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Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Local Flour and Materials for the Breadalong

I'm over the moon at the news that I can now buy flour that is 100% local! This article from SFGate.com has me ready to embrace the crowds at the Ferry Building's Farmer's Market and bring back a 50-lb bag of wheat berries on BART. I need to find a convincing argument for the boy to be my wheat berry mule.

Before, the closest I could come to Bay Area flour is flour that is milled locally at Guisto's in South San Francisco. The wheat berries that they grind do not necessarily come from California, though, but since it was the best option available, that's what I used. But not anymore!

This food mill that attaches to my mixer is on my wish list now.

For those of you interested in the breadalong, it is still going to happen! In preparation, here are the items that you'll need on your bready journey:
  1. A glass jar or plastic container and a loose fitting lid (gas has to escape) that will be your starter's home. If you do not plan on making bread every 2-3 days, then this container will also live in your refrigerator. Your starter will double in volume when it is fed, so use a container that can hold at least 6 cups.
  2. A spatula or spoon long enough to mix the contents of your container
  3. A dry erase pen (optional) for marking your container
  4. 5-lb bag of bread flour. Bread flour has more gluten than your average flour, a plus for bread as its name implies, but you can also use all purpose flour. King Arthur unbleached, white flour is a great product that is not too hard on the wallet.
  5. A teeny, tiny bit of yeast for kick starting your starter. Just a pinch will do.
  6. Water. I use unfiltered tap water since it tastes good and that is what we drink around here, but if your water tastes chlorinated or you regularly drink bottled or filtered water, use that for your starter and bread.
  7. Some means of measuring your wet and dry ingredients. My favorite method is a baking scale. I use the scale exclusively for measuring out my wet and dry bread ingredients because I know how much the required amounts of water weigh - I'm all about making less dishes to wash!
  8. A draft-free place in your abode that is not in direct sunlight and that ranges between 65-80 deg. F.
  9. A baking stone (optional)
  10. A spray bottle or a pressurized sprayer that is only used for water (optional)
  11. A stand mixer, like a KitchenAid or a Bosch (optional)
  12. Salt, but not the kind with iodine
If I've forgotten anything, which is very likely, I'll update this post.

Do you have everything you need for the breadalong? Then, mosey on over to Part 2 and Part 3!

4 comments:

  1. Yay! I've been waiting.. not that I have much spare time, but still :)

    bread flour - can I pick any flour (like the tons of wheat flour I have at home), or do you mean something specific?

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  2. Hmmmm....this might be fun! I'll have to see what I can do about this checklist!

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  3. Thank you for reminding me.
    Now if I am able to find the time.
    Hmmm ... my seven day a week job will be finished by mid-October. DH will - fingers crossed - be soon done with trying to give me his sniffing, sneezing, body aching in every joint, cold. (And I will not have caught it!)

    Of course, as long as I keep a record of your directions - I can make it any time. Right?

    Happy knitting in the meantime,
    Janey
    janeyknitting AT yahoo DOT ca

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  4. I found your list too long but very useful one,first of all thanks for it.I think many of us normally forget many useful items,so your list would be just like a check list for them.

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