ekreider wrote:HarvesTime does not have a lot of space so the flour mix is erratic. Last Thursday Tony's Lincoln Square store had the flour shelves full including large bags on the bottom shelf. They have been well stocked with Ceresota all-purpose flour in five and 25 pound bags for weeks. Ceresota all-purpose flour has fairly high protein level, comparable to KA from what I have heard. Tony's had a good supply of Pillsbury bread flour but no Gold Medal or KA bread flour, just all-purpose. The pipeline does seem to be refilling.
gastro gnome wrote:You are right about Ceresota! I have seen it in stores for weeks but assumed it was a run-of-the-mill mid-tier protein content AP flour. They do not list a protein content on their website, but when Cook's Illustrated did a round-up of common AP flours, they found that this flour was 11.4%=11.8% protein content (compared to 11.7% from KA AP).
cilantro wrote:gastro gnome wrote:You are right about Ceresota! I have seen it in stores for weeks but assumed it was a run-of-the-mill mid-tier protein content AP flour. They do not list a protein content on their website, but when Cook's Illustrated did a round-up of common AP flours, they found that this flour was 11.4%=11.8% protein content (compared to 11.7% from KA AP).
Ceresota is the flour used by Hoosier Mama. I know this because they sell 5-pound bags of it through their "Isolation General Store". They also offer KA bread flour, by the way (and it seems to be currently in stock).
lougord99 wrote:I don't understand the huge concern about protein content. I have made bread with KA all purpose flour and KA bread flour and just don't notice that much difference. What does bread flour do for you guys that I am missing.
thaiobsessed wrote:I really like the Heritage Spring Patent Artisan flour from Gordon Food Services for bread and pizza dough. It's not bleached/bromated. Protein content is 12.5%.
A couple caveats:
--It is sold in 50 lb bags (for $17.99)
--I haven't seen in carried in their stores. You have to call the store nearest you and have them send it over from the warehouse (usually 1-2 days before you want to pick it up). This always seems to generate some confusion on the other end of the phone but eventually works out. One of the times I called, they told me I needed an item number (which they were eventually able to look up for me--it's 798801).
Xexo wrote:. . . if you need to weigh that small of amounts to get a jeweller's scale. So I'm looking at one of those.
Xexo wrote:Sigh, the older I get, the less I know.
lougord99 wrote:Kenji's recipe calls for 300g of flour and 4.5g of salt for 1 loaf of bread. I can see how at that level measuring the salt is a bit tricky. I scale his recipe up to 800g of flour and make 2 large loaves, which I freeze. It's hardly any more work than the 1 small loaf. At that level, it is 12g of salt and 8g of yeast which seem to measure fine. I definitely would not use less salt than he calls for. I actually increase the salt from 12g to 14g which I find a better proportion.
I use this scale : https://www.amazon.com/dp/B004164SRA/?t ... ippilot-20 .
It seems to be accurate at these levels, but I'm not sure it is.
lougord99 wrote:Kenji's recipe calls for 300g of flour and 4.5g of salt for 1 loaf of bread. I can see how at that level measuring the salt is a bit tricky. I scale his recipe up to 800g of flour and make 2 large loaves, which I freeze. It's hardly any more work than the 1 small loaf. At that level, it is 12g of salt and 8g of yeast which seem to measure fine. I definitely would not use less salt than he calls for. I actually increase the salt from 12g to 14g which I find a better proportion.
lougord99 wrote:Kenji's recipe calls for 300g of flour and 4.5g of salt for 1 loaf of bread. I can see how at that level measuring the salt is a bit tricky. I scale his recipe up to 800g of flour and make 2 large loaves, which I freeze. It's hardly any more work than the 1 small loaf.
zoid wrote:I just mixed up a batch using the weights provided by lougord99 and at first I thought I messed it up. I'm used to using the Jim Lahey weights which gives about 91% hydration but then I checked and the Kenji Lopez way is more like 70%. Hopefully I got it right.
ronnie_suburban wrote:I don't typically use mine for weighing ingredients (pocket knives, long story) but I bought this one and I'm really happy with it. When I bought it back in March, it was only $11, though. They're over $14 atm.
=R=
lougord99 wrote:Kenji's recipe calls for 300g of flour and 4.5g of salt for 1 loaf of bread...make 2 large loaves, which I freeze...
mhill95149 wrote:...my no-knead recipe calls for 645g flour, 525g water, 12g salt and 1.5G yeast...My sourdough version is 645g flour, 500g water, 150G starter and 15g salt. My starter is made of 50g old starter, 50g water & 50g flour. All my bread is 50/50 WW/BF
pairs4life wrote:FWIW I would choose Lahey over Lopez-Alt anytime for bread baking. Especially a No-Knead loaf. That said 91% hydration seems terribly high for that loaf.
I measure 5g all the time on my CI/ATK suggested Oxo large capacity scale, max I believe is just about 11.5#. It measures both grams and ounces. I use it daily.
Cheers,
Xexo wrote:Also, freezing bread just doesn't work for me. It changes the taste, but I could always give one away I guess.
lougord99 wrote:Kenji's recipe calls for 300g of flour and 4.5g of salt for 1 loaf of bread...make 2 large loaves, which I freeze...
lougord99 wrote:Xexo wrote:Also, freezing bread just doesn't work for me. It changes the taste, but I could always give one away I guess.
I think homemade frozen bread is better than store bought fresh bread.
The problem with digital kitchen scales is not that they measure small amounts any less well than they measure large amounts. The problem is that their resolution i.e., plus or minus one half of the smallest whole unit displayed, may be inadequate for the purpose of precisely measuring very small quantities. If a scale can display measurements to the nearest whole gram, the actual weight of something is within an error margin of ± 0.5 g of the weight displayed. In other words, there is rounding error in the weight displayed.Most electronic kitchen scales do not weigh reliably under 10 grams.
mhill95149 wrote:I must have a jeweler’s scale, it has Troy Ounces and has no problems with 0.01 grams