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submitted 4 days ago by Sunny to c/bready@lemmy.world

It turned out really great and tasty! Was a little worried when making it as I didn't have everything the recipe asked for. As it wanted a loaf pan with a lid(?) Have never seen such, but it worked fine without 😊 A bit of a confidence boost tbh that it went so well for being the my first time. Look forward making more!

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submitted 3 weeks ago by Sunny to c/bready@lemmy.world

While it being a little more expensive, sooo worth it. Bread in picture is a fresh sourdough bread. Yummsy!

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No crumbshot yet, cooling. It's a bit of a frankenloaf as I didn't have enough flour but had already started the process.

about 30% white bread flour, 30% rye, and 30% horrible supermarket wholemeal. ~80% hydration.

Tbh I was surprised it came out of the rattan thing as the rye + high hydration makes a pretty sticky mess. However it seemed enough water leeched through the wood during proofing that the rice flour did it's thing.

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cross-posted from: https://lemm.ee/post/23582539

They're an all sourdough bakery.

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submitted 4 months ago by deegeese@sopuli.xyz to c/bready@lemmy.world

Recipe is 75% bread flour, 25% whole khorasan, 80% hydration.

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submitted 4 months ago by pageflight@lemmy.world to c/bready@lemmy.world

Followup to temperature profile with a probe in the loaf. The temperature inside the dutch oven was lower and steadier than I expected.

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submitted 4 months ago by Trabic@lemm.ee to c/bready@lemmy.world
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Cinna-star (lemmy.world)

King Arthur cinnamon star bread, very tasty not overly sweet.

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submitted 5 months ago by pageflight@lemmy.world to c/bready@lemmy.world

Temperatures recorded in the oven during a dutch oven sourdough bake. 20 minutes at 500F with the dutch oven lid on, 20m at 400F with it open.

Green = oven temperature throughout. Blue = baseline kitchen temperature (thermocouple cold junction temp).

  • Before 1st blue line: preheating. Yellow line = inside a cold cast iron dutch oven. Oven was already warm from baking something else.
  • 1st blue line to 2nd: baking with lid on. Yellow = probe in the loaf here onward. I was surprised the internal temperature has pretty much maxed out by the end of the first 20 minutes.
  • 2nd blue line + 20 minutes: baking with the lid off.
  • After 20:27 / green line dropoff: oven open, loaf cooling. I know you're supposed to cool to "room temperature", but even at 150F the crumb was pretty stable when I cut the loaf, with no obvious tearing or sticking to the knife.

Compare to the previous bake where I forgot to reduce the oven temperature after the first 20 minutes. The crust was black/inedible, but the interior was still totally fine.

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Recipe is The Country Blonde from Flour Water Salt Yeast.

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Surface bubbles (lemmy.world)
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This one's to share (lemmy.world)
submitted 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) by banneryear1868@lemmy.world to c/bready@lemmy.world

I wanted to demonstrate a harder bake and go full Maillard on this wheat. 77% hydration, 550 degrees in Emile Henry baker then immediately dropped to 450 for 45 minutes, lid off baker for another 17, with me intently focused for the last 5 minutes.

Didn't have time to do a full 24 hour cold ferment (damn winter temps slowing my starter) so I compensated by putting the 5 hour bulk ferment on turbo with a warm water bath before 8 hours in the fridge. Overall it’s 7 hours shorter cold ferment than I usually do for something I’d pass as sourdough but it was really going before I retarded it, and it has a hint of that acid scent which is a good sign. Love how flexible making bread is when you use a starter.

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submitted 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) by LobsterGlutenFree@lemmy.world to c/bready@lemmy.world

400g Manitoba 600g type 1 75% hydratation

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Thanksgiving breads (ttrpg.network)

I made 3 different breads for Thanksgiving this year; a Guinness oat and molasses loaf, a soda bread, and some biscuits. The first two were made with whole wheat flour from a local mill, and the last were made with a gluten free 1 to 1 flour replacement. All 3 were pretty successful, but the soda bread needed a deeper score across it, as the middle ended up a bit doughy.

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submitted 6 months ago by Squizzy@lemmy.world to c/bready@lemmy.world

My oven has a steam function, I can heat and steam the oven on high before putting the loaf in.

Do I still need a dutch oven?

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submitted 6 months ago by fujiwood@lemmy.world to c/bready@lemmy.world

This is one I make often since it usually gives me good results.

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I've only recently got into baking these last few months after losing my job and having the time to really try and learn. Most have come out pretty good so far.

I'd like to try to make everyone on my list (not many, like 10 or so people) some tasty bread for Christmas as a gift, I plan to aslo make apple butter and maybe something else to go along.

I'm just looking for ideas and tips as a beginner cooking several loaves for the first time. I don't have a dutch oven, it's been on my list for several Christmas' but they're just so expensive. So I would be using a good old oven for baking them.

I saw that putting a pan of water in the oven helps make it crispy. Anything else I can do to help with the process?

Thanks in advance for any help!

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submitted 6 months ago by deegeese@sopuli.xyz to c/bready@lemmy.world

Bonus crumb shot:

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submitted 7 months ago by deegeese@sopuli.xyz to c/bready@lemmy.world

75% bread flour

15% whole khorasan

10% scalded whole khorasan

77.5% hydration

Baked with ice in a dutch oven.

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Banana Nut Bread (lemmy.world)
submitted 7 months ago by fujiwood@lemmy.world to c/bready@lemmy.world

Just some banana nut bread.

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submitted 7 months ago by Trabic@lemm.ee to c/bready@lemmy.world

I've been experimenting on babys lately, so here is tonight's samhain version:

Preheat oven and pan to 220c

Ingredients:

4 eggs. 2 cups ap flour. 200ml milk. 200ml water. Salt. Pepper. Nutmeg.

Make baby batter:

Add all to blender, blend at low speed until smooth. Or just whisk it in a bowl. Let rest 30 mins

Cook the baby:

Add butter to hot pan, then all the baby batter. Immediately throw the baby in the oven.

After about 10 minutes turn the oven down to 420 so you don't burn the baby.

The baby should be GBD about 20 minutes after that, it's better to be a little over than under, no one wants a soggy bottomed baby!

Happy Halloween!

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Date Pecan (i.imgur.com)
submitted 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) by Trabic@lemm.ee to c/bready@lemmy.world

Crumb Shot

Ingredients: 70% Bread Flour. 20% Whole Wheat flour. 10% Buckwheat Flour.

20% chopped dates soaked in earl grey tea, drained well reserving liquid. 15% chopped pecans, lightly toasted. 2.5% NaCl. 0.7% instant yeast.

80% H2O, use the soaking liquid from the dates as half the water.

Method: Mix all the flours and water, cover let rest/autolyze for 30 minutes.

Fold/pincer in the yeast and salt. Cover and Rest 10-15 minutes.

Fold in the dates and nuts. Cover Rest another 10-15 minutes, until the dough relaxes a bit.

Fold one more time, then cold bulk for 8 hours.

Shape and room temperature proof 1 hour.

Preheat oven and Dutch oven 450f at least 30 minutes.

Cook in Dutch oven 30 minutes covered.

Uncover and turn oven down to 420f for 25-30 minutes.

Let cool if you can.

En Guete!

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Bready

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Bready is a community for anything related to making homemade bread!

Bloomers, loafs, flatbreads, rye breads, wheat breads, sourdough breads, yeast breads - all fermented breads are welcome! Vienesse pastries like croissants are also welcome because technically they're breads too.

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