Blog posts

[2017-08] Hearth Pan Loaf

Profile picture for user Modern Jess

I'm falling behind on posting. Still baking, but I have a backlog of photos and posts to do. Trying to catch up.

Here's a loaf to change things up a bit. My wife is actually not super fond of "artisan" bread. She'll eat it, but she prefers softer bread, and always cuts the crust off regardless of what kind of bread it is. This is, needless to say, a bit of a sore point in our household.

Cedar Mountain's Sprouted Rye Sourdough

Profile picture for user Danni3ll3

I managed to find some of Cedar Mountain's recipes on Tapatalk and since hubby had requested a rye loaf for this week, I thought I would give it a shot. It didn't get the oven spring that Cedar Mountain gets but it sure smells wonderful. Crumb shot will be forthcoming once we cut into it.

Long mixed wet dough - following the Leader

Profile picture for user Lazy Loafer

I bought myself a copy of Daniel Leader's "Local Breads" just before Christmas. It's a very good read for one thing - lots of stories about his travels to different parts of Europe, learning the secrets of many traditional regional breads from France, Italy, Poland, Germany, etc. There are lots of techniques to try and recipes scaled for the home baker.

First Sourdough Bake 1-12-17

Profile picture for user Dana D

Just posting to catalog photos and thoughts as my baking progresses.

This first batch:

-Outer crumb was light and airy, but when I cut into the middle of the loaf, it was much more dense.

-I got impatient during the final rise and was feeling antsy, so I baked after only 2.5 hours.

-I still felt pure joy when I took the steam lid off and saw that my all day project had been successful!

Made with Acorns - Acorn Levain à la Tartine

Profile picture for user hanseata

During my childhood, we kids used to gather acorns and chestnuts (not the edible kind) to make funny little gnomes from them. Nice and shiny as they looked, I knew that only pigs and squirrels could eat them, they were much too bitter for human consumption.

When I read a facebook post ("Bread History & Practice") about the possibility to use acorns in bread baking, I was intrigued - the huge European oaks in our neighborhood had produced a bumper crop of acorns this year.

5 Ways Recipe Report Cards Will Make you a Smarter Baker

Toast

I have been working on a small machine for a while. Each day it gets smarter and smarter, more powerful and more refined. Although not perfect, I think I can say with the utmost humble expression,  I think this may be the first program to prescreen baking recipes. So what!?

 

The idea is to have a downloadable Recipe Report Card you supply with your recipe, so people know how a recipe will actually turn out, instead of the just looking at the best of 30 staged photos.

This means:

Flavor, crumb and presentation

Profile picture for user kendalm
Here's a quick pic of today's bake. Recently I have shifted focus to all three (at least of my) important criterion in baking a great loaf that is, good flavor, a nice open crumb structure and somewhat presentable final shape. When o first started trying baguettes it seemed that only one of these was near impossible. So here's today's batch - great taste considering the bulk was only 6 hours. As a side-note, used thawed fresh yeast which I am beginning to notice is really active even more so that fresh yeast that was never frozen.

Porridge Leek Squared Bread

Profile picture for user Isand66

I asked my wife to buy me a few bannetons for Hanuka and she bought me enough to start a bakery :).

The first one I used was a square shape.  I at first was going to use the square one and a batard shape but after dividing the dough realized I needed to use all of it to fill the square version.  After combining the two dough's together I probably degassed them a little too much which resulted in a tighter crumb than expected.