Blog posts

AB's Pretzels

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I have always loved Pretzels.  Nothing brought more joy to me than walking through the mall and stopping off at Wetzels Pretzels or Auntie Anne's and grabbing a fresh, warm, soft, and chewy pretzel to devour.  The scent wafting from Cinnabon could never win me over the smells of a freshly baked pretzel.

Mixers

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I regularly use and SP5 Micro Spiral mixer, I've had good results with it, but as others have noted, for high hydration doughs - it's usually better to use the double hydration method.  I purchased mine from TMB Baking south of San Francisco and they are extremely helpful.  Although, it's often reported to be made by "Esmach" it's actually made by Avancini - an Italian cooking equipment manufacturer.  I recently had a chance to use a Haussler Alpha spiral mixer.  The mixer looks almost identical to the SP5, however, it has a tilting head and a removable bowl.

Weekend Bake

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Every weekend I try to bake something.  I did Relay For Life last weekend so I didn't get a chance to get my hands on dough.  I made up for it this weekend though...  This weekend's bakes:

MIDDLE CLASS BRIOCHE KNOTS:

 

SD vs yeasted hot cross buns - this year's winner (recipe now posted)

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As kids, my siblings and I were never permitted to eat a hot cross bun before Good Friday (or an Easter egg before Easter Sunday, or meat on Good Friday). While formalised religion and I have parted ways, I've continued to observe the Easter culinary traditions I was brought up with. I think it's no bad thing to delay gratification with treats like hot cross buns. The building anticipation enhances the experience, and I suspect you savour them all the more for holding off. Anyway...

Ciabatta Quest, Week 1: Double-Double Trouble

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Time to begin another question for bread perfection improvement! By popular request/persuasion, I've decided to attempt a ciabatta quest, and leave off on perfecting crusty sourdough dinner rolls for another day.

For the next however-many-it-takes weeks, I will bake a batch of ciabatta dough, and post my results to this baker-blog. My goal: to reliably produce a ciabatta with a thin, crisp crust, open, moist crumb, delectable wheaty flavor, and which is tall enough to slice longitudinally for sandwiches.

Levain as Desert [redo]

Originally, this was a comment in the thread:Levain as Desert

http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/20693/culturing-growing-and-baking-range-wild-yeasts

However, I now find that I cannot find such "comments" very easily, and I just spent a too much time finding this, and another "comment", both of which should have been done as a blog, if for no other reason than to be able to reference them, when needed.

Second Pullman loaf - orange raisin bread experiment

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For some reason I've been daydreaming of raisin bread recently. In years gone by I've tinkered with various orange-raisin-oatmeal formulas but they always seemed too heavy, probably because I was including too much oatmeal.  My objective is to develop a bread formula that has not only the tartness of the juice but also the tang of the peel, rather like a marmalade, but also like raisin bread.

 

This is my account of my latest experiment, which I consider rather successful over all (although I did slip up a bit on the proofing time).