Blog posts

Cooked Potato Starter White Bread

Profile picture for user dabrownman

 

With Lucy’s success, after 3 tries, at the Methodist Ladies, 1906 Witch Yeast, Lucy thought she could move on to a more difficult starter - especially now that she has finally passed the last of the aluminum foil wrapped Hershey’s Kisses she ate a couple of days before Christmas – nearly a whole bag of them.  So much for chocolates being poisonous for dogs too.

Cheese garlic bread.

Toast

This bread was the last minute thought to accompany some left over vegetable, squid and bay scallop chowder that is a mainstay at Christmas Eve dinner. It also served as a means to use up some starter that needed refreshed and some cheese left over from the same meal. Since time was short it is a hybrid with 125g starter and a pinch ( too small to weigh with my 1g minimum scale) of commercial yeast. The flour,500g total, is 50% fresh ground white whole wheat and 50% AP.

Porridge Rye Beer Bread

Profile picture for user Isand66

  I made a version of this bread in the summer and decided to bake it again with some modifications to bring to our friends house for Christmas dinner.  I usually bring some type of rye bread to go with the Christmas ham and figured a nice moist porridge bread would do the trick.

I decided to add some beer which usually gives Rye a wonderful flavor and I also added some toasted onions to the second build of the starter to really enhance the onion flavor profile.

Merry Christmas & Happy New Year TFL!

Profile picture for user FrugalBaker

The year end is approaching once again and it is time to reflect on what I have done and have not. Though, this time around, I chose to count on all the blessings instead and TFL is definitely one of them as I have benefited so much from the helpful community around here.

 

Many thanks to Abe, dabrownman, Alan, Minioven, Gordon and so many more people out there...

 

Merry Christmas, Happy New Year and as always....Happy Baking : ) 

 

Pain Cordon de Bourgogne

Profile picture for user Bröterich

This was first described here by freerk. 

I modified the recipe by not using yeast and using a very active rye starter (100% hydration). As high extraction flour I used Red Fife. The dough was very slack so that I could't really formed a batard, and I used an oblong cloche. The taste was beautiful.

Tom.

Seed bread reproduction

Toast

I bought this amazingly delicious bread from a bakery in my hometown 
It was dense but it felt light and with a great crispy crust and plenty of grains.

Few days after tasting it I started to develop an obsession to discover the mysteries of this bread
I even posted a forum thread to share this urge with the TFL experts

http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/44314/how-achieve-crustcrumb-texture

Cracked Spelt Levain

Profile picture for user WoodenSpoon

 

  • 62g bread flour (11%)
  • 196g all purpose flour (35%)
  • 96g fresh milled spelt (17%)
  • 146g fresh milled hard red (26%)
  • 120g 100% hydration, rye levain (11% rye 11% water)
  • 415g warm water (74%)
  • 280g strained, fermented, cracked spelt berries

 

1/2 hr autolyse 

mix in levain and salt

Dorm Room Bread

Profile picture for user TwoBreadedBoy

The thing I feared most about college was that I wouldn't be able to bake bread anymore. Turns out, however, that my dorm building has a kitchenette on each floor - equipped with a small oven that begins to smoke if turned to over 450 F. Good enough for me. Here are a few of the loaves I managed to bake while pursuing a dual degree in Computer Science and English Literature. I didn't have time to post them until now.

Zhavaronki (bird-shaped rolls)