Blog posts

Cloche

Profile picture for user Edo Bread

Still doing some experiments with the new cloche.

This was a delicious loaf. Actually got a shot of the crumb so thought I would post. Nothing that special.

Mountain Oat Rye (Poland)

Profile picture for user Isand66

This is the fourth recipe I have been asked to test from the upcoming Rye Bread baking book by Stan Ginsberg.  This one was much different than the first three.  It ended up being pretty simple to make and the final bread had a very tender crumb and soft crust with a nice mild tang to it.

Closeup

Over-fermented dough makes a decent sandwich loaf

Profile picture for user David Esq.

I was planning to make a "field blend #2" bread, using starter and the directions for the overnight country brown.  However, I started earlier in the morning and by the time the dough was tripled, it was very much over fermented.  I knew this because the dough was much more fragile than usual.  I could see the gluten web being fully developed as it poured/pulled out of the bucket.

Dairy-free Buchteln

Toast

While these are not perfect, at least they do not have an overpowering yeast flavor.  I increased the lemon zest by 50%, and changed the process point when it was added.  The flavor is light and subtle.

The prior formula used 3.4% compressed yeast, and took about 2 hours in bulk ferment. This formula took 3.5 hours to reach the same gas:dough ratio of 0.9, almost a doubling.

Photos of recent wood fired baking in Wellington Nz

Toast

Summer is slowly on its way here in Wellington and after a recent bake I thought I would share some photos for those interested in wood fired oven baking, as an amateur baker any hints and tips from experienced bakers in this craft would be much appreciate.  After a few pizzas the bread went in, the bread pictured is a mixture of white and seeded loaves. The oven was a tad hot 260C but thought I would load it anyway.

Better than a brick

Toast

Far from perfect, but significantly improved over last week, this week's bake is not a brick, but a bread!

Basic ingredients remained the same, BF, WW (this week Red Fife from Grist & Toll, in Pasadena), some wheat germ, farro berries (cooked, not sprouted - wanted to keep things simple), about 85% hydration, which should have been higher.

Caraway Beer Bread

Profile picture for user Isand66

This is the third recipe I have been asked to test from the upcoming Rye Bread baking book by Stan Ginsberg.  The beer is not too overpowering and the crumb is fairly moist for this hydration level of bread.  Overall a nice rye bread that makes a nice sandwich with some pastrami or corned beef.

Crumb1