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ReadingWhat have you been reading?
Posted April 3, 2021 by bluestocking in Books

Any recent reads that you'd recommend? Any books you really hated?

Any new favorite books or authors so far this year?

45 comments

takshakNovember 15, 2024

There's a youtube channel called Chain Baker who does a good, if technical, job of explaining the bread-making process.

  1. you can use starter, fresh yeast, or active dry... just start your yeast before using so you know it's still active.
  2. flour protein content is important. Here, AP flour is "hard" and is fine for bread, but a lot of countries have softer wheat. If so, don't spend extra on "bread flour", just get some "gluten flour" to reinforce your flour, a tablespoon or so is sufficient.
  3. you don't need sugar.
  4. don't let your yeast and salt meet. At high concentrations, salt kills yeast, I just mix the salt in first.
  5. you don't need a full second rise, but you do need to rest the dough before kneading (hydration helps form the gluten)

Oh, and atta flour is amazing. It's a whole wheat flour, but is as fine as regular flour, so you can get a very good "white" sandwich loaf that's whole wheat. Also tasty. I use half atta/half AP.

If you aren't sure if your bread is kneaded enough, check for "windowing". Stretch your dough as thin as possible... can you see light through it before it breaks? that's the window,

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024

So you want it to be able to form a window if it’s kneaded well enough?

takshakNovember 15, 2024

yes... it should stretch thin enough to be translucent just before it breaks.

there are specialty breads and pastries where this isn't the case, this is for regular bread.

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024

I’ll remember this tip! It’s a good indicator to remind myself when I do go and make simple breads ☺️

LapisLazuliNovember 15, 2024

I have a family recipe for Everlasting Yeast Bread, the kind where you keep a starter in the fridge kind of like a pet. I make my own bread using the starter, a small amount of instant mashed potatoes, flour, water, salt, and sugar. It's not complicated, IMO, and it's one of those things where you can do other things as long as you come back every hour during the rise period to punch it down. It's generally the only bread I eat.

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024

Wow mashed potato is a surprise! That sounds delicious

Killer_DanishNovember 15, 2024

I make my own pizza dough, does that count? I use a 3-day poolish (a pre-ferment made of water, flour and yeast) to add to my pizza dough for an extra yeastie flavor. Unfortunately, I’ve spoiled myself, and now all franchise take-out pizza tastes like cardboard to me.

TheEthicalHedonistNovember 15, 2024

A 3-day poolish?!? I use a 24-hour poolish and I’m so impatient! I don’t know how you wait 3 days!!!

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024(Edited November 15, 2024)

Pizza dough definitely counts! I don’t eat much take out so it would be even more of a win for me personally if I can make something even more tasty

FeministunderyrbedNovember 15, 2024

For crusty artisan loaves, the no-knead bread from the New York Times / Mark Bittman / Ed Lahey - it’s been circulating for nearly 20 years and it has evolved a little but basically remains the same. Or, for a whole-grain sourdough version, the book Bittman Bread.

For a mostly whole-wheat sandwich loaf, Just Bread.

beingNovember 15, 2024

I wish. I tried to do the whole sourdough starter thing a couple years ago, but it kept growing mold and I gave up.

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024

Ah that’s a shame. I guess it was too humid in your place

StrawberryCoughNovember 15, 2024

I make a couple of pretty simple flat breads sometimes for company. You still have to let the dough rise, but they are quite forgiving and not fussy - good beginner recipes.

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024

I want to see if I can make focaccia as a beginner. It’s a flatbread in a way 😅

How long do you have to feed your starter before you start baking bread with it? Or is that just for sourdough?

CathyVerattiNovember 15, 2024

This Persian naan by Sabrina Ghayour is the first ever bread I made, and I've never looked back.

I take it you're in the US, and I don't know if they sell "strong" flour over there - in the UK, that just means high-protein. In my experience, at least 13% protein is necessary for a reliable rise, so check the nutrition label on the flour pack.

StrawberryCoughNovember 15, 2024

That's just for sourdough. My flatbread recipe just uses those "Active Yeast" packets, and you let it rise twice.

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024

Ah I thought so but wanted clarification. Thank you! I have to purchase some active yeast and have a go.

I thought I could try making cinnamon buns first as my first introduction to baking with yeast, but idk if I’d have much time to do so with my holiday baking coming up.

StrawberryCoughNovember 15, 2024

You can definitely do it! Just out of the oven bread is amazing! Post pics!

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024

I’ll see if I can! Stay tuned

BeachBleachNovember 16, 2024

I make mine in my circa 1982 Cuisinart. It's very heavy and is made in Japan.

Put the liquid ingredients in, and then the flour. Run it until the dough makes a ball and rolls around the shaft. Take it out and do your usual. I don't need a bread machine at all. It's an alternative.

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 16, 2024

I’ve seen Lidia use her cuisinart in a similar manner! Then she hand kneads the rest. Perhaps I should do that too

girl_undoneNovember 15, 2024

I recommend subscribing to America’s Test Kitchen. They do so much work testing and creating recipes, figuring out what is actually important for flavor etc while jettisoning techniques that don’t benefit enough, and explaining what to do and why. They’ve come up with some serious hacks to get good flavors and textures reliably and quickly (preferment, tangzhong, vodka in pie crust, easier croissants). Instead of doing loads of research you can just rely on them. Often there are videos to go with recipes which really helps with baking because I need to see what things are supposed to look like at various stages.

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024

Oh thank you! This a great resource and I’ll look further into what they have. I even just thought to myself how awesome it would be to make my own soft pretzels whenever I want, though I’d probably gain a lot of weight 😅

Bagels are my biggest goal atm

girl_undoneNovember 15, 2024

I saw downthread that you want to make focaccia - I love ATK’s focaccia and I don’t see any reason why you couldn’t start with it! It was really fun to make. A really weird technique but the bubbles could not be denied.

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024

If the focaccia doesn’t have bubbles then you failed in my book! Haha

spiderberriesNovember 15, 2024

It probably won’t matter much for most easy breads, but be mindful of your elevation! I used to love making bread when I was home, but now I’ve moved to a place that is about 115 feet higher in elevation and haven’t been able to make a good bread since. I am vegan and gluten free (not by choice) and the ingredients are just too expensive to keep trying over and over. It’s like I’m cursed.

Lots of good tips in this thread! Once you get the hang of it you’ll be baking nonstop. I think the hardest part is exercising patience and not digging into the bread the moment it comes out of the oven hahaha.

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024

My elevation is average, I’m not at sea level nor am I in the mountains. Hopefully that means I’ll have good luck!

I’m sorry to hear you’re gluten free not by choice…the ingredients are so much more expensive and have their own challenges chemistry wise with baking. Like almond flour doesn’t have as much structural integrity and rice flour makes it too doughy! It’s rough and I feel your pain.

faerieberryNovember 15, 2024

Yes! I mostly do a simple one in my dutch oven (it’s just flour, yeast, salt, warm water) but I want to branch out more

TheEthicalHedonistNovember 15, 2024

I started baking my own bread right before covid, when everyone else started making their own bread.

You don’t need anything fancy. You don’t even need to use bread flour. All-purpose is great. Just some fresh yeast, and I’ve found honey works better than white sugar when proofing your yeast.

Just practice and enjoy!

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024

Oh now you’ve given me an idea if honey works better for proofing!

I have to try it at some point.

FernLadyNovember 15, 2024(Edited November 15, 2024)

Yes, with a bread maker 😎 makes it very easy and I make pizza dough in there too

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024

I was considering a bread maker but I have zero counter space up for grabs atm

[Deleted]November 15, 2024

I like this easy no-knead bread recipe! It’s very simple

HoneycreeperBird LesbianNovember 15, 2024

Thank you for sharing!! Looks wonderful ☺️

ReliquiaNovember 15, 2024

I don't know what to answer because I only make shitty naan bread lol I found a recipe that is unauthentic but it's quick and it actually tastes very good for the little effort involved

Since it goes in the pan instead of the oven I'm going to say "no" because it technically isn't baking 😅

IworshipKalikadeviNovember 16, 2024

I do the Asian equivalent and cook my own rice 😂.

I always wanted an oven to bake! Maybe I'll make bread as my first recipe!

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