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I want to thank whoever it was that recommended Barton Springs Mill earlier in this thread - they started running a quality shipping rebate so I got two big bags of ~fancy~ flour and paid three dollars for the shipping when all was said and done. It took about eight days to get here, though, and most of that was escaping from Dripping Springs and getting to Austin. The TAM 105 is a nice high-gluten hard red winter wheat with a slight sour undertone, really good for sourdoughs, no-kneads, and pizza dough; the All-Purpose Premium Blend made really good cookies and would probably also be good for sandwich breads and brioche-type breads. Our actual local flour mills are all pickup-only at the moment. Feels kind of weird to go back to Texas like this. But hey, flour!
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# ? Apr 24, 2020 21:13 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 04:21 |
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Cyrano4747 posted:Like here’s my most recent ugly prototype loaf. If you need it to be even more sour you can add citric acid or "sour salt". You only need ⅛ to ¼ teaspoon per loaf. You can also use that to add kick to citrus or sour dishes or curdle milk if you're making fresh ricotta.
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# ? Apr 24, 2020 22:24 |
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Rocko Bonaparte posted:Has anybody experimented with the the tangzhong technique? It's where you cook some of the flour with liquid like you're making a roux paste before mixing it with the rest of the ingredients. I only did it recently with some cinnamon rolls, and we were reheating them anyways. I may have gotten a little more time out of them regardless. I'm curious how well it has extended the life on your bread. I used that method when making dinner rolls and they had more spring and held up pretty well.
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# ? Apr 24, 2020 22:28 |
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Rocko Bonaparte posted:Has anybody experimented with the the tangzhong technique? It's where you cook some of the flour with liquid like you're making a roux paste before mixing it with the rest of the ingredients. I only did it recently with some cinnamon rolls, and we were reheating them anyways. I may have gotten a little more time out of them regardless. I'm curious how well it has extended the life on your bread. Tangzhong keeps bread soft longer, but it also changes the crumb pretty significantly. I like it a lot for sandwich bread or other soft breads - cinnamon rolls would be a perfect application. The crumb becomes soft, tight, and even; with tangzhong and some added dough conditioner, you can approach supermarket bread. Rub butter on top of the loaf and put it in a plastic bag while still barely warm then let it rest overnight, it'll have an even more tender crust.
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# ? Apr 24, 2020 22:34 |
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Arsenic Lupin posted:King Arthur Flour has what looks like a sensible one. Protip: Use their shaping technique, but make challah instead. Challah is the superior sandwich structural component every time. Liquid Communism fucked around with this message at 01:13 on Apr 25, 2020 |
# ? Apr 25, 2020 01:11 |
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Give me your best sourdough sammich bread recipes.
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 01:57 |
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Liquid Communism posted:Protip: Use their shaping technique, but make challah instead. Braided hot dog buns? Interesting.
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 02:24 |
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I've brought this up before, but imo you don't need to do much to a standard white dough to make an enriched dough suitable for sandwich bread or cinnamon rolls, etc. My standard white bread dough (which I use for everything from boules to pizza crust) is 65-70% hydration, 2.5% salt, 1% yeast. To enrich it, I'll add ~ 5% milk or buttermilk powder (the latter especially for dinner rolls, but if you don't have any you can use buttermilk instead of water) and usually a big knob of whatever butter I have at room temp. Sometimes I'll add eggs at 2 eggs per kilo of flour. Maybe some malt or honey, but those are pretty rare additions. If you're using a starter or other pre-ferment, just remove some of the flour and moisture (or don't, it doesn't matter too much). The enriched dough is good for buns, sandwiches, cinnamon rolls, savoury spirals, what have you.
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 02:46 |
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Arsenic Lupin posted:Braided hot dog buns? Interesting. I mean you -could- braid 'em, but you don't have to.
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 03:18 |
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I made some Dutch oven bread. I used a mix of bread flour, all-purpose flour, and wheat flour, and gave it an overnight refrigerator rise. I wanted to add something to it, so I added a “looks about right” of cranberries. My word, was that the right call. The cranberries are amazing. They are exactly the right amount of sweet spread throughout the bread. The crust is perfect. This little experiment was an unqualified success. Here it is with some homemade butter I whipped up. I do not know how the heck I am going to stop myself from eating the whole drat thing today.
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 14:58 |
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My starter is on day 5 and it isn’t expanding anymore. I’m getting bubbles and about 2mm of liquid on top every 12 hours. It seems weird because it doubled in size on day 2. I also started feeding it twice a day since yesterday morning, spaced out every 12 hours. I’m doing a 1:1:1 ratio, 120g each of all purpose, water and starter. First feeding ever was King Arthur whole wheat flour. Is this normal? Was the crazy early growth an initial stage of bacteria growth that passed? Should I wait for growth to feed it? While transferring and discarding, the liquid mixes back into it. Should I spoon this off the top instead of allowing it to mix back in?
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 17:16 |
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I have a delitainer half full of sourdough started I made using the starter from Carl Griffith’s mail away group that gifts starter. I’ve been using it on and off for several months. I’m currently feeding it, cup of flour and cup of water, and letting it ferment up next to the stove light. To gift this to someone, I’m assuming the I would just pull some and feed it the same way in a separate container and let it ferment up for a few days. Any suggestions on how much of my starter to add to the new batch and if I should do anything differently?
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 19:28 |
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i have a question. i'm trying to make no-yeast bread because there is no yeast anywhere, i've only made bread once before and it was last week and it was this. kneading/shaping the bread seems absolutely impossible, its just way too loose and sticky. i've floured my flat surface, my hands, the whole deal, and its still impossibly sticky (like a solid half of the dough is attached firmly to my hands within 15 seconds). is this just a reality of no yeast poo poo or am i badly missing something.
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 21:16 |
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Farg posted:i have a question. i'm trying to make no-yeast bread because there is no yeast anywhere, i've only made bread once before and it was last week and it was this. What recipe are you using? When I’ve done no-yeast breads they’ve always been quick breads where no kneading was required. You just combine wet and dry ingredients and pour it into a greased pan to cook.
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 21:23 |
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Staryberry posted:What recipe are you using? When I’ve done no-yeast breads they’ve always been quick breads where no kneading was required. You just combine wet and dry ingredients and pour it into a greased pan to cook. https://kirbiecravings.com/no-yeast-bread/ was using this. basically just ended up being a case of sliding/schlorping it into a parchment paper lined breadpan and cooking it. tastes fine given the ingredients but i wasn't sure if i was missing something.
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 21:34 |
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Rolo posted:My starter is on day 5 and it isn’t expanding anymore. I’m getting bubbles and about 2mm of liquid on top every 12 hours. It seems weird because it doubled in size on day 2. I also started feeding it twice a day since yesterday morning, spaced out every 12 hours. I’m doing a 1:1:1 ratio, 120g each of all purpose, water and starter. First feeding ever was King Arthur whole wheat flour. Oh snap I just found out the flour I’ve been using is bleached. Should I start over or just switch what I’m feeding it with?
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 23:09 |
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Rolo posted:Oh snap I just found out the flour I’ve been using is bleached. I feed my starter every day with bleached. It's fine.
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 23:12 |
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Ok awesome because I like this flour. I’m going to give it another 5 days.
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# ? Apr 25, 2020 23:16 |
Just made another batch of white bread and this one turned out great. Very light and fluffy. I think I didn't knead the last one enough SSJ_naruto_2003 fucked around with this message at 02:25 on Apr 26, 2020 |
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 00:10 |
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Farg posted:i have a question. i'm trying to make no-yeast bread because there is no yeast anywhere, i've only made bread once before and it was last week and it was this. Would you like me to ship you some?
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 02:59 |
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Farg posted:i have a question. i'm trying to make no-yeast bread because there is no yeast anywhere, i've only made bread once before and it was last week and it was this. Maybe add a bit more flour? If it’s that sticky it might just be too wet.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 03:17 |
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bartlebee posted:I have a delitainer half full of sourdough started I made using the starter from Carl Griffith’s mail away group that gifts starter. I’ve been using it on and off for several months. I’m currently feeding it, cup of flour and cup of water, and letting it ferment up next to the stove light. To gift this to someone, I’m assuming the I would just pull some and feed it the same way in a separate container and let it ferment up for a few days. Any suggestions on how much of my starter to add to the new batch and if I should do anything differently? Yeah that works. I don't treat the offshoots (buds?) any different than the starter it came from. Just make sure it is recently fed and is growing fast before giving if the person is not experienced with sourdough.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 04:04 |
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Rolo posted:My starter is on day 5 and it isn’t expanding anymore. I’m getting bubbles and about 2mm of liquid on top every 12 hours. It seems weird because it doubled in size on day 2. I also started feeding it twice a day since yesterday morning, spaced out every 12 hours. I’m doing a 1:1:1 ratio, 120g each of all purpose, water and starter. First feeding ever was King Arthur whole wheat flour. I'm in a similar boat only I'm just adding 1 to 1. day 5 it smells a ton less vomity and is starting to foam a bunch. so I guess stick with it.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 04:49 |
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Veni Vidi Ameche! posted:Would you like me to ship you some? First of all, I would like to say, What the Actual gently caress is wrong with those shelves? Secondly, swapped my hour rise in a warm place for 4-5 hours in the fridge, with a second rise at room temp of 1 1/2 hours after shaping. Worlds. Better. I might actually produce a loaf worth sharing before this poo poo show comes to an end.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 05:26 |
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Hopes Fall posted:First of all, I would like to say, What the Actual gently caress is wrong with those shelves? It's 2 pictures, it took me a little bit to realize that. At first I thought they were raiding a store after the bombs dropped. I think the euro-centric grocery I often go to carries that brand, I'll have to check for it next time I'm there. They also have some brand with a terrifying leprechaun on it, so hopefully I can avoid that.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 16:36 |
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Does anyone have a strategy for white bread with yeast starters (thanks shortage)? My rise times are crazy long at room temperature (75F+ these days) if I use 10-20% of 1:1 starter in 18 oz of flour. If I let it rise for 4 hours, shape, 4 hours again, the bread does nothing and comes out revoltingly dense and inedible. If I let the first rise go for 20 hours, I get something that looks much better, it has over-risen, but I have to sleep sometime and I know 10 hours wasn't enough. Leaving eggs and milk to rot at room temperature for 20+ hours seems like a bad idea. If I scale this to a refrigerator rise, I'm looking at ~1 week of rising, which isn't acceptable to me and I don't think it will work anyway. If I use more starter the dough gets slack and gooey, not bread-like at all. This is shockingly similar to a problem I had earlier in the thread, where my lazy-rear end yeast wouldn't do anything in a warm, moist, flour-filled environment, that I corrected by buying yeast. I can't do that now, so what do I do? I guess what I can do is use more starter, refreshed the night before so it can do its 10+ hour whatever-the-hell and then use lots of it in the bread at the cost of milk. But, I'm tired of throwing away bread, well, flour and other ingredients that could have been bread. And the richness of the bread will be reduced by using more water than milk. I guess I can buy dried milk and mix it in with the eggs and butter? MickeyFinn fucked around with this message at 17:28 on Apr 26, 2020 |
# ? Apr 26, 2020 17:16 |
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Unique little snowflake that I am I've got a sourdough starter on the go. Started 50/50 bread flour and water, 100g each. Day two saw some bubbles, topped up about 50g each. Today I've seen the level go up maybe an inch over the morning, and fed with 25g each. I've not discarded any yet, definitely will but I'm aware of the quantity I'll need for loaves, and also that we've not seen flour in stores for a while. Is it okay to retain this much whilst feeding? I'm pleased with progress so far, very noticeable rise this morning and it started to smell like weird yoghurt.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 17:17 |
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FYI anyone not able to find flour, go to a costco if you can. My local grocery stores are post-apocalyptic in the shortages in the baking aisle, but Costco had enough 25 pound sacks of flour to start a bakery. Didn't see any yeast (I don't think they carry it normally) but also tons of sugar. Note that if you don't have a membership you can buy a costco gift card for yourself, pay with that at the register, and use a credit card for anything over what you have on the card. Note that they only take Visa.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 17:22 |
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Made another bread. Much better than the last loaf I let bulk ferment for three days in the fridge.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 18:08 |
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Like just about everyone else, I've been practicing making sourdough while I'm working from home. I've gone from this first attempt which was probably over-hydrated, and I was completely unable to shape properly: And eventually moved to making tin loafs because I don't own any bannetons, and got this 75% hydration loaf I'm super proud of: The crumb has just the combination of chewy and airy that I wanted to make, the only thing i'm not quite satisfied with is the thickness of the crust. Does anyone have any tips for making the side/bottom crust of a tin loaf thicker? One difference is that I've tried both putting the tin in a dutch oven to trap steam, and putting it straight into the oven with a tray of water to create steam. But having the loaf directly out of a dutch oven very quickly makes the top heavily browned so I feel like I need to play with the temperature to avoid that. Edit: dedian posted:Made another bread. Much better than the last loaf I let bulk ferment for three days in the fridge. That's a fantastic looking boule!
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 18:08 |
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BizarroAzrael posted:Unique little snowflake that I am I've got a sourdough starter on the go. Started 50/50 bread flour and water, 100g each. Day two saw some bubbles, topped up about 50g each. Today I've seen the level go up maybe an inch over the morning, and fed with 25g each. I've not discarded any yet, definitely will but I'm aware of the quantity I'll need for loaves, and also that we've not seen flour in stores for a while. Is it okay to retain this much whilst feeding? Discarding is very important because otherwise the sourdough dies in its own waste products.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 18:59 |
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Bizarro Buddha posted:The crumb has just the combination of chewy and airy that I wanted to make, the only thing i'm not quite satisfied with is the thickness of the crust. Dangerous speculation: I think the tin-side crust keeps thin and chewy because it isn't allowed to dry out and isn't directly exposed to the dry heat of the oven. Maybe pop the loaf out of the tin for the last 5-10 minutes? The dutch-oven people here are constantly debating temperature vs lid removal vs time for crust quality, so I'd think the same applies here.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 19:08 |
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MickeyFinn posted:Dangerous speculation: I think the tin-side crust keeps thin and chewy because it isn't allowed to dry out and isn't directly exposed to the dry heat of the oven. Maybe pop the loaf out of the tin for the last 5-10 minutes? The dutch-oven people here are constantly debating temperature vs lid removal vs time for crust quality, so I'd think the same applies here. Yeah that's worth a try, I could try flipping it over and propping it up somehow to reduce the over-browning on the top too... I'll try that with the loaf I have fermenting in the fridge.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 19:14 |
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By the way, speaking of discard recipes, I found a sourdough pancake one that doesn't require an overnight rise, but still has a lovely sourdough flavor. https://www.theperfectloaf.com/my-top-3-leftover-sourdough-starter-recipes/ theperfectloaf.com is in general a pro click.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 19:17 |
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I loafed: First sourdough loaf, created the starter about 2 weeks ago. No knead, 14 hour rise. The inside had more moisture than it should have, next time I'll try a lower temp for longer. Tasted good though! User Error fucked around with this message at 19:44 on Apr 26, 2020 |
# ? Apr 26, 2020 19:37 |
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SymmetryrtemmyS posted:dough conditioner Edit: I don't need anything to help me work the dough and get the gluten going. I got... equipment for that.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 19:39 |
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dedian posted:Made another bread. Much better than the last loaf I let bulk ferment for three days in the fridge. Tell me your process. I've been cold bulking for 3 days and I'm getting an OK spring, so this next batch is going to be 2 days. I'd like to warm bulk and then cold proof but we don't have enough fridge space for the large-ish quantities that I make
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 20:08 |
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I tried some plague breads, mostly doing the Bittman style no knead recipes. This is my first time ever making bread. Also throwing in these Sour Cream & Onion biscuits from Bon Appetit
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 21:42 |
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Man I want to try those biscuits.
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 21:56 |
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# ? May 15, 2024 04:21 |
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Tell me more about those rolls
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# ? Apr 26, 2020 22:06 |