Blog posts
The Lineage of my Gluten-free Sourdough Starter
When people think of sourdough starter lineages they often think of the famous San Francisco or Alaska starters originally brought over from Europe. I imagine the people who brought starters along with them were courageous people looking for a better life. I imagine they dehydrated their starters in the old country and carried small amounts of it in pouches or tiny clay pots carefully tucked into whatever belongings they could carry with them in the boats. When they got to the land of opportunity it is said their bread starters took on a new flavor, the flavor of their new locale.
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- sharonk's Blog
half whole wheat sourdough
I again followed the 1-2-3 sourdough recipe but this time, I used 9 oz starter, 18 oz water, and 9 oz whole wheat flour, 9 oz bread flour and 9 oz all purpose flour (I ran out of bread flour). I mixed until moist and let rest 1-2 hours. did 3 stretch and folds over several hours and then put it in the fridge for an overnight retard (that ended up being almost 24 hours; I punched it down after 12). I shaped it, let it rise covered on the counter for 2 and a half hours or so. Baked on a stone with steam, 500 °F for 2 minutes and then 450 for 38 more.
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- hmcinorganic's Blog
SF Sourdough & Pain de Beaucaire - plus a book review
Both are from the book "Advanced Bread and Pastry". I have been baking from it a lot lately as you can tell from my blog entries, my feeling about the book is mostly positive, with some caveats. It''s a textbook for SFBI students, and stays true to that premise. I like the fact that it not only has interesting recipes, but also solid theories.
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- txfarmer's Blog
going for gold 2
The first night in CUE and a good sleep ensued, i was awoken by the unmistakeable sound of rain falling on the caravan roof lightly at first but then a little heavier, bad news for prospecting in the flat red dirt but ordinarily a most welcomed sound out here. The clouds had been chasing us all the way from Perth some 640 kilometres behind us.
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- yozzause's Blog
Haelman's Flaxseeds Rye Bread
I have been been experimenting with rye during my past few bakes and this week I made Hamleman's rye bread with flasxseeds (wich I first saw in hansjoakim's post here). The recipe is from the site Modern Baking and you can find a reduced recipe in David's post about it. I have also made the bread as a 1 kg boule, like david did.
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- jsk's Blog
Vermont Sourdough
My attempt of the Vermont Sourdough. 2 loaves, proofed at the same time, but one was overproofed, the other not. Why? The details are in my blog.
The one on the bottom left is probably over proofed. Difficult to score, and it just didn't look good after baking.
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- jennyloh's Blog
No Knead Bread
This is my first post in quite some time. I have been experimenting with the no knead breads. I have so very little time to devote to making breads. Being a bachelor with a full time job, a house, pets, and a garden andyard to tend to keeps me plenty busy. I am satisfied and enjoy trying new flavors from my herb garden. My breads have a wonderful crunchy crust and chewy crumb.
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- petecandzeph's Blog
scones
We were reading Nigel Slater's "Eating for England",
You are faced with a plate of scones, a pat of butter, a dish of jam and a pot of clotted cream. [...] You have either butter or cream, never both. At least not when everyone is looking. It is generally accepted that the jam goes on first, followed by a teaspoonful of cream. Others insist it is the other way round.
-Nigel Slater, "Eating for England"
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- ejm's Blog
2010 Krakow Bread Festival
Well, I had some good luck this past weekend. It seems that I'm in Krakow at the perfect time of year: the 2010 Bread Festival was in full swing.
You can read my short piece here:
http://www.associatedcontent.com/user/820336/dan_suchocki.html
Here are some pictures:
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- dcsuhocki's Blog