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5 Ways Recipe Report Cards Will Make you a Smarter Baker

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I have been working on a small machine for a while. Each day it gets smarter and smarter, more powerful and more refined. Although not perfect, I think I can say with the utmost humble expression,  I think this may be the first program to prescreen baking recipes. So what!?

 

The idea is to have a downloadable Recipe Report Card you supply with your recipe, so people know how a recipe will actually turn out, instead of the just looking at the best of 30 staged photos.

This means:

Flavor, crumb and presentation

Profile picture for user kendalm
Here's a quick pic of today's bake. Recently I have shifted focus to all three (at least of my) important criterion in baking a great loaf that is, good flavor, a nice open crumb structure and somewhat presentable final shape. When o first started trying baguettes it seemed that only one of these was near impossible. So here's today's batch - great taste considering the bulk was only 6 hours. As a side-note, used thawed fresh yeast which I am beginning to notice is really active even more so that fresh yeast that was never frozen.

Porridge Leek Squared Bread

Profile picture for user Isand66

I asked my wife to buy me a few bannetons for Hanuka and she bought me enough to start a bakery :).

The first one I used was a square shape.  I at first was going to use the square one and a batard shape but after dividing the dough realized I needed to use all of it to fill the square version.  After combining the two dough's together I probably degassed them a little too much which resulted in a tighter crumb than expected.

Poalbürgerbrot

Profile picture for user Bröterich

I tried to recreate this nearly 100% rye bread according to the well known German bread blogger "brotdoc".

For a description, see here: https://brotdoc.com/?s=Poal

You can use the English translation of the website.

I modified the method somewhat, didn't use a machine to knead the bread, didn't have fresh yeast, and used a cloche to bake it. It turned out alright. The crumb is pretty dense and a day after baking is still very moist. It is close to the German tradition, however, as I remember it.

Tom

 

Baking with my granddaughter

Profile picture for user joc1954

Yesterday we were looking after three of four grandchildren because my daughter and son in law and the oldest grandson were involved in "International Water Count" of birds which always takes place mid January practically worldwide.

I decided to involve my eleven and half year old granddaughter into baking and she was also very keen on baking. She is an incredible girl playing trumpet and riding horses. We made two loaves of bread and three baguettes. The boules were baked in wood fired oven while baguettes were baked in electric steam oven.