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🎉 Meet Member #1,000.
His name is @David Smith . We crossed the line today, bakers. One thousand members. And the seat we'd been holding for that milestone moment now belongs to David, out of Bothell, Washington. David found us through a friend, joined quietly, and is already showing up. He loves fishing, cooking, and learning Greek. The kind of person who appreciates a process that takes time and rewards attention. That tracks with bread, doesn't it. David, welcome. You picked a good crew. Jump into the feed when you're ready and introduce yourself. Tell us what you're hoping to bake, what you've already tried, or what's been giving you trouble. Whatever you bring, this room will meet you where you are. To the rest of you: this milestone belongs to all of us. Every conversation, every Saturday bake-along, every loaf you posted whether it worked or didn't. Every time you answered another baker's question before I got there. That's what one thousand looks like. Shannon at 800. Amanda at 900. David at 1,000. And we're just getting started. Perfection is not required. Progress is. Henry ⭐🔥
🎉 Meet Member #1,000.
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🥖 Saturday Bake: Poppy Seed Loaf, Two Ways 🌾
We’re staying on the road we’ve been building together. Baguettes. Pretzel bread. The Foolproof Sourdough Loaf. And this Saturday, we’re going somewhere beautiful. ✨ Poppy seed bread. ✨ Two versions. ✨ One bake-along. 📌 Why two versions? Some of you are deep into sourdough and ready to push hydration. Some of you are still building your starter, or just want to bake bread this weekend without a multi-day commitment. This Saturday, both of you get to bake the same loaf alongside everyone else. 🥖 The Sourdough Version T55 French flour and a touch of wholemeal at 80% hydration. The poppy seeds get folded in during the first coil, which laminates them through the crumb instead of mixing them away. The result is what you see in the photo: ✨ Open ✨ Airy ✨ Flecked with seed ✨ That nutty crunch you only get when the seeds keep their integrity This one teaches you: 🌾 How to handle higher hydration 🌾 How to time bulk fermentation in a warmer kitchen 🌾 Why we use 3.5 sets of coils instead of 4 (Hint: 80% hydration with wholemeal doesn’t want a fourth set. It tightens the crumb.) 📖 Full sourdough recipe in the Recipe Pantry: https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/poppy-seed-sourdough-loaf 🍞 The Yeasted Version Same flavor. Same beautiful crumb. Simpler timeline. ✅ Same-day bake ✅ No starter required We’ll use the same poppy seed lamination technique with a commercial yeast dough, so you still get that gorgeous seeded crumb without the multi-day fermentation. If you’ve been wanting to bake along but felt like sourdough was a barrier, this is your week. 📌 I’ll have the yeasted version uploaded to the Recipe Pantry by end of day today. Watch for the post. 🛒 What you need to know now: 🌾 Pick up poppy seeds this weekMost grocery stores carry them in the spice aisle. 🌾 If you can find T55 flour, grab it.If not, a strong all-purpose around 11–12% protein works beautifully.(King Arthur AP is the closest match.)
🥖 Saturday Bake: Poppy Seed Loaf, Two Ways 🌾
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The Art of Handling High-Hydration Dough 💧🍞
Every week, someone in here posts a photo of their dough and asks the same question: “Is this right? It seems really wet.” The answer is almost always yes. The fear is universal. And the instinct to fix it by adding flour is what kills the bake. 🥖 This video is for everyone who learned to bake on sandwich bread and dinner rolls, then hit a wall when they tried ciabatta, focaccia, or rustic sourdough. The dough was never wrong. The expectation was. In this video, I walk through: 💧 The hydration spectrum and why the rules change at 75% and up 🔥 Why higher hydration is actually more forgiving on bake day, not less 🙌 The “wet hands, not floured hands” rule 🌀 Coil folds vs. stretch and folds and why it matters for your crumb 🛠️ The three tools that make wet dough manageable This is the foundation for everything we’re baking Saturday and beyond. 🎥 Watch it here:[drop YouTube link] Then meet me back here. Saturday, we’re baking a poppy seed sourdough at 80% hydration. Two paths available: sourdough or yeasted. Pick the one that fits your week. 👇 What’s the highest hydration you’ve taken on so far? Drop it in the comments. Perfection is not required. Progress is. Henry ⭐🔥
🫙 Trust the process. I mean it.
I let Vitale sit in the refrigerator for a few weeks. No feedings. No attention. Just neglect. And when I pulled her out, she had a thick layer of hooch sitting right on top. ⚠️ That’s not failure. That’s chemistry doing exactly what it’s supposed to do. I did this on purpose. I wanted to show you what a neglected starter actually looks like, because too many bakers panic when they see hooch and think they’ve killed their starter. You haven’t. She’s hungry, not dead. 🥣 Here’s what I did: • Poured off the hooch• Discarded almost everything in the jar except 30 grams of dregs• Built her back up as a stiff starter with:• 30g starter• 100g water• 200g flour That’s it. No fancy Rescue. No starting from scratch. 👀 And here’s where it gets interesting. I’m running two experiments at once. 1️⃣ First, I’m bringing Vitale back to life so you can see exactly how a neglected starter responds. 2️⃣ Second, once she’s showing signs of life, I’m splitting off a portion into a separate jar and treating it like a brand-new sluggish starter. That one gets fed with pineapple juice, the trick Candy mentioned in our live chat last weekend, to show you how the acid can rescue a starter that just won’t get going. 🧪 Two scenarios. 🫙 One jar of dregs. 🎥 Real footage of what actually happens. Stay with me on this one. I’ll be posting updates as she comes back to life. Perfection is not required. Progress is. ~ Henry ⭐🔥
🫙 Trust the process. I mean it.
Yeast Water Project: Day 3 🍇
Shook the jar this morning and there it was. Tiny bubbles racing across the surface, gone in a second. Water’s a little cloudier. Grapes are riding higher. No off smells, just clean fruit. 🍎 Day three is the moment. The yeast just punched the clock. There’s finally enough of them in there to make a scene. Quick teaching points for today: See that dusty haze on the grapes? Don’t wash it off. That powdery, almost frosted look on the skin is called the bloom. It’s a natural coating of wild yeasts and bacteria that lives on the fruit, and it’s exactly what you’re trying to capture. Rinse if you must, but a gentle one, never scrub. The bloom is the whole point. Wash it off and you’ve thrown the inoculum down the drain. This is also why organic, unwaxed fruit matters. Conventional grapes are often coated with food-grade wax or treated post-harvest, and that interferes with the wild population you’re trying to grow. Loosen the lid. Active fermentation means gas needs an escape route. Snug, not sealed. Size your jar to the recipe. If you’ll use 300g of yeast water in your bake, you need a jar that holds more than 300g of water plus the fruit plus headspace. Think backwards from the recipe and add a buffer for evaporation and pour-off. Trust your nose. Fruity, slightly sweet, a little tangy is exactly where you want to be. Solvent, sulfur, or anything sharp tells a different story. Drop your Day 3 photos below. Let’s see those jars. Henry ⭐🔥
Yeast Water Project: Day 3 🍇
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