Blog posts
Semolina Bread

Semolina bread. Two 750-gram loaves. 60% durum flour and 68% hydration. 15% of the total flour is pre-fermented in a liquid levain. Hamelman does not include an autolyzed stage and it appears that it is not required for the durum flour. I’m very happy with the result. The crumb was more open than I was expecting and the crust slightly chewy. Eating quality excellent and very different from my usual sourdough.
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- gavinc's Blog
Chocolate Olive Oil Cake
I recently had a birthday and decided last minute to bake myself a cake since we were meeting friends for dinner. I LOVE chocolate and remembered seeing this recipe by the awesome Stella Parks (BraveTart). It turns out that this is a super easy super delicious cake that is actually vegan and almost flourless (no eggs or dairy). Also what flour is in it is all whole wheat. It is practically healthy especially for a cake. The cake is super tender but I’m still shocked that something with such a simple ingredient list can bake into a cake.
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- Benito's Blog
Pan de Jamon 35% Whole Wheat Sourdough
This is my take on what is apparently a traditional Venezuelan Christmas bread that turns out to be super yummy. As I said before, my various takes on Hokkaido SD milk bread prove to be so flexible. I used my 35% WW version for this bake. The dough gets rolled out and then ham, sliced green olives stuffed with pimentos and finally raisins and applied. It is all rolled up into a cylinder and then eventually baked. Did I say it is yummy, salty and a bit sweet from the raisins.
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- Benito's Blog
My "first" panettone, 2 years in the making
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- joegranz's Blog
Oatmeal Graham Flour Sourdough Pullman Bread

I received a sack of graham flour for Christmas. It is from Burkett's mill. If you read up on graham flour you usually read that is whole wheat ground more coarsely than the usual WW. If you find the right site, it will tell you that the endosperm is ground finely and the bran and germ are ground coarsely, I think the flour I have must be the latter. It's color is lighter than the water wheel-stone ground flour I have, with larger flecks and dark bits.
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- tpassin's Blog
Rye with flax

Very successful and as simple as it gets.
Preferment: 2 cups wholegrain rye flour, 2 heaping tablespoons of rye starter from the fridge, enough water to make a soft dough. Place in lukewarm spot for a couple of hours, then move to a cooler place fir the rest if the fermentation (total of 18-24 hours)
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- Martadella's Blog
Just another panettone post

I made three panettoni for my family Christmas, and I'm very happy with the result. There was some discrepancy between final proofing temperatures due to proximity to the oven light, so one of them was a little shorter than it could have been, but the flavor and texture was great on all of them.
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- 7 comments
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- fredsbread's Blog
Lithuanian Christmas Bread—Kaledu Pyragas

I wanted to make a special bread for Christmas and the Lithuanian Christmas Bread from Stanley Ginsberg’s The Rye Baker fit the bill. The bread is 100% rye and has a whopping 45% fruit added (prunes, apricots, and raisins). The recipe specifies 76% white rye and 24% medium rye. I don’t have any white rye flour so I made it with all medium rye (King Arthur) and increased the hydration from 70% to 75% to compensate.
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- alcophile's Blog
Wishing y'all much happiness, during this blessed season.

Today's exercise.
Brooklyn style, Sicilian stuffed pizza. Sausage roll/chicken roll.
2.0 The second time, much better than the first time.
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- The Roadside Pie King's Blog