Mike

Milk

Milk has many uses in making bread. It provides liquid to the dough, just as water would. It adds flavor to the bread. If you are using any milk but skimmed milk, it adds fat to the dough, which extends the bread’s shelf life. It also adds lactose, a milk sugar, to the dough. Lactose […]

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Sourdough Bagels

Sourdough Bagels This recipe is the one we used at the Colorado High Attitude Bakery. I can’t count how often expatriate New Yorkers would stop me on the street with tears in their eyes, telling me that mine were the best bagels they’d had since they left “The City,” and that they were better than most

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Malted Barley Extract

Malted Barley Extract – We wouldn’t dream of making bagels or Kaiser rolls without barley malt extract, and neither should you! Barley malt extract, improves the taste and texture of the breads it is used in. It goes by a number of names, barley malt extract and malt extract among them. If a malt extract

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Extraction

Extraction is a miller’s term that refers to how much of the original grain winds up in the final flour. If all the grain winds up in the flour, the flour is said to be 100% extraction.  Most American white flours are around 70 to 75% extraction flours.  

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The Rule of 240

Bakers have found that dough develops best around 78F(25C). If the dough is too cold, it will rise too slowly. If the dough is too hot, it will rise too quickly which can result in not enough flavor development, and sometime off-tastes being created by yeast that are out of their preferred temperature range. Bakers

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Extensibility

Extensibility is the ability of dough to be stretched, or extended. Dough has to be extensible to rise at all. Hand pulled noodles are at the extreme of extensibility – the dough has no elasticity and can be extended incredibly far. If your dough is too extensible, you might consider using fresher sourdough, making your

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Elasticity

Elasticity is the ability of the dough to spring back and have tension. If dough has too much elasticity it is called bucky. Bucky dough springs back into it’s former shape as soon as you stop working it. If you roll a bread braid or Challah strip, it springs back. For dough to rise it

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Water

To most visitors to this site (USA, Canada, northern Europe, Australia, Great Britain) water is something we take for granted. We turn on the tap and there it is. Water, clear, splashing, fresh, safe. We can turn the tap this way or that and change the temperature of the water. However, water, as I have

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Flour

Flour is grain that has been ground, or milled, into a powder of a desired consistency.  In the United States, flour is usually ground wheat, however, it may be almost any grain ground into a light powder. The most commonly used grains include wheat, rye, barley, rice, spelt (a primitive wheat), kamut (another primitive wheat),

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Feeding a Starter

Sourdough starter, like any living organism, needs food to live.  As bakers, we add flour and water to our starter and call that “feeding the starter”. There are as many ways to feed a starter as there are sourdough bakers, maybe more.  There are a number of signficant things that happen when we feed the

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