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Normandy Apple Bread… Tweaked

Profile picture for user KathyF

Since the family loved the apple bread so much, I decided to try again with a few tweaks. As suggested by dabrownman and Reynard in my last blog, I soaked my dehydrated apples in the cider. I also decided to forgo the instant yeast and rely on my levain to do all the rising of the bread. So this is how I went about it:

Catching Up (Now with a formula for Cheese Straw Sourdough!)

Profile picture for user a_warming_trend

Yet again, it's been way too long since I last posted. I won't dwell on the reasons, because we all have them...the important part is that I've still been baking, even in these crazy North Carolina summer temperatures!

I'll focus on posting some photos of bakes from the last few months, but I also wanted to share a few thoughts I've been mulling recently 

1) Bulk fermentation:

Barley Beauty

Profile picture for user Anne-Marie B

I've had this recipe for a long, long time, it dates back to 2006. It takes 3 days to develop but it is an easy bread to make and never fails. It has a lovely aroma and taste.

I have made it in rings like Petra did on her blog, but last Saturday morning at 5am it was really chilly and I felt lazy and in a hurry to get back on my electric blanky. So a simple boule would have to do. Still tastes great, just not as impressive on the eye.

Khaled does 6 (six) SF Bakeries in 1 (one) day!

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Back in April, Khaled let me know he had enrolled in the Sourdough Bread workshop at the San Francisco Baking Institute. I volunteered to meet him there and, after he had a night to recover a bit from the 15 hour flight from Dubai, take him on a tour of San Francisco bakeries and show him some of the city sights. I also volunteered brother Glenn, who lives in San Francisco, to act as native guide. 

Normandy Apple Bread

Profile picture for user KathyF

As I was looking through Jeffrey Hamelman's book Bread: A Baker's Book of Techniques and Recipes, I saw the recipe for Normandy Apple Bread. Having a couple of apples laying around the house, I thought I would give it a try. So, I started the levain build and then found my dehydrator so I could dehydrate the apples by morning. Took 2 apples for the amount required for one loaf.

Pecan Porridge Multi-grain Bread

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  I love pecans and remembered the other day that I had some pecan meal left over just yelling at me to use it.  What better use than in a new version of a porridge bread.

I also found some bulgar, cracked wheat, rye chops and malted wheat flakes to use in the porridge which smelled amazing while cooking.

I used some fresh milled spelt, durum, and rye along with some AP flour, potato flour and KAF French style flour.

Bread in the grill.

Toast

This bread is a continuation of trying to perfect a technique of baking in a Kamado style but metal grill. The bread is also an experiment because of using a high percentage of old dough something I've never done before (had a left over ball of natural leavened pizza dough). I know I really need to concentrate on one thing at a time but can't seem to help myself.

Recipe:

315g old dough ( 40% fresh ground white wheat 60% KA AP)

125g active starter

200g water

35g fresh ground Rye

35g fresh ground Einkorn

230g KA AP

10g salt

Started out a failure but ended up a success!

Profile picture for user FrugalBaker

Over the last 2 weeks, I bought a couple of things to fulfill my curiosity in bread making. First off, I bought 'Bread Revolution' by Peter Reinhart. It is an interesting book, lots of explaination and beautiful bread pictures too. Though, there was one particular chapter that caught my attention, Sprouted Flour Bread