Croissant from Advanced Bread and Pastry, Michel Suas
- Log in or register to post comments
- 6 comments
- View post
- Faith in Virginia's Blog
weekend baking for friends.
baked a couple of breads for my friends. using Chad's formula for country bread. 500g brown bread flour and 250 gram AP. 150gram wholewheat starter at 75% hydration. 520gram water and 20gram of rum. 150gram raisin soaked in rum. 150gram toasted walnuts. 30gram soaked flaxseeds.
[url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/jamcraft/8422788570/][/url]
Today’s Bread [2013.1.27_28]
・100g Levain (Maison Kayser Traditional)
・300g Legendaire (bread flour)
・50g Gristmill (stone-mill 1CW)
・0.8g Saf Instant Dry Yeast
・5g Sea Salt
・222g Water (total 68% hydration dough)
This is true in bread baking, of course. We are all more or less methodical, trying to get everything just right. But everything is never just right. Then, something inexplicably wonderful happens and the best bread ever known comes out of your oven. And it’s either because you’re amazingly skillful, or pixies, leprechauns, angels or karma paid a visit. In my case, I would bet it’s pixies.
The same is true in photography (that’s why they’re called “pixels”).
Yesterday was a lucky day both for bread and photography.
This is my first TFL write up.
While I have only made some comments on posts within the last couple of months, I have been stalking the wonderful forums and submissions on this site since I started baking bread regularly, about four years ago. I think a big thank you to the collective of the website is in order, if not something more.
I just refreshed my Yeast Water starter earlier in the week after returning home from a long business trip. I have had great success mixing the Yeast Water starter with a traditional sourdough starter so I decided to follow a similar path. To make things interesting and because I happen to love durum breads I decided to make a 65% hydration YW starter using only durum flour and for the
Flour, water, salt, time, and temperature. The right combinations of those variables, plus technique, make good bread.
Along with a few simple tricks.
I've learned how to make pretty good bread from this forum. This is the first of a set of posts describing a few of the things I've learned. Maybe they will help somebody new.
My fight against scurvy (not really) and the wintertime blues (really) by baking fruity things continued today. This time I went for raspberries and made a Raspberry Cream Cheese Braid using the Blueberry Cream Cheese Braid formula on the site.