New Member Intro
Found this site while looking for information to repair my Hobart N50 which failed during a bread making marathon on Memorial day. Poor thing was made in 1948 and has been in the family since the mid 50's, faithfully cranking out goodies ever since. We had two of them at home when I was growing up, the other resides with my sister in Chattanooga, TN who is a pastry chef and chocholate maker.
My Hobart has an internal gear or broken shear pin and is currently starting to be disassembled for a complete refurbishment.
I am the baker/cook/bottle washer in the household and truly enjoy bread making. My other intrests are machine work and fabricating just about anything from metal (having a complete machine shop and foundry in the garage). Also an avid amateur astronomer and large format photographer. I am a Ham radio operator, Extra Class and VE.
Beevo (aka Bill VanOrden)
Tempe, AZ USA
I think you might have come to the right place. Please supply us with the region in France and characteristics of the bread for further discussion by the membership. I'm pretty sure that with a little discussion you'll come extremely close to your Pain Quotidien...,
Wild-Yeast
Post Script: Just noticed that this is a reply to the second poster. Welcome Beevo and please excuse the compound blunder...,
Wild-Yeast
Welcome Beevo!
Your mixer sounds interesting and I'd love to get my hands inside of its workings. Wouldn't it be great if only it is a sheer pin? Are you doing the repair yourself? I've never looked inside the guts of one but I love that kind of stuff. My big brother used to take all my toys apart leaving me to put them back together. I got pretty good making things work. And you can make your own parts! Neat!
Large format photographer eh? How big?
Hope your hobie is up and working soon. :)
Mini Oven
30+ years as an automobile technician forces me to take it apart myself and have a go at fixing it. I currently have the entire transmission apart and have yet to find anything out of order. I need to clean and inspect the gearing on the motor housing half of the equation. I'll try to find time to post pictures of the interior workings on my website.
4X5 is what I shoot the most, though I have done some 5X7. I use a mahogony ZoneIV camera shooting mostly B&W and printing kallitypes. I do shoot some transparancy and process everything myself using a Jobo processor. I sometimes make internegatives in 8X10 and kallitype print those, they look gorgeous in that size. I have never worked up the nerve to plantinum/palladium print mostly due to costs and the fact I would need to maintain a complete different set of trays and tools.
Beevo
Welcome to TFL. Just one question - with all those other hobbies how can you find time to bake :) ?
Well yah gotta eat to stay mobile in order to play with the hobbies.... {;o)
I don't bake too much bread but there is a local Bread & Breakfast near the house that makes the most gorgeous and tasty artisan breads I just have to improve my game.
I'm a reasonably good bread maker but it is due more to luck than skill I think. My best recipe is a onion bread that reminds me of a 12 X 18 inch onion bially with a whole bunch of craters. Whenever I make it the stuf just evaporates.
Beevo
Alas, you most likely will never find it, or be able to recreate it here. It's not your palate. It's just that terroir bestows specific characteristics on food and drink.
A search for the bread of your youth. What better reason to return to France?
Anyway, welcome to TFL.
[Edited to get the name straight. Thanks MO]