavender seeds, sometimes daintily holding it with their feet while eating. It served as my inspiration for bread this week. Lavender makes me think of France, so voila, Lavender Fougasse! 

The lavender flavour is very strong, so I used only a sprinkle and combined it with rosemary and orange thyme. I used my wheat sourdough starter for this one.

Lots of seeds for a change

Profile picture for user TomK

 

This week I decided to wing it somewhat, a departure for me. I made a dough I’ve made often before - 30% whole wheat, 79% hydration, 12% levain - and added a soaker of a small handful each of sesame, flax, chia, pumpkin, and sunflower seeds. I didn’t weigh the seeds or water in the soaker because I knew it would be a much higher percentage of the dough weight than much I was taught to use. My bad! I’ll have to experiment to recreate it to get the wonderful aroma and flavor. The dry seeds were probably around 30% or more of the dough weight.

Sourdough Jerusalem Bagels

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I've been wanting to try baking these for quite some time now and finally managed to do it.  Unlike NY style bagels these are not boiled, but rather baked and dipped in a sweet pomegranate molasses and sesame seed mixture which gives these bagels a very unique flavor.  I converted a recipe using instant yeast to sourdough I found in The Palestinian Table by Reem Kassis. My mother starter is kept at 66% hydration so if yours is different you can adjust accordingly.

Spiced Walnuts SD with 50% Sprouted White Wheat & Rye

Toast

This loaf was partly inspired by the tempering technique in Indian cooking. The aroma of spices blooming in hot oil is notably different from that of dry toasting spices. This makes sense: we all know the flavor of spices is oil-soluble :)

 

 

Spiced Walnuts SD with 50% Sprouted White Wheat & Rye

 

Dough flour (all freshly milled):