281 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
281 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1327
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Title: HPR1327: Frank Bell Bakes Bread
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1327/hpr1327.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 23:36:23
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---
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Hello, this is Frank Bell and today I'm baking bread.
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I've reached the point that I bake pretty much all my own bread, just occasionally we'll
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get a loaf from the bakery at the local supermarket that has the best bakery.
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I'm too busy or too fed up or too bored to bake bread, but I bake most of my own because
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I like it and it's good bread and I know what's in it.
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I've got all my ingredients out here, I'm going to start by proofing the yeast.
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Proofing is a fancy word for making sure that the yeast is still good and all that's required
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to proof the yeast, it to put some warm water in a saucepan, I'm using a nice big stainless
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steel saucepan and let it sit there for a minute or two and make sure that it bubbles and
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that it smells like yeast, which it does.
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Today I'm going to make honey bread, honey whole wheat bread.
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Anytime you make a whole grain bread like whole wheat or rye, it's a good idea to put
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about half of the composition as being regular white flour.
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I usually use unbleached white flour, I don't buy special bread flour or this flour or
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that flour, just garden variety, unbleached white flour.
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Because I, again, I know what I'm getting and you don't have to get the fancy stuff.
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The key is in what you do with the ingredients after you mix them together.
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I started off here with about two cups of warm water, I'm using the American measurements,
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which are derived from the pre-metric British measurements, they are volume measurements,
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volume measurements are not as precise as measuring by weight, a cup of rye flour is going
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to weigh more than a cup of white flour.
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I'll try to do some equivalence for the show notes because I know there are a number
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of listeners in countries that are advanced enough to have accepted the metric system.
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I've got the wheat in there and I'm looking for my wooden spoon, oh there's my wooden
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spoon, I thought it had disappeared.
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I'm going to add my honey so it gets nicely dissolved and distributive.
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If I were just making regular white bread, there'd be no honey.
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So I open up my little bottle of honey and pour it in and let's see here.
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That looks good.
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I think I put about a cup of honey in there and give it a little stir.
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If I were just making regular bread, I might put a little bit of sugar in there but that
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would be redundant after putting in almost a cup of honey.
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Now I'm going to add, get started adding some white flour, I had some poured out there
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it is and it's just a little bit to get started and give it a stir and we're also going
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to add a little bit of salt, about half a teaspoon, I didn't measure it, I just poured
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it out into my hand.
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Stir this up a little and now I'm going to add some more white flour.
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That was my flour container clanging against the measuring cup if it came through.
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I put in a couple more cups here.
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I don't want to add it all at once because it becomes almost impossible to get it to
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blend smoothly if you do that.
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So you add a little bit at a time.
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Most recipes will tell you to add it a cup at a time that's really not necessary.
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You can add two or three cups at the beginning and then add in greater detail.
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I say two or three cups, I've got two cups of water here.
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It's going to come out to about two loaves of bread.
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I found that the determining thing on volume is how much water you start with and my
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rule of thumb is one cup of water equals one standard sized loaf of bread.
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That looks nice and blended.
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Now I'm going to add some white whole wheat flour.
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That's something that's only recently appeared on the grocery store shelves in my part
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of the world.
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I did a little research on it which meant 10 minutes on a search engine.
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And it is the European variety of white, of whole wheat flour.
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It's actually a different strain of wheat from what in the states we normally make our
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whole wheat flour from our whole wheat flour tends to make a darker, a brown bread.
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Now this is mixing up very nicely.
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This is getting to be kind of the consistency of a thick mortar for those of you who've
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ever built a brick wall.
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That's kind of where we are now.
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That's not enough flour yet, but we're getting there.
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When you look at a bread recipe or a dough or batter recipe and a cookbook they'll say you
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know use two cups of water and approximately seven cups of flour and the approximately
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has to do with getting the flour to the appropriate consistency to need it.
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And you can tell when that happens, let's see, I just, and I'll describe that when it
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happens you can sense it and the appearance and the feel of the dough.
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I need some more flour.
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I used up all of my white whole wheat flour and I thought I had some regular American brown
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whole wheat flour here in my pantry, there's rye flour, cornmeal, brown sugar.
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It seems to have made a run for it, but it's not necessary.
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I'll just put in a little more of this ungly flour here.
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I think I'll just add half a cup this time and stir it up.
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Now we're getting there.
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You can tell when the bread or when the dough is ready for kneading, when it stops accepting
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more flour.
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That's why you add it towards the end a bit at a time because it'll come a point when
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it will no longer absorb the flour you've added.
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And I think we're at that point now.
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Yes we are.
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Let me walk over here, see if my camera is in reach, maybe take a picture of this.
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There we go.
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I think I can put a little more flour in there.
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Just about a quarter of a cup this time and yes, that's looking good.
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How does it feel?
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It feels right.
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And that's the other thing.
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You can tell by the feel that you can touch the dough and it doesn't stick to you.
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Then it's getting ready.
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Now I'm going to pour it out on a floured board as the recipes say.
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And that's simply, I've got a big chopping block here that's about 14 by 20 inches and
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take a little flour and sprinkle over it.
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And the reason for doing this is so it doesn't stick to the wood.
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And then take my mixing bowl here and just dump the whole mixture out.
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A little still stuck to the spoon.
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So I scrape that off.
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And now I'm going to put it in the sink and put a little detergent at it and fill it
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up so it sucks so it'll be easier to clean when the time comes.
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I don't want to touch the dough again while my hands are wet.
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So I want to get them nice and dry and while I'm waiting for this dish to fill up because
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I'll be using the same bowl for letting the bread rise.
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Now I'm going to take some more flour, a little scoop of flour and sprinkle it on top
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of the dough in case there are any sticky spots and then I'm going to knead it.
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And that basically is pushing it together and then you push down on the middle with
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your heels of your hands and then you pull it together again, push down on the middle
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and you keep this up.
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The old cookbooks would say need until it hurts for some recipes.
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And that was not just flowery language.
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If you do this for a long time, you're making a lot of bread, it could start to hurt.
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Every once in a while I stop and I sprinkle a little more flour on the top.
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If it starts to feel a little sticky, then you put a little flour on the top and you
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work it in, it might accept a little more flour.
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Now had I been making, had I been making rye bread instead of the whole wheat flour, of
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course I would have used rye bread.
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I probably would not have used honey, I would have put in a little bit of sugar and I would
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have put in a couple of three tablespoons of caraway seeds.
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Because the other member of this household really likes caraway seeds in her rye bread.
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And I just sprinkled a little more flour on the top because it kneaded it.
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The kneading kneaded it, kneading square.
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Sometimes I make a darker whole wheat bread.
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I'll use more whole wheat and less of the white flour.
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One thing I didn't mention, I did use two packets of yeast, one per loaf.
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I find that that gives me a better, faster and lighter rye to the bread.
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Another thing that happens is if I were making say rye bread, the bread would, it's generally
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denser, doesn't rise quite as high.
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And of course you can see that in rye bread you get at the store too, they tend to be denser
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than either the white, commercial white bread, whether it comes from a mass produced bakery
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or whether it comes from the bakery right there inside the supermarket made by the, on
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the spot.
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And now this is getting to a very nice consistency.
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And you can tell when it's ready.
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After you bake your first loaf of bread, you will know it's ready because it just feels
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ready.
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It's nice and resilient, spongy, not sticky.
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If you shape it into a shape it pretty much holds the shape.
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And that's about ready there.
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Let me wash off my hands here, I'm just going to lay it sit there for a minute or two while
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I wash off my hands and wash out my saucepan here, okay that's done.
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I edited out a lot of the washing signs, the clanging and so on, but the reason I washed
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this is what I'm going to use to allow the bread to rise.
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Now I've got my olive oil, I'm going to pour a little bit of olive oil in here and that's
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to keep it from sticking to the bottom of the pan plus olive oil is a good thing.
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And spray it around with a paper towel, set the paper towel over here on the side.
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I want to put a little bit, need to make sure my hands are nice and dry before I pick
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this up and I'll take another picture, okay and I just roll it up, it's nice and dry
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and spongy to the touch, it's not sticky and drop it in the pan and I'll take this paper
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towel and put dab it on the top with the olive oil and now I'm going to cover this with
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a nice clean dish towel out of the drawer here and let it rise.
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Normally on a summer day I would set it out on the deck where a temperature of 80 or 85
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degrees in summer humidity is ideal rising conditions but today we have the humidity,
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it's been raining all morning but we don't have the temperatures only about 72 degrees
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outside.
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In the olden days before I moved to this part of the world I had an old gas oven with
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a pilot light, the pilot lights I know it pretty much disappeared, probably a good thing
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in the long run for energy conservation but a gas oven with the pilot light inside
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it was almost the ideal place to stick your dough to allow it to rise.
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So I'll just sit here on the kitchen counter, I'm going to keep my flower board out, I'll
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need it again so there's no reason to clean it yet and I'll be back with this when it's
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time to punch down the dough.
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Okay I'm back.
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The dough has, as the cookbooks say, approximately doubled in the bulk and it's time to turn it
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out onto the flower board which is fancy talk simply for turning the pan on its side and
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letting the dough flow out.
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And now that it's out, I'm going to go back to my flower jar and sprinkle some more
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flower across the top because what is now the top was the bottom, it was in the cooking
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oil, the olive oil and it's a little sticky.
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And now I'm going to punch it down which simply means I start to knead it a couple of times
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and a lot of the air that has grown up inside the loaf through the action of the yeast escapes
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and it becomes firm and reduced in size.
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I usually let my bread rise twice along rise and a short rise.
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So now I've got this all punched down and just knead it a few times and maybe five or
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ten times until you get a nice consistency.
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And I'm going to take my bread knife here out of the knife rack and cut it in half.
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I do this gently and it's all cut in half now and each one of the halves I'm going to
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turn up on the cut end and place in the flower on the flower board to get a little coating
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on the part that was exposed by the cutting.
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And now I've got two loaves approximately the same size.
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Now I'm going to do these in the loaf pans.
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If I were doing a decorative loaf for a part of your something I might shape it into
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a round loaf or a longer Italian style loaf and just plop it right on the baking sheet
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or a cookie sheet for the next step but since this is just for utilitarian purposes
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primarily for making toast in the morning I get nicer slices of toast when I cook it
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in the loaf pans.
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I've got two little aluminum loaf pans here and I'm putting a casserole pan filled with
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water into the oven.
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I'm going to turn on the oven and let it preheat to 400.
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These will normally save for 25.
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This particular oven seems to cook a little hot.
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400 seems to be the right temperature.
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Now what the water pan is going to do inside the oven is fill it with steam and when I
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put the bread in that's going to help make the crust a little more on the harder side
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and I like a crusty loaf of bread.
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Now I've got my loaf pans here and I'll put a little olive oil in one of them and pour
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it around.
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I use olive oil whenever I can as opposed to regular just cooking oil or canola oil which
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is actually rapeseed oil if you don't believe me.
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Get up in your search engine.
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I suspect that someone thought rapeseed was not a particularly marketable term and
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you will find that from time to time in the marketing of foodstuffs where they'll
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take fish and give it a different name.
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I think tilapia used to be known by a different name that was nowhere nearly so romantic.
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I might have been dolphin fish which you did you ever read Conteiki or seen the original
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documentary of Conteiki.
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The Conteiki crew lived a lot on dolphin fish which is a fish.
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It's not another word for purpose or what we commonly refer to as dolphins.
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It's a fishy fish like a shark or a tuna.
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Very big too with a square head but they changed the name of it for marketing purposes
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and I'm not taking this to the bank but I think they changed it to tilapia.
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Now I put the loaves of bread into the loaf pans, covered them once again with the clean
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towel and I'm going to allow them to rise until the oven is nice and preheated and then
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I'll be back with you for the final steps.
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And now it's time for the final step to cook the bread.
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It's nicely risen up in the loaf pans.
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I take the cloth on.
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Before I put them in the oven I'm going to take my bread knife and slash diagonally
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across the top of each loaf.
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I don't know if that actually serves any purpose but I like to do it.
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And then once it goes in after about ten minutes I'll open up the oven and take a brush
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and brush water from the casserole pan in the bottom on the top.
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I'll do that again ten minutes later.
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Commonly these loaves take about 30 minutes to bake through.
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Sometimes 35 you can tell by looking or there's the old baker's trick of putting a clean
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knife into whatever you're baking and pulling it out and if it comes out clean whatever
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you're cooking is done all the way through.
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I will include some pictures of the various steps and link them up in the show notes.
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And I will think about you all when I slice into this tonight and have nice freshly baked
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homemade bread with my supper.
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In case you're wondering why commercial bakeries and mass produced bread caught on, although
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the total prep time has been about 25 minutes of actual work according to the timeline
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on audacity.
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The actual process of baking bread can take two and a half to three hours.
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It's not something you can start in the morning, throw in a crock pot, go to work and come
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back and pick up eight hours later.
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It's a pretty sizable commitment of attention.
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If you're working at home, it's easy to do, but if you have work in an office or some
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other type of location away from home, you don't have the time to bake bread except possibly
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on your days off.
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I used to bake bread very early in the early 70s, someone gave us some sourdough starter.
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And if you have heard of sourdough starter, but don't know what it is, it's basically
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a living yeast culture.
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And I used to spend the Saturdays baking bread, but when you have children coming along
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and other commitments that pull on your time, the amount of time it takes to do this gets
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sucked away from you and it's difficult to bake your own loads of bread on a regular
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basis, though you can still do it for special occasions.
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Before I got quite good at baking, what's called quick breads, like biscuits, pancakes,
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waffles, and also anything with cornmeal, cornpone, cornbread, after all, I'm a southern
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boy.
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And I grew up on cornbread, it's especially good if you put a little can of jalapenos
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into the batter.
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But that is pretty much what I've learned about baking bread.
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It's really very simple, much simpler than reading a recipe would lead you to believe.
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And if you've never baked your own loads of bread, I urge you to give it a try.
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It is one of the most satisfying items I've ever found to cook.
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There's very few feelings in cookery akin to slicing the heel of a freshly baked loaf
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of bread after it's cooled slightly, putting a little butter on it, and savoring your own
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loaf of bread just out of the oven.
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If you want to email me, you can email me at Frank at PineViewFarm.net.
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PineViewFarm is all one word, no spaces, no punctuation.
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And my website is www.pineviewfarm.net.
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Thank you very much.
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