Amber waves of grain. A baguette year in review

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These were a few of my favorite things

Whole Wheat Fig-Pecan with 75% hydration mixed flour Levain

Hamelman Olive with 125% hydration Rye Levain

SFBI Pain au Levain with caraway seeds, cornstarch glaze and 75% hydration mixed flour Levain

Hamelman Sesame Semolina with  with 125% hydration Rye Levain

Hamelman Pain au Levain with 2 starters, stiff and liquid Levains

Hamelman Pain au Levain with Whole Wheat and 61% hydration stiff Levain

Forkish Field Blend #2 with 75% hydration mixed flour Levain

Forkish Artisan Bakery Style Country Blonde with 75% hydration mixed flour Levain

Snyder Pugliese Capriccioso with 75% hydration mixed flour Levain

SJSD with 100% hydration mixed flour Levain

son of SJSD with 75% hydration mixed flour Levain

 

Sesame Semolina Capriccioso with 50% hydration mixed flour Levain

Rye with caraway seeds, cornstarch glaze and 100% Rye Levain

And then, there were the batards.  Maybe another day...

Happy New Year, alan

They all look amazing :) I know the batards are just as good. 

Are they in any particular order?

By the way, I really like the title of your post :) 

Happy baking 

Ru

No particular order, but I did start looking at more recent 2016 pictures first.

Here in the USA the unofficial national anthem, "America The Beautiful", contains that line - amber waves of grain.  Considering the recurring "waves" in pictures of grain, I thought that was an appropriate title.

alan 

everyone can do it with practice and patience.  Most people don't want, or are too shy, to tackle baguettes.  I made that my thing.  Scoring is directly from the retard where the dough has firmed sufficiently and is compliant.  It really is all mechanical with proper technique and good steam.  It didn't come overnight and won't for most folks.  But with time, it will. 

alan

PS the "god" thing - that, and $2.75 USD will get me a ride on the NYC subway... (actually with my MTA senior card, I ride for half fare when in NY).

Toast

Breathtaking breads! Aesthetic factor: off the charts

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In reply to by dough dog

I think that the idea for these types of "cheesecake" photos came from David Snyder's SJSD baguettes, often featured in the right hand column under "Also on TFL".  Under the oven hood light using my iPhone camera, they seem to come out pretty good.  Usually I take the shots within minutes of the bake, before the breads have a chance to oxidize (or whatever it is that they do to lose a bit of the color and sheen).

alan

takes my breath away. beautiful! you should do a masterclass for us all.  wouldn't it be fun to manage to bring off something like that!

happy happy baking Alan

Leslie

at least for me, is a solo event, it sure would be fun to put together a class of some kind.  If for nothing more than the camaraderie.  But let's not get carried away with the "master" part of it!  As I've also mentioned ion TFL, sometimes I have trouble analyzing my own problems, no less someone else's.  I seem to be good in my small corner of the baking universe, but pretty much a tenderfoot once I step beyond that limited range of knowledge.

thanks, alan

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Oh man its like something you'd see in an art gallery - amazing !

In the Wynwood section of Miami there is an old structure called the Bakehouse where The Flowers Bakery once resided.  After being abandoned for bigger digs, it was eventually converted over to a workspace/art gallery for artists from all over the world to rent workshop space within.  It would be pretty apropos for someone to exhibit bread art there.

thanks, alan

I'm just some hack doing this for the tasty output and fun of it all.  And again, if I showed this to my wife she'd probably say something like "Very nice dear, now don't forget to take out the trash before going to bed".

Thanks for the very much appreciated thought from you and all of my fellow Loafians, alan

It's so interesting to see how many different recipes can be successfully shaped and scored as baguettes (like the Country Blonde and Field Blend #2). The breads and photography are stunning. It's fun to play with our food!

There are an awful lot of talented dough shapers around here.  Just two examples in the baguette realm recently promoting their wares  here are Danni and kendalm who both beat me hands down in clean shaping abilities.  I can handle the scoring pretty well, but getting consistent clean shaping is still a WIP for me.

And yes, playing with food is indeed fun.  Just not in front of my Mother!

alan

You are the master at baguettes.  One of these days once I have more experience baking sourdough and being more consistent, I will try a baguette, you inspire those of us who are newbies.

Benny

doing nothing but baggies, so it certainly didn't come overnight.  First it was the IDY variety and then I moved onto my levain experience.  Nothing but pure repetition and paying attention to detail.

thanks, alan