In my years as a cook the one thing I have figured out is that I'm terrible at bread.
I can make flatbreads and I can make dark&nutty syrup&soured cream bread. That's it.
You can do it! The KAF recipe for crusty bread in particular is explained very straightforwardly.
I wanna bake but I’m working all day Saturday so not certain I can set aside enough time for it.
All but the KAF baguette recipe include a fridge proof--in particular I think the KAF crusty bread says you can comfortably proof the dough for up to seven days safely. Then all you have to do on Saturday (or whenever you want the bread) is shape, do the final rise, and bake! (You could probably shape before fridging and then go straight from fridge to oven, too)
Hey just wanted to give a huge thanks to @SilverWind for not only updating the op, but for also linking to all of our submissions! in alphabetical order no less!
The Jim Lahey no-knead bread is the first one in the video, and is the first boule I ever made. Do note that Babish says, at one point, "as hot as your oven can go" for that, but temp your oven first. My oven at my old place went up to 680, which is way too fuckin' hot. I'd keep it down to about 550-575 for this. Over time I started making adjustments to the recipe itself and started to really like 250g of bread flour and 150g of whole wheat flour, but I really like the taste of whole wheat.
Also, for those of you with slightly more money than time and/or sense, for boule baking, check out these guys! 500 of them lasts a fuckin' lifetime.
Hey just wanted to give a huge thanks to SilverWind for not only updating the op, but for also linking to all of our submissions! in alphabetical order no less!
Thank you!
No problem! I have a love of excessive documenting so I figured it would come in handy here and/or establish that community feeling
Also whoooooa Pinfeldorf I'm so envious of how high your oven goes! Mine can only be set to 500 F... and actually does only get that high
I don't have a baking stone, or a cast-iron skillet, or a dutch oven so I will be making my bread on a plain baking sheet or in a bread pan. I am not experienced with baking bread but I'm looking forward to trying.
I am excited to try to make bread for the first time this week!
I will likely skip Bouillabaisse week because I have bad memories of, I think it was Cioppino, that my grandmother use to make during lent that just...stunk so so bad.
I am excited to try to make bread for the first time this week!
I will likely skip Bouillabaisse week because I have bad memories of, I think it was Cioppino, that my grandmother use to make during lent that just...stunk so so bad.
I'd recommend "smelling around" your local food store the next week (because fennel can be triggering if you have particular memories about that kind of food). While I can totally understand not liking the smell of mussles/clams a bouillabaisse on shrimp and frozen fish (frozen fish is totally fine for a bouillabaisse imho) tends to be rather light on the odor. Just a bit of fennel and a very slight seafood aroma.
"The western world sips from a poisonous cocktail: Polarisation, populism, protectionism and post-truth"
-Antje Jackelén, Archbishop of the Church of Sweden
In my years as a cook the one thing I have figured out is that I'm terrible at bread.
I can make flatbreads and I can make dark&nutty syrup&soured cream bread. That's it.
You can do it! The KAF recipe for crusty bread in particular is explained very straightforwardly.
I wanna bake but I’m working all day Saturday so not certain I can set aside enough time for it.
All but the KAF baguette recipe include a fridge proof--in particular I think the KAF crusty bread says you can comfortably proof the dough for up to seven days safely. Then all you have to do on Saturday (or whenever you want the bread) is shape, do the final rise, and bake! (You could probably shape before fridging and then go straight from fridge to oven, too)
Maybe I’ll get this done on Friday or Thursday then. We’ll see. A nice crusty bread would be good to have when I do steaks sometime in the next few days for Valentine’s Day.
I don't have a baking stone, or a cast-iron skillet, or a dutch oven so I will be making my bread on a plain baking sheet or in a bread pan. I am not experienced with baking bread but I'm looking forward to trying.
Try focaccia! It's basically just pizza crust in a cookie sheet. It might be the drop-dead simplest bread to make as long as you don't overwork it and develop too much gluten. Make yourself some marinara sauce on the side or just a simple garlic and olive oil mixture and you're set for a night in carbohydrate heaven!
We made the beef burgundy and it was amazing. Used the instapot recipe, threw some potatoes in there, a chopped up onion, mushrooms, carrots, etc.
This is actually day after leftovers because I was too busy consuming it the day before to get a good picture. We got some sourdough to mop it up and oh my lord we will be making this more often.
Like many stews beef burgundy only gets better as leftovers.
"The western world sips from a poisonous cocktail: Polarisation, populism, protectionism and post-truth"
-Antje Jackelén, Archbishop of the Church of Sweden
I think the key thing with bread baking is to keep on trying, as the key skills are developed over time (and recipes are based on judging the state of the dough rather than having firm times and amounts). We can all share our first attempts together
JedocIn the scupperswith the staggers and jagsRegistered Userregular
I started reading the sourdough chapter in the Bread Bible to see if I wanted to use any of her recipes. Based on what I read there, it has become clear that my starter is definitely dead.
Looks like after some initial signs of life, I ruthlessly poisoned it to death with the chloramine in my tap water. The good news is that my filter pitcher should be able to get rid of it, so I'll be able to try again without using bottled water.
In any case, I'll be making bread this week using my regular, non-soured dough as usual.
Rest in peace, Cabinet Goo. You were my only friend.
I started reading the sourdough chapter in the Bread Bible to see if I wanted to use any of her recipes. Based on what I read there, it has become clear that my starter is definitely dead.
Looks like after some initial signs of life, I ruthlessly poisoned it to death with the chloramine in my tap water. The good news is that my filter pitcher should be able to get rid of it, so I'll be able to try again without using bottled water.
In any case, I'll be making bread this week using my regular, non-soured dough as usual.
Rest in peace, Cabinet Goo. You were my only friend.
If I remember right, around day 4 it kinda flatlines/slows down for a few days--you may want to keep it kicking around to see if it picks up
After it stabilizes I think tap water is fairly safe to use, and many people do (though I imagine this varies from location to location as chlorine levels vary). Though chlorine also just leaves water naturally in ~24(?) hours and I always just leave a pitcher lying out for feeding purposes. I think it leaves fairly fast if you microwave the water too, though then you'd have to wait for it to cool a bit
So if I put together my starter tonight, can I bake tomorrow afternoon?
If you just started a new sourdough starter, it would be too young, more likely than not. It needs about 5-7 days to get nice and healthy and get into a regular cycle of rising and falling
(I'm by no means a sourdough expert but I'm fairly sure on both of these things)
it's actually just unbleached king Arthur flour with a quarter cup of dock seed flour added in
it's a unique taste and I love it. sadly, when I say unique, I mean I've never tasted anything like it to compare it to
maybe a slight pumpernickel taste?
I'm sad because I'm all out of dock seed flour and that stuff is a pain in the butt to forage
Go to, like, Boston or something, and find a dock. During the springtime, the seals will eat the flowers it produces and their scat will contain the dock seeds. You don't want to harvest the dock flowers yourself, it helps to have them pass through the acidity of the seal's stomach.
JedocIn the scupperswith the staggers and jagsRegistered Userregular
Is bread. Not very crusty, and not at all sour, but it toasts up real nice.
Also, I ran out of side dishes before I ran out of boof birbiglia, so I'm going to have the last of it tonight on a couple of slices of griddle toast. Definitely the fanciest SOS I have ever prepared.
+5
Options
lonelyahavaCall me Ahava ~~She/Her~~Move to New ZealandRegistered Userregular
I wasn't sure about bread. We don't eat much of it and I hate wasting things right now.
But then I remembered that I had a small batch baking cookbook!
So I'm attempting a country loaf for 2 people.
Yeast is proofing at the moment. Or blooming. Or something.
lonelyahavaCall me Ahava ~~She/Her~~Move to New ZealandRegistered Userregular
OK so That was a completely different way of making bread than I have ever done. and I didn't take photos.
1.25 tsps active yeast
1/2 cup lukewarm water
3/4 tsp salt
3/4 cups plus 2 tbsp bread flour plus extra for dusting work surface
bloom the yeast in the warm water for 5 minutes (i added a pinch of sugar because I didn't trust that it would bloom without sugar).
Mix in the flour with a spatula and then cover and let rise for 1 hour
Stir down the bizarre sponge looking thing in your bowl, then cover and let rise 1 hour
sprinkle 3-4 tbsp of flour on the work surface, pour out this bizarre sponge thing from the bowl onto the flour and then work in the flour on the work surface, adding more if needed.
put flour on a baking tray and then put your ball shaped dough onto the floured tray, cover with plastic wrap and let rise another hour.
Preheat oven to 375*F
According to the recipe, I was meant to spritz the oven with water, bake for 5 minutes, and then spritz the oven and bake for 25 minutes.
However, I dont' have a spray bottle, so I just put a cake pan of water and heated that up with the bread and baked it for 25 minutes
It came out soft and chewy and dense but still airy with bubbles and between mom, me, and the 4 year old, we ate almost the whole loaf. Just enough left over for breakfast toast with nutella.
Very good, would easily try this again and I think I'm going to have to take a much closer look at this small batch baking cookbook again.
Bread was a success. It was hard to wrangle the wet dough and my knife wasn’t sharp enough to score the top properly but the recipe was easy enough that I think I can make it better next time.
Other than some casual 2nd degree burns this went way better than I expected. I could do this again real easy, I am starting to doubt if no kneed sour dough is worth the week long process.
If you were in Toronto I'd happily send some of Betty over to you. :P I suppose I could look into drying some out too? It apparently works
I'm nearly about to start the divide and preshape stage of the sourdough baguettes. Still trying to figure out what to eat with it / how to eat it. Perhaps I should send Wyborn on a cheese run...
Posts
no loafing about for me!
I will undoubtedly be listening to 'Icky Mettle' by Archers of Loaf while I do this
loaf
You can do it! The KAF recipe for crusty bread in particular is explained very straightforwardly.
All but the KAF baguette recipe include a fridge proof--in particular I think the KAF crusty bread says you can comfortably proof the dough for up to seven days safely. Then all you have to do on Saturday (or whenever you want the bread) is shape, do the final rise, and bake! (You could probably shape before fridging and then go straight from fridge to oven, too)
Switch: SW-7603-3284-4227
My ACNH Wishlists | My ACNH Catalog
Thank you!
The Jim Lahey no-knead bread is the first one in the video, and is the first boule I ever made. Do note that Babish says, at one point, "as hot as your oven can go" for that, but temp your oven first. My oven at my old place went up to 680, which is way too fuckin' hot. I'd keep it down to about 550-575 for this. Over time I started making adjustments to the recipe itself and started to really like 250g of bread flour and 150g of whole wheat flour, but I really like the taste of whole wheat.
Also, for those of you with slightly more money than time and/or sense, for boule baking, check out these guys! 500 of them lasts a fuckin' lifetime.
No problem! I have a love of excessive documenting so I figured it would come in handy here and/or establish that community feeling
Also whoooooa Pinfeldorf I'm so envious of how high your oven goes! Mine can only be set to 500 F... and actually does only get that high
Switch: SW-7603-3284-4227
My ACNH Wishlists | My ACNH Catalog
I will likely skip Bouillabaisse week because I have bad memories of, I think it was Cioppino, that my grandmother use to make during lent that just...stunk so so bad.
I'd recommend "smelling around" your local food store the next week (because fennel can be triggering if you have particular memories about that kind of food). While I can totally understand not liking the smell of mussles/clams a bouillabaisse on shrimp and frozen fish (frozen fish is totally fine for a bouillabaisse imho) tends to be rather light on the odor. Just a bit of fennel and a very slight seafood aroma.
-Antje Jackelén, Archbishop of the Church of Sweden
Maybe I’ll get this done on Friday or Thursday then. We’ll see. A nice crusty bread would be good to have when I do steaks sometime in the next few days for Valentine’s Day.
Try focaccia! It's basically just pizza crust in a cookie sheet. It might be the drop-dead simplest bread to make as long as you don't overwork it and develop too much gluten. Make yourself some marinara sauce on the side or just a simple garlic and olive oil mixture and you're set for a night in carbohydrate heaven!
This is actually day after leftovers because I was too busy consuming it the day before to get a good picture. We got some sourdough to mop it up and oh my lord we will be making this more often.
-Antje Jackelén, Archbishop of the Church of Sweden
Levain Fri @ 3:00:00 PM (Wyborn will help with this step)
Autolyse 5:15:00 PM
Mix 6:15:00 PM
Warm Bulk 6:30:00 PM
Cold Bulk 8:15:00 PM
Divide and Preshape Sat @ 3:30:00 PM
Shape 4:00:00 PM
Proof 4:30:00 PM
Preheat Oven 5:15:00 PM
Bake 6:15:00 PM
Switch: SW-7603-3284-4227
My ACNH Wishlists | My ACNH Catalog
I'm just doing a round loaf and a regular loaf though
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IRDL3lPQSkc
I think the key thing with bread baking is to keep on trying, as the key skills are developed over time (and recipes are based on judging the state of the dough rather than having firm times and amounts). We can all share our first attempts together
Switch: SW-7603-3284-4227
My ACNH Wishlists | My ACNH Catalog
Looks like after some initial signs of life, I ruthlessly poisoned it to death with the chloramine in my tap water. The good news is that my filter pitcher should be able to get rid of it, so I'll be able to try again without using bottled water.
In any case, I'll be making bread this week using my regular, non-soured dough as usual.
Rest in peace, Cabinet Goo. You were my only friend.
I really want to make a proper jambon beurre, maybe I'll cook a ham this weekend too
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5fm3lNM5vV4
If I remember right, around day 4 it kinda flatlines/slows down for a few days--you may want to keep it kicking around to see if it picks up
After it stabilizes I think tap water is fairly safe to use, and many people do (though I imagine this varies from location to location as chlorine levels vary). Though chlorine also just leaves water naturally in ~24(?) hours and I always just leave a pitcher lying out for feeding purposes. I think it leaves fairly fast if you microwave the water too, though then you'd have to wait for it to cool a bit
If you just started a new sourdough starter, it would be too young, more likely than not. It needs about 5-7 days to get nice and healthy and get into a regular cycle of rising and falling
(I'm by no means a sourdough expert but I'm fairly sure on both of these things)
Switch: SW-7603-3284-4227
My ACNH Wishlists | My ACNH Catalog
Ah! In that case, the timing should work out
Switch: SW-7603-3284-4227
My ACNH Wishlists | My ACNH Catalog
I really need to start making a loaf of bread every week
absolutely delicious
it's a unique taste and I love it. sadly, when I say unique, I mean I've never tasted anything like it to compare it to
maybe a slight pumpernickel taste?
I'm sad because I'm all out of dock seed flour and that stuff is a pain in the butt to forage
Go to, like, Boston or something, and find a dock. During the springtime, the seals will eat the flowers it produces and their scat will contain the dock seeds. You don't want to harvest the dock flowers yourself, it helps to have them pass through the acidity of the seal's stomach.
all yours!
Is bread. Not very crusty, and not at all sour, but it toasts up real nice.
Also, I ran out of side dishes before I ran out of boof birbiglia, so I'm going to have the last of it tonight on a couple of slices of griddle toast. Definitely the fanciest SOS I have ever prepared.
But then I remembered that I had a small batch baking cookbook!
So I'm attempting a country loaf for 2 people.
Yeast is proofing at the moment. Or blooming. Or something.
Democrats Abroad! || Vote From Abroad
1.25 tsps active yeast
1/2 cup lukewarm water
3/4 tsp salt
3/4 cups plus 2 tbsp bread flour plus extra for dusting work surface
bloom the yeast in the warm water for 5 minutes (i added a pinch of sugar because I didn't trust that it would bloom without sugar).
Mix in the flour with a spatula and then cover and let rise for 1 hour
Stir down the bizarre sponge looking thing in your bowl, then cover and let rise 1 hour
sprinkle 3-4 tbsp of flour on the work surface, pour out this bizarre sponge thing from the bowl onto the flour and then work in the flour on the work surface, adding more if needed.
put flour on a baking tray and then put your ball shaped dough onto the floured tray, cover with plastic wrap and let rise another hour.
Preheat oven to 375*F
According to the recipe, I was meant to spritz the oven with water, bake for 5 minutes, and then spritz the oven and bake for 25 minutes.
However, I dont' have a spray bottle, so I just put a cake pan of water and heated that up with the bread and baked it for 25 minutes
It came out soft and chewy and dense but still airy with bubbles and between mom, me, and the 4 year old, we ate almost the whole loaf. Just enough left over for breakfast toast with nutella.
Very good, would easily try this again and I think I'm going to have to take a much closer look at this small batch baking cookbook again.
Democrats Abroad! || Vote From Abroad
Bread was a success. It was hard to wrangle the wet dough and my knife wasn’t sharp enough to score the top properly but the recipe was easy enough that I think I can make it better next time.
Switch: SW-7603-3284-4227
My ACNH Wishlists | My ACNH Catalog
jocooks is a great site for bread
Full gallery: http://imgur.com/a/7exwYdw
If you were in Toronto I'd happily send some of Betty over to you. :P I suppose I could look into drying some out too? It apparently works
I'm nearly about to start the divide and preshape stage of the sourdough baguettes. Still trying to figure out what to eat with it / how to eat it. Perhaps I should send Wyborn on a cheese run...
Switch: SW-7603-3284-4227
My ACNH Wishlists | My ACNH Catalog