Sour Rye with Onion and Mustard
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My husband and I were involved in a terrible car accident January 9. Among other injuries, he has a broken neck and i have a very badly broken right arm. God was there and we will mend and be good as new. I got my computer after three days in the hospital. in between surgeries, etc I read TFL. It was the best medicine available. I have enjoyed every picture and all the comments. It was so nice to follow the experiments and experiences of all the loafers. I will say, some pictures were better than others depending on the amount of morphine I had on board.
I baked a couple of things this weekend. The first was the Sourdough Carrot Cake recipe from King Arthur that someone (TXFarmer?) posted about a couple of months back.
I halved the recipe and baked them as cupcakes rather than a cake. It is quite good and a useful way of disposing of ripe starter.
In my quest to make better bread I have gathered information from almost any resource. Peter Reinhart's Bread Baker's Apprentice has become a go-to book when I want to bake. One day I was perusing random websites and I happened upon a blog called "Pinch My Salt". This blog included a number of amateur bakers making each recipe in The Bread Baker's Apprentice in order. I thought this might be a cheaper alternative to making beer considering I do not currently have the funds.
Foodies (myself included) can be really annoying. Especially the obsession with details of the provenance of ingredients. I don’t need to know what species of leaves are in the mulch that fed the grass that fed the lamb that I eat.
One foodie principle that I endorse, though, is the locavore concept, the idea that it is beneficial to use local ingredients and to celebrate local cuisine. Well, we don’t grow wheat here in the Bay Area, but my bake today is decidedly local to the Bay Area.
This might just say it all. I made a very small amount of Peter Reinharts Rich Man's Brioche, actually only a third of the recipe. It still called for 1 1/2 sticks of butter in it, by weight is was almost the same amount as it called for flour! The recipe said this was the hardest to make of the three formula's. I took that as a challenge. Here's the end result, the "Money Shots".
There have been some inspiring and mouthwatering nutty breads posted lately, so how could I resist. I had to have some. It's been a long time, and I forgot how good a few walnuts in a loaf of bread could be.
I stumbled upon bwraith's 2007 blog entry on this sourdough ciabatta. It combines my two favorite breads in a way that enhances the best of both! I have learned so much from others on this forum and thought others might like to be reminded of this great bread.
Hello, I was poking around the pastryna.com website, where they make available back issues of their magazine.
I was delighted to find an article written by my SFBI Weekend Baguette class instructor, Frank Sally, on baking with Teff (in a WFO):
http://www.pastryna.com/DigitalEdition/Digital_NA_10_1.html (The SFBI Teff Miche article starts on page 26).
(David, if you're out there, this one's for you!)
A return to Andy's formula yielded good results and considerable lessons about dough development, strength, and fermentation. At the same time, I'm more convinced than ever that all home baking is local. Andy, if you are reading, thanks again for your guidance.