Blog posts
San Joaquin Inspired Pecan Meal Sourdough Batard
This is similar to a bake I did a little while ago but I changed things up a little. I used a much higher % of freshly milled whole wheat flour and a little less whole rye. I also used some pecan meal and cracked wheat and eliminated the onions.
I am not sure how much the pecan flavor really comes through but you can definitely taste some nuttiness for sure and it gave the crumb an interesting purple haze color similar to when adding walnuts.
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- Isand66's Blog
Sunflower Seed and Date Bread
Lately I've been making fairly simple breads and so got the urge to get a little more complex. While doing the weekly shopping both dates and sunflower seed caught my eye and there was a lady demonstrating some locally made maple syrup, unusual for Iowa, which of course I had to try.
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- STUinlouisa's Blog
2 years with a Nutramill
2 years with a Nutramill.
I’m 74 and grew up eating toast for breakfast. As I have aged it seems what passes for bread does not agree with me. Specifically there were too any trips to the bathroom at night and i blamed these on too much folic acid.
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- arydberg's Blog
Insane-Amount-Of-Garlic Bread
After the craziness of the festive season, it's good to get back into the bread baking saddle. Not that I was entirely out of the kitchen as the holidays are a wonderful time to cook great food. And it was a leftover from that cooking that provided the inspiration - a head and a half of roasted garlic...
Now, I adore garlic, so yes, I decided to make a loaf of bread with that much garlic in it... Not that the neighbours will be thanking me, I'm sure... I kept the bake simple in order to showcase the garlic.
Poolish:
100g bread flour
100g water
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- Reynard's Blog
To score or not to score
I baked my Rye sourdough in the iron pots the other day for the first time. I've been using Ken Forkish's method of forming the boules, proofing them seam-side down then baking them seam-side up, letting them bloom naturally. However, when I did this batch I mistakenly put on in the pot smooth-side up. The difference is amazing! No bloom on the mistaken one, though it did split a bit on one side. The others all rose higher and are much more attractive.
Here is the same bread baked on stones, with regular scoring before baking:
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- Lazy Loafer's Blog
Starting to get a handle on this
I've been baking weekly and making progress with the occasional step backward. Today's bake is a wheat levain with sunflower and pumpkin seeds. I'm finally getting better at shaping my batards, this is dramatically better spring than in the past.
I've noticed something curious: I've usually made boules, two at a time, one baked in a combo cooker, the other in a Le Creuset enameled casserole of the same diameter. The one in the Le Creuset always has noticeably better spring. I've done this often enough that I'm pretty sure it's not my imagination . Has anyone else come across this?
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- TomK's Blog
Poilâne
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- Sjadad's Blog
Multi-grain Cream Cheese Onion Bread
This is a healthy and tasty loaf. The cream cheese really created a moist semi-open crumb.
I had just returned from a business trip in Vegas so I used my newly refreshed AP mother starter for this one and decided to add some dehydrated onions for some extra flavor.
I brought one loaf into work and it didn't last too long so I guess it was pretty good :).

Formula
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- Isand66's Blog
bread with seaweed
This looks so interesting I am going to post it. You may get a pesky pop up ad sorry about that!
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- Truth Serum's Blog