Originally posted by Dave2002
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The Bread Thread
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostI’ve successfully been using bread machine for around 13.5 yrs now and only occasionally buy bread nowadays. i’ve tried a variety of combinations - currently 400g loaf - 200g strong white, 100g rye, 100g wholemeal.
Usually supermarket brand bread flour, but the last delivery included Allinson's VERY STRONG wholemeal, and it certainly is, so (after a first rather solid effort) the proportions are interchanged when using that flour.
I use sunflower oil (2 tbsp) instead of the 25g fat/margarine.
Occasionally I get adventurous and add a couple of teaspoons of caraway seeds, or even substitute some of the flour with oat bran.
Our local baker has a nice Country Crunch flour that was available during the first lockdown, and although they no longer stock it regularly (not enough sales) they said they were happy to deliver some on order when I next need some.
The thing that took the longest to get right was the amount of water to add: in general it's less than the recipe suggests, but different flours do seem to need different amounts.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostI’ve successfully been using bread machine for around 13.5 yrs now and only occasionally buy bread nowadays. i’ve tried a variety of combinations - currently 400g loaf - 200g strong white, 100g rye, 100g wholemeal.
We had to buy an electric knife to cut through the bread we make more reliably, otherwise the "slices" are very erratic.
We've had several bread machines over the years. The latest one is the best, though the previous one is still being used not far from here. The blade in the last one got stuck in - "baked" in - and we couldn't get it out, but it still worked/works. Trying to avoid that happening with the newest one.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostI’ve successfully been using bread machine for around 13.5 yrs now and only occasionally buy bread nowadays. i’ve tried a variety of combinations - currently 400g loaf - 200g strong white, 100g rye, 100g wholemeal.
I previously used a mixture of supermarket strong white and wholemeal or brown flour. However, when this was unavailable during the first lockdown our local deli and wholefood store managed to get a pallet of various flours from a local miller, Marriage's Master Millers, which was much better than the supermarket own brand. I now use a mixture of their Strong White bread flour and their Golden Wholegrain (200g of each), which makes a really lovely loaf. Their flours are stocked by Ocado, so we now get it as part of our regular delivery. The full range of flours can be seen here:
"I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square."
Lady Bracknell The importance of Being Earnest
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We seem to have diverted away from grumbles to recipes. Wrong thread?
Today's bread was good - which keeps up my small record - 100% success - but over a considerably larger sample "we" have had a few failures. Some were due to power failures, and occasionally missing or miscalculated or stale ingredients. One comment is that "sometimes the bread is different even though the ingredients and procedures are as close as reasonably possible to previous attempts".
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Originally posted by LHC View PostWe also have a bread machine, which we have been using for 10+ years (actually, we are on our third machine).
I previously used a mixture of supermarket strong white and wholemeal or brown flour. However, when this was unavailable during the first lockdown our local deli and wholefood store managed to get a pallet of various flours from a local miller, Marriage's Master Millers, which was much better than the supermarket own brand. I now use a mixture of their Strong White bread flour and their Golden Wholegrain (200g of each), which makes a really lovely loaf. Their flours are stocked by Ocado, so we now get it as part of our regular delivery. The full range of flours can be seen here:
https://flour.co.uk/our-range/home-baking
Looking like this is far from a grumble topic - we need a Bread Thread! - Dough! K
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostMany of you people seem to be very well-bread!
Mme v makes bread with no need for machinery - a soda bread incorporating many nuts and seeds. A little on the heavy side for use as 'bread', but makes the most excellent toast. For 'bread' bread, our local waitrose often has its sourdough at much reduced prices when approaching sell-by dates : we stock up, and deep-freeze them - they unfreeze easily, and are excellent when warmed through.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... a roll-call of loafers if you ask me!
Mme v makes bread with no need for machinery - a soda bread incorporating many nuts and seeds. A little on the heavy side for use as 'bread', but makes the most excellent toast. For 'bread' bread, our local waitrose often has its sourdough at much reduced prices when approaching sell-by dates : we stock up, and deep-freeze them - they unfreeze easily, and are excellent when warmed through.
.bong ching
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostStrong stoneground wholemeal - always.
I recommend the flour ground at the National Trust watermill at Dunster Castle, near Minehead. The addition of organic soya flour is a worthwhile option.
I see Shipton Mill can be ordered online**, as many different flours as you could wish. They say white flours will last, properly stored, for up to a year, wholemeal for 6 months.
**No personal interest to declareIt isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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