ronnie_suburban wrote:Gorgeous and delicious!
. Cathy, thanks for reviving this thread. I have recently (as part of my pandemic quarantine distractions) gone down the sour dough starter rabbit hole. I’m such a novice but am loving the process. And IrisArbor, could you please share your Challah recipe with me as well? ~ KalamazooGal (Celia)irisarbor wrote:I'm sending you my recipe Cathy
kalamazoogal wrote:I have recently (as part of my pandemic quarantine distractions) gone down the sour dough starter rabbit hole. I’m such a novice but am loving the process.
ronnie_suburban wrote:kalamazoogal wrote:I have recently (as part of my pandemic quarantine distractions) gone down the sour dough starter rabbit hole. I’m such a novice but am loving the process.
Novice? I don't think so. The English Muffins you baked were awesome. I and my family thank you profusely for them. Here's one I toasted up this morning . . .
kalamazoogal's English Muffin, toasted, buttered and lightly salted
Also, since I can't think of a better place to post it, I'll post it here: the (rhubarb?) pie you made us was outstanding . . .
Truly A Thing Of Beauty
One Slice Out
I was just going to eat the whole thing (maybe with a fork) but Julie convinced me that slicing it up and sharing it was the right approach!
Thank you Celia, for your generosity!
=R=
3 TBSP butter, margarine, or oil -- room temperature (I prefer oil)
Xexo wrote:Used some leftover sourdough pancake batter, let it sit till it really foamed up, added flour, salt, strech and fold, refridged over night, let finish rising, shaped, final rise, baked.
justjoan wrote:how does it taste? i'm having trouble imagining pancake batter in bread, but kudos to you if you made it work!!
Ms. Ingie wrote:My sourdough starter was finally ready to make bread. I did a 12 hour first rise and about 2 hour second rise. Should have let it go longer; I will next time. Baked it in a Dutch oven. Didn't get very tall, but it is very tasty with a nice crust. Good chew and nice tang.
gastro gnome wrote:I just started reading Full Proof Baking last week! I haven't gotten into fancy aesthetics yet. Does the infused portion of the dough taste any different? Or is this just for color?
gastro gnome wrote:I just started reading Full Proof Baking last week! I haven't gotten into fancy aesthetics yet. Does the infused portion of the dough taste any different? Or is this just for color?
lougord99 wrote:I'm not sure if flour is hard to find anymore.
Today, Sunset Highland Park had lots of KA flour and several other brands of flour in good supply.
pairs4life wrote:gastro gnome wrote:I just started reading Full Proof Baking last week! I haven't gotten into fancy aesthetics yet. Does the infused portion of the dough taste any different? Or is this just for color?
Kristen is active in the Chicago Bread Club and... Instagram.
lougord99 wrote:I'm not sure if flour is hard to find anymore.
Today, Sunset Highland Park had lots of KA flour and several other brands of flour in good supply.
gastro gnome wrote:lougord99 wrote:I'm not sure if flour is hard to find anymore.
Today, Sunset Highland Park had lots of KA flour and several other brands of flour in good supply.
Are you seeing standard 5 lb bags? On their own website they still only have the 3 lb bags of AP flour available.
Also, it's still basically out of all the local Targets so I wouldn't say it is widely available. When I have seen it on the shelf at other places, it is the smaller 2 or 3 lb packages. I think the availability of this particular flour is still highly variable.
Cathy2 wrote:All purpose flour has been available for a while, what is not yet seen is bread flour. Did you see any bread flour?
NFriday wrote:Yeast is still hard to find in the grocery stores....