Blackbread Rolls
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- SylviaH's Blog
Hi Everyone:
This is my first time on this website and have a question for you all. I am a recreational baker. I bake sourdough bread every weekend and have several brotforms. Several years ago I found a beautiful brotform with a starburst design on the bottom and am looking for more designs, does anyone have any suggestions of where to find them?
I am not much of a photographer and well, I am never exactly "happy" with anything I bake. I can always outline the flaws or specific things that could stand some improvement.
But I decided to show this week's bake - come what may - and here are the results:
Batch 1: Baguettes
Sometimes when you find a recipe, it takes a little adjusting to make it turn out how you would like. Sometimes after lots of adjusting, you come back to the original recipe and find out it was great how it was. This is the latter. If you'd like to find the recipe, and method, both Jane (janedo) and David (dmsnyder), among others, have written about it quite a bit here, and have both had much success with this recipe and variations of it. Anyway, using that as a baseline, I'll mention the adjustments I made to the method, and/or explain the pics. Oh, and just a
Levain Honey Oatmeal Loaf
Great toasting and breakfast bread. Very tender and soft. Converted this from a commercial yeast recipe I have been making.
Breakfast of Champions!
Second Loaf got much better rise, however I should try a larger pan. These are perfect gift size.
This weekend's baking included Bernard Claytons Pain Allemande aux Fruits. It's a marvelously fragrant bread, containing lemon zest, orange juice, anise seed, cinnamon, figs, raisins, apricots, prunes, almonds, hazelnuts, butter and other good things. I made a double batch, since I tend to make a mess in the process of getting everything prepped. Might as well have four loaves for my efforts as two, right? Plus, I can give some for gifts and still have some for myself.
I've tried an awful lot of toys and tweaks in my quest for better bread. But Eric's (ehanner) claim that he doesn't see any benefit to using a baking stone and the recent post asking about La Cloche versus a Dutch oven got me thinking: Each new trick I've learned about has been added on top of all the other tricks I've adopted. It sounds like what happens with government programs - If the one we have isn't doing the job, we don't trash it or improve it. We just create a new one to run beside the old one. I call it "Planning by Acretion."
I had two fairly large pre-frozen dough ball recipes from Neo-Neapolitan P.R. American Pie. Pre-heated my oven and stone to 550...it was set to come on and be pre-heated automatic for one hour...dough balls were left out to thaw...so when I returned home later that afternoon....everything would be ready for a fast pizza dinner...well under 30 min.
I started baking today and thought I would make a couple loaves of babka. Of course I started and didn't realize I did not have everything. I had no almond paste, no milk powder, or corn syrup. I ran to the store, actually 4 of them and not one had almond paste. Well, I decided (this recipe calls for almond paste, which I love!) I would substitue because I have a recipe that calls for pound cake crumbs. Made it home and then realized someone had eaten the rest of the poundcake. Anyway, I had no filling but my dough was rising.