9/22/10 - 70/20/10 Miche...
Hey All,
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- breadbakingbassplayer's Blog
Hey All,
I've been having trouble developing a gluten structure in rye breads that will will hold up. The surface of the dough cracks and splits. Anyone have any pointers?
[size=18][b]Introduction[/b][/size]
Usually I am not too much involved in the blogging world, or the blogosphere, as it seems to be called. There is a fine line between writing just for serving your own ego and writing as part of a social endeavour, the desire to contribute to the wide array of knowledge and media which is the source for all the people, including myself, in the need for advice. I always feared going too much for the former.
This isn't a recipe, nor is it instructions to anyone other than me, it's just a statement of where I am right now in terms of baking bread. Some will be appalled, others might be inspired. Most probably won't care!
Maybe this is unsolicited advice, but here goes...
For those of you who have tried recipes and have failed, my advice to you is to make note of what went wrong, and try it again. Try it again until you it works for you. And keep trying until it comes out how you want it to. This is the only way to get better. Success is not a very good teacher. Learning from your mistakes is... This applies not only to baking bread, but life in general...
Tim
Hey All,
I took the trip to the Amish store, and I brought back two types of bread flour, some high gluten flour, wheat gluten, whet germ, oat bran, and spelt. I wanted to try the spelt to make something hearty, something chewy and rich and full of old world flavor. The first thing I made was pasta. Talk about good! We usually use bread flour because I don't have any semolina to buy nearby. It is always good, but the spelt I put in changed it from good to ridiculously amazing.
This year Chinese Mid Autumn Festival falls on 9/22, Wed, even though it still feels like high summer here in Dallas, I have been making traditional mooncakes to mark the occasion.
Traditionally, it''s a holiday for people to gather with loved ones. The round moon symbolizes "togetherness" and "family". My parents are in Seattle, while my husband's family is all the way in China, so we can only celebrate with them spiritually.
Hey All,
This Baklava recipe isn’t overly sweet and for large group parties it is a winner.
http://turosdolci.wordpress.com/2010/09/20/baklava-in-an-italian-recipe-box/