Greetings from SFO!
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It sat for about an hour before I cut it. It was still warm but not all that warm.
Crust is good, interior is chewy. Thinking about it though, no more chewy than Tartine, which is supposed to be the gold standard. Baked a second loaf today as well, we each brought home a lump of dough we made in class. Baked the first loaf to 203 degrees internal temp and the second to 210 as the higher temp is supposed to help. Haven’t tried the second loaf yet. In fact, we will never eat all of this bread!
Baked in an enamel over cast iron Dutch oven (Crock Pot brand -we’re bougie like that) with parchment paper underneath to lift it. 450 degrees oven, preheated with Dutch oven in it for 45 minutes, covered for 25 minutes, uncovered after that until I hit the target internal temp - maybe another 30 minutes.
Anyway, now I have two starters - Bubbles, the one I’ve been nursing from scratch, and John Dough, the Oregon Trail one. I think I’ll mess with both of them and see what I get.
wrote on 7 Apr 2025, 23:57 last edited by@Steve-Miller said in Greetings from SFO!:
It sat for about an hour before I cut it. It was still warm but not all that warm.
Even a little warm can make it gummy.
In fact, we will never eat all of this bread!
Bread crumbs. Tear up the leftovers and throw into a food processor. Store in freezer.
Or, panzanella.
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wrote on 7 Apr 2025, 23:58 last edited by
I’ve never had Panzanella and I want to try it.
Great idea!
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wrote on 8 Apr 2025, 02:10 last edited by
And once you get this down, try the cold start method. Way easier.
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wrote on 8 Apr 2025, 04:06 last edited by
I’ve seen videos that talk about that. I’ll try it soon!
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wrote on 8 Apr 2025, 18:15 last edited by
Add me to the cold start school. Seems to work fine.
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wrote on 8 Apr 2025, 18:35 last edited by
Also, I slice mine and stick it in the freezer if it doesn’t get eaten right away. Great for French toast later. Or regular toast, for that matter.
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wrote on 19 Apr 2025, 20:02 last edited by wtg
Breadtopia did an experiment using various types of water:
https://breadtopia.com/what-kind-of-water-should-i-use-to-make-sourdough-starter/?utm_content
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wrote on 19 Apr 2025, 21:25 last edited by
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wrote on 19 Apr 2025, 21:32 last edited by
So jealous as I love bread but don’t eat much. If I baked that would change. Same reason I don’t get good at the high art of pie crust.
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I’ve never had Panzanella and I want to try it.
Great idea!
wrote on 19 Apr 2025, 21:35 last edited by wtg@Steve-Miller said in Greetings from SFO!:
I’ve never had Panzanella and I want to try it.
Especially good in the summer when home grown or farmer's market tomatoes are abundant.
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wrote on 19 Apr 2025, 22:12 last edited by
Yes. I used Campari tomatoes which are good. Most recipes will tell you to let it sit for half an hour after you mix the bread in. I think that’s a mistake. To me it just makes the bread mushy, so I let the vegetables sit for a while to meld and put the bread in right before serving.
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wrote on 20 Apr 2025, 16:23 last edited by
Who would have guessed that a baking thread would become our record holder. Over 2K views and counting.
Big Al
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wrote on 20 Apr 2025, 18:45 last edited by
I messed up and let the Easter loaf proof way too long. Baked it anyway but I think the Easter loaf may end up being the Easter croutons.
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wrote on 20 Apr 2025, 19:23 last edited by
Croutons are good….
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wrote on 20 Apr 2025, 19:30 last edited by
Sourdough bread pudding?
Sweet: https://www.pantrymama.com/sourdough-bread-pudding-recipe/
Or a savory bread pudding/strata: https://www.easyanddelish.com/savory-bread-pudding-for-christmas-breakfast/
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wrote on 20 Apr 2025, 20:32 last edited by
I read that the next time this happens I should spread it out in a sheet pan and make foccicia.
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wrote on 21 Apr 2025, 01:08 last edited by
So the overpoofed Easter loaf was over proofed. I punched it down and let it proof another 4 hours then baked it.
Definitely still overproofed. Kind of sticky, wouldn’t shape, impossible to score. Actually rose a little but not a lot.
A bit dense, a bit chewy but the most delicious bread I’ve ever eaten! Very sour (yes!), absolutely perfect dipped in evoo and balsamic with cracked pepper and shaved Romano cheese. We ate every crumb.
I might make all of my bread that way.
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wrote on 21 Apr 2025, 17:38 last edited by
Bread making is such a wonderful experiment. Sounds like you're having fun!
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wrote on 21 Apr 2025, 23:13 last edited by
I am!
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wrote on 27 Apr 2025, 16:58 last edited by wtg
Have gone back to adding 20 g or so of EVOO.
The flowers are the ones that the rabbits chewed off my Virginia bluebells last week. They opened up!
@Steve-Miller , I think of you every time I make sourdough bread now.