Cathy2 wrote:Thaiobsessed,
Did you learn this watching a youtube video? If yes, is it possible to see the link?
That is a really super job.
Regards,
CAthy2
I think it was on instagram but I can't find the thread. It was pretty simple to do (I've had some not great results with fancy scoring attempts in the past)--I laid 3 long pieces of kitchen twine over a round banneton for an overnight cold proof. The next morning, I tied the strings, flipped the boule onto a peel and put it in the oven.
I've been making lots of bread from Greg Wade's (Publican) Bread Head cookbook. I love the flavor combos and ideas. But I'm not sure I've ever had a cookbook with such poor proofreading--I've found significant errors in several recipes. Weight conversions are off, the listed weights of ingredients (like water!) vary from recipe to recipe. One recipe, when made as written, yield 'dough' the consistency of pancake batter. Despite this, I find myself going back to the book again and again, though I've been modifying the recipes. My favorite 'recipe' is the sourdough with cornmeal porridge, Mexican chiles, and pepitas--I've riffed on it probably half a dozen times with different kinds of chiles and cornmeal.
The Farmer's Favorite is also one of my favorites (the farmer and I agree on that
) with lots of seeds inside and out (including kalonji*** seeds, which I had never cooked with).
The seeded pumpernickel and farmhouse sourdough, malted rye are also very nice. The malted rye uses cracked rye malt--I tracked this down at Gnome Brew (2026 W. Montrose--proprietor was one of the nicest, most helpful folks I've ever met and I left there with free beer and bought some barley malt for bagels).
Malted rye
***side note/question on Nigella/Kalonji seeds--Greg Wade says to seek out Kalonji seeds and use Nigella seeds if you can't find them but everything I've found online suggest they are the same. I got some from Patel Bros on Devon and they are labeled Kalonji (onion seeds). Anyone have insight on this?