Blog posts

Miche made with dark beer.

Profile picture for user dmsnyder

I was visiting the King Arthur Flour web site last week and, as I usually do, wandered into the "Professional" section of the site to see what might be new. There, I found a new formula for "Harpoon Miche." You know, with a name like that, I had to check it out. It sounded like a bread that would stick in your ribs ... if you weren't careful.

Basic sweet dough

Profile picture for user Cuisine Fiend

I’d like to share my basic sweet dough recipe which I’ve found really reliable and versatile. I bake a lot of buns and tea breads as that’s the preferred breakfast fodder in my house... And before you say they are best from the oven – of course, but I freeze them as soon as they cool down and – though not warm – they are as good as defrosted. Show them the oven if necessary.

Multigrain yeast water bread.

Toast

The last whole grain yeast water bread I made was possibly under fermented realized from the very good post that Yippee made. This time I wanted to take it to the other extreme. All the flours used were high extraction with just the biggest bits sifted, an extraction rate of 90-95% depending on the grain. This bread was a throw together bread where nothing is actually measured. The flours were Spelt, Kamut, Turkey Red, and some sprouted multigrain that was left over and I don't remember exactly what was in it.

Buckwheat Whole Wheat Bread

Profile picture for user Isand66

  It's nice to be home after a two week business trip to Asia.  I'm always happy to bake some fresh bread after eating pretty crappy bread most of my trip.

I used some Buckwheat flour I had recently purchased from KAF and combined it with some freshly milled hard red whole wheat along with some French style flour and potato flour.  Barley flakes were added for some additional flavor.

Cheat's sourdough

Profile picture for user Cuisine Fiend

I know, I know. Not a good way to start, presenting a cheating loaf in my first post. But this is an interesting little number and well worth trying, for when you can't be bothered to feed your starters, or just for a change.

The starter is made with a little rye flour plus white bread flour and more for the main dough, but I've tried adding a mix of white and wholemeal in the past and it works fine. The nice thing is you can throw in seeds and whole grains, flavour it with herbs - it will take it all without protesting.