Horst Bandel's Black Pumpernickel
Horst Bandel's Black Pumpernickel
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Horst Bandel's Black Pumpernickel
Well, dear readers, despite my recent silence on the subject I have not given up on my baguette quest! For the last few weeks, however, I'd gotten a little sick of blogging about it. This week was fairly successful, however, and so I want to share, and request some feedback.
We were invited to a Cajun-themed dinner party last evening at a friend's house here in Pretoria. Not the easiest thing to pull off in South Africa but it turned out pretty well, considering the limitations.
Hello everyone,
Farine featured Luminita Cirstea in a 'Meet the Baker' post on her website.
Ms. Cirstea's courage, hard work, commitment and talent are so inspiring!
I so wanted to try making Ms. Cirstea's delicious-looking (and prize-winning!) Raisin-Rye bread.
With thanks to Farine for writing about Ms. Cirstea, and thanks to Ms. Cirstea for her efforts to develop this formula!
Thanks are due at the top to Farine-MC for her charming blog and its marvelous, useful content, and also to breadsong, scoring master and exemplary baker.
In brief, I neglected to take account of the very low humidity in New York City right now. My maple oatmeal was both too stiff and underproofed. Yes, I made the same mistake two weeks ago with another loaf. Now I have two striked against me, so I hope that atleast it will be something different that I overlook next time. The effects of the underproofing are clear on the batard.
I have undertaken the BBA challenge for 2011 but I am not one to follow directions. I am making the recipes in the order that they appeal to me or what I have a desire to bake. This does however mean that I will be on my own during the challenge without a number of supporters. My family decided they wanted some cinnamon rolls, so i pulled out the bba and went to work
This is a Whole Wheat Barley Bread I baked yesterday. The recipe was made to include my barley flour.
Procedure:
Day 1:
Mix the Soaker contents in a Bowl until you form a ball. Put the dough in a an oiled container and leave at room temp. for 24 hours.
Mix the Biga contents in a Bowl until you form a ball. Put the dough in a a large oiled container and into a fridge for 24 hours.
Day 2:
I wanted to make a sandwich roll that had some substance both for chew and to hold up under moist sandwich ingredients, but something tender enough to be compressible. I’d been meaning to try a bread with some potatoes in it, as I’d heard that potatoes add some tenderness to the crumb (and every crumb needs a little tenderness).
This does not quite match the discussions I have read, and I am hoping someone might recognize what is going on here and point me in the right direction.
Hi - Long time lurker, first time poster! I love everything that you do here. It has been such an inspiration!
I am giving the 36 Hour SD Baguette recipe a shot. The only difference in our recipes is that I have Bob's Red Mill AP flour on hand and used it. Yesterday went well, I made it through step 3 (all the S&F and putting up for the 24 hours).