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IMG_0139.jpeg Bathtub soak.jpg A good soak.jpg

The value of a good soak: A bread story

February 12, 2023 by Ashley Look in Flour, Breads

Fun fact about me; I’ve never met a soak I didn’t like. Pools, spas, friend’s bath tubs… I live for anything resembling an immersion tank. I’m not joking. I will plan trips around where I can get my soak on, and occasionally have resorted to sneaking around town, just to sneak myself into a local hotel hot tub. Being up to my ears in water has a calming effect and the warmer the water, the better! Half the time I bring myself to the brink of fainting. I know that probably sounds extreme but ascending from a tank so utterly depleted, lends itself to some mad rest. Such lassitude is where the aches of life get a chance to heal and I can move about my days a bit softer and more forgiving. Well guess what? The same goes for bread making!

Soaking flour in bowl.

Equal parts flour and water soaking in a bowl.


Recipe

Soaker:

  • 1 cup flour

  • 1 cup water

Dough:

  • 2 cups flour

  • 1 1/4 tsp yeast

  • 1 1/2 tsp salt

Process:

  1. Combine the soaking ingredients in a large bowl and let rest for 2 to 8 hours.

  2. After resting, add the additional ingredients to make the dough.

  3. Mix it well so the dough starts to form and then knead it until it’s springy (10 minutes-ish?)

  4. Cover and rest for 1 hour in a clean bowl that’s been greased with oil.

  5. After resting and the dough has doubled in size, punch it down and knead it again.

  6. Shape the dough, and let rest another hour.

  7. Preheat a dutch oven to 450F degrees.

  8. Score the dough and carefully transfer it to the preheated dutch oven and bake for 25 minutes.

  9. Remove the lid and reduce the temperature to 410F degrees and continue baking for 15 more minutes.

  10. Carefully remove the bread from the oven and let cool before slicing.

  11. Enjoy!


Bread baked from soaked flour.

So, soaked flour, soaked self… both produce good results. Give it a go and feel your way through the process. The dough will be light, and the crumb of the bread softer. Not a bad things really.

Bake on!

February 12, 2023 /Ashley Look
Soaked flour, bread, recipe, dough, soft dough, crumb, dutch oven, yeast, of grain and grain
Flour, Breads
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A simple sourdough recipe to get you in on the sourdough game.

A simple sourdough recipe to get you in on the sourdough game.

May 2020: Simple Sourdough Recipe

May 07, 2020 by Ashley Look in Full Moon Baking Club, Recipes

This is a shout-out to all the new bakers that have embarked on the sourdough journey but feel defeated in effort. Hey there…I hear you. It’s a lot of flour feeding and discarding and questioning if the hobby is worth it or wasteful… Well, buck-up friend! If there’s one thing I can tell you about bread baking, it’s that the recipes themselves matter less than your relationship to the dough. Over time, you come to learn that a good bread is something you feel. You can tell long before it’s baked if it’s going to perform well and my advice to you is, just stay with it. Practice, make a mess, and enjoy the process regardless of result because you will get better with time. Breads take time… I’ve been baking for a while now and it’s the relationship I have created with time that makes bread such great company. And now, as we all sit idle in our quarantined quarters, where time escapes us and loneliness set in, it’s nice to have a friend, especially a nourishing one that provides a taste of companionship.

As for sourdough specifically, my fandom was born thanks to the pandemic and the sudden hunt for yeast. Albeit my yeast supply remains plentiful, I’m here for the herd. The thought of would-be-bakers being left behind due to yeast shortages was enough for me to join the sourdough bandwagon. I don’t care if it’s trendy because of the pandemic. The truth is, anything that enables you to provide for yourself reduces dependency at large. The fact that you can make your own bread means you don’t have to buy it from the grocery store, reducing demand on the supply chain which reduces the demand on factory workers which right now, are at the very heart of the virus outbreak. So, trendy or not, if you’re better able to shelter in place thanks to what might be a new hobby, by all means, go for it! Reducing your demand for market needs is one step closer to sustainability. Even thought it’s a small step, it’s still a step, and in times of crisis, little things matter.

So, don’t be discouraged by your bread flop, or shamed into thinking your’re just following a fad. Who cares? It’s fun. It’s therapeutic. And when you get the hang of it, it taste good! It’s a win for you, front-line workers, and the environment. Gawd… Just writing that feels like a sales pitch but honestly, this is not a hard sell. If bread baking is a coping mechanism for dark times then consider me an apocal-optimist cause I think its awesome!

As the sourdough starter ages, the holes get better and better!

As the sourdough starter ages, the holes get better and better!

Before I get into the recipe, I have to say one thing. Screw recipes! It’s so easy to get bogged down in how-to’s that quickly turn to overwhelm. That is how I have felt about all the sourdough recipes I’ve found so I’m giving up and going with what I know and chalking the failures up to learning along the way. I’m not getting into levain, or biga, or poolish and all the fancy names that boiled down, amount to “sponge” in my book. The semantics in bread making can leave a new baker confused, so let’s ignore that for now We’re keeping things simple. Ready?

Simple Sourdough Recipe

Step 1: Create the “sponge”

  • 1/4 cup starter
  • 1 cup warm water
  • 1 cup flour
  1. Mix sponge ingredients in a large bowl.
  2. Cover and let rest for 4 to 6 hours or when a small amout can float when placed in a bowl of water. This is known as a float test.

Step 2: Create the dough

  • 2 cups flour
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1 1/2 tsp salt
  1. Add the dough ingredients into the sponge bowl and combine.
  2. Mix until a shaggy dough forms and all ingredients are incorporated.
  3. Cover and let rest 6-8 hours or overnight.

Step 3: Knead the dough

  1. With a wet hand, reach along the inside edge of the bowl, lifting the dough up, so you can fold it onto itself.
  2. Do this this three or four times and then cover and let the dough rest in the bowl for 30ish minutes.
  3. Repeat Step 3, three more times.

Step 4: Shape the dough

  1. On a lightly floured surface, dump out your dough and gently shape into a round form being mindful of the gas bubbles.(You want to keep those intact as much as possible. That's what helps give the crumb those big sourdough holes.)
  2. Once it's shaped, place on a piece of parchment paper and place it in a clean bowl.
  3. Cover and let rise in the fridge overnight.

Step 5: Bake

  1. Remove bowl from fridge and let come to room temperature.
  2. Preheat a dutch oven in your oven to 500 degrees F.
  3. When the oven reaches tempurature, score the top of your bread dough with a few slits and carefuly place the dough with the parchment into the dutch oven.
  4. Cover it with the lid and place it back into the oven. Lower the tempurature to 450 degrees F and bake for 30 minutes.
  5. After 30 minutes, remove the lid, lower the tempurature to 400 degrees F and continue baking for 15 more minutes.
  6. Remove and let cool on a wire rack.
Sourdough starter.jpg Sourdough Sponge.jpg Sourdough ingredients.jpg overnight rise.jpg first knead.jpg third knead.JPG sourdough dough.jpg scoring.jpg Simple Sourdough Loaf.jpg Simple Sourdough Holes.jpg Simple Sourdough Slice.jpg Sourdough Still Life.jpg

Hot damn! This is me trying to simplify things but my head is already hurting so not sure it worked.. Good luck and remember that the Sourdough Support Group is here for you! I’m posting my updates over on Instagram so if you want some behind the scenes shots check the sourdough stories. Don’t hesitate to message me with your successes, failure, questions or requests. I’m just as bored as you are so lets get gaming and have some fun. You have one month to complete this recipe mission. The next full moon is June 5, 2020 so you got four weeks to give this a shot. Good luck. You got this!

Piece out!

Simple Sourdough Slice.jpg
May 07, 2020 /Ashley Look
How to feed a senior, Simple Sourdough Recipe, sourdough starter, baking, bread making, pandemic, flour, sourdough support group, float test, levain, biga, poolish, sponge, dough, knead, gas bubbles, crumb, Full Moon, Full Moon Baking Club, Yeast, shaping dough, dutch oven
Full Moon Baking Club, Recipes
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#FullMoonBakingClub

#FullMoonBakingClub

The Full Moon Baking Club

November 06, 2018 by Ashley Look in Full Moon Baking Club

Baker’s say what?!

Yep. I'm starting a thing! The Full Moon Baking Club! It's really just an excuse to intentionally get back to my love of breads and and all things baking.

Breads, as you might know, are a timely affair and not to be rushed. It's the fact that they take time that beckons me. They are a chance to slowdown. An edible craft of sorts... So, each full moon, celebrating the magic of the night’s sky, I'm going to release and new recipe. The nights will be long but that's ok. That's the point! It's an excuse to light a fire (or candles), play some music, drink a glass of wine and BAKE something and I invite you to join me!

It’s worth mentioning that club fun is not exclusive to the single evening of the full moon. Personally, this project is about setting the intention of doing something I love more regularly and using the moon cycle as a prompt to keep baking in my repertoire. As for the “club” side of things, your participation between the full moons is what really drives the community aspect. Throughout history there are stories of people gathering for food. “Breaking bread" with someone is considered a gesture of kindness… Honoring the brotherhood of humanity… Across nations and even civilizations, bread has remained a commodity for sharing. So, let's share some! Whether it’s baking together one night a month, sharing the same loaf or batch, or using the same recipe, there’s room at the table for improving our sense of community. I believe that kindness lives large within all of us but opportunities to share that kindness with others can feel fleeting. We’ve been too busy to slowdown long enough to remember that the slowness accounts for our time and our time is the most important thing we can share with another person. I look forward to sharing some of my time with you, and you with us, and us with we and so on… An exploration around the idea of what a “we” can really be… Breaking bread “together” by baking together…

Post your Full Moon Baking Club moments using the hashtag #FullMoonBakingClub so I can break bread with you and you can break it with others. That’s how this can work. Also, keep an eye out for New Moon updates where I’m trying to release hand carved wooden spoons to compliment all the culinary adventures. Every good baker needs a wooden spoon so ya know… It has to happen!

Forever in crumb,

Ashley

November 06, 2018 /Ashley Look
how to feed a senior, Full Moon Baking Club, Bread Baking, Full Moon, Baking Club, edible craft, crumb, break bread, Togetherness, unity, community building, sharing, humanity, gestures of kindness
Full Moon Baking Club
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