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🍞 Japanese Milk Bread Week: The Full Story
I don't write these recaps because I like looking at numbers. I write them because the numbers tell a story about the people behind them. This week, our Saturday working thread crossed 1,095 comments. But that's not even the real number. When you count every like on every comment inside that thread, every bit of encouragement, every "your crumb looks amazing," every "try checking internal temp instead of going by color," the total interactions in that single thread topped 4,200. Across the full week, 25 posts generated over 5,243 interactions. In a community that's two months old. Here's how the Saturday threads have grown: Focaccia: ~521 comments Cinnamon Rolls: ~840 comments Japanese Milk Bread: 1,095+ comments That's not a fluke. That's a pattern. But the numbers aren't what make this community different. The people are. Tracy slept through her bulk fermentation alarm, shaped the dough anyway, then laminated brown sugar and cardamom into a second batch because why not. Ehsan ran three simultaneous experiments: standard, long fermentation, and poolish. Linda catalogued the protein content of every flour in her pantry. Kim asked about glass pans and Tracy researched it before I could even start typing. Kathee swapped her sourdough starter into the yeasted recipe just to see what would happen. Cheryl fought wet dough, overproofed, popped bubbles, and pulled a loaf that smelled like espresso. Deborah's loaf collapsed on one side and she posted the photo anyway. That's the culture. Not perfection. Progress. Not cheerleading. Coaching. Oh, and somewhere in the middle of all of this, that little yellow star showed up next to our name. Top 1% of all 191,000 communities on Skool. #1 on ProveWorth across the entire platform. Not just bread. Not just food. All of it. That star belongs to every single person who showed up this week. The full recap is attached. Every post, every baker, every number, verified from the feed. Give it a read. Find your name. You earned it.
🍞 Japanese Milk Bread Week: The Full Story
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🍞 SATURDAY JAPANESE MILK BREAD BAKE-ALONG: Our Working Thread
This is it. We're making Japanese Milk Bread today. If you've never worked with tangzhong before, today's the day you learn why this technique changes everything. We cook a small portion of flour and milk into a paste before it goes into the dough. That paste traps moisture and keeps this bread impossibly soft for days. It's the reason Japanese bakery bread feels like a cloud and your regular sandwich loaf doesn't. This dough is enriched: butter, eggs, milk, sugar. It's going to feel different from lean doughs. Softer. Stickier. Richer. Don't panic and don't add extra flour. Trust the process. The stand mixer does the heavy lifting here, and the dough will come together. 📱 Recipe Pantry Tip: At the top of every recipe page, look for the little chef's hat icon on the right side of the nav bar. Click it. That keeps your screen awake so you're not tapping your phone with floury elbows. The crescent moon next to it toggles dark mode if your kitchen is bright. 🔗 The Recipe: https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/japanese-milk-bread?variant=yeasted Before you start: - Take your butter, eggs, and milk out of the fridge NOW. Room temperature ingredients matter today. - Make your tangzhong first. It needs to cool before it goes into the dough. If you made it last night, even better. - Clear your counter. You'll need space for shaping. Post your questions, your progress photos, your tangzhong shots, your shaped loaves, your finished bread. Everything goes here so we can all learn from each other. I'm here all day, start to finish. Whether you're mixing right now or pulling your loaf out tonight, this thread stays open. Let's see those milk breads. 👇
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A Note About the Culture We're Building Here
A lot of you came from Facebook. I run Baking Great Bread at Home over there, 40,000+ members, and I love that community. But I want to be honest about something. On Facebook, you often get one of two things: criticism without substance or compliments without critique. Someone posts a loaf and the comments are either "Beautiful!" when there's clearly something going on, or unhelpful jabs that don't teach you anything. People mean well. They're trying to be kind. But kindness without honesty doesn't make you a better baker. This is a different place. Crust & Crumb Academy is exactly that: an academy. This is where you come to hone your skills and get better. That means when you ask for feedback, you're going to get it. Real feedback. Specific feedback. The kind that actually helps you improve. I'll always be kind. I'll always be encouraging. But you're not going to get empty platitudes from me. If I see something in your crumb, your shaping, your scoring, I'm going to tell you what it is and how to fix it. That's what coaches do. And I want you to do the same for each other. When someone posts a bake and asks for critique, give them something useful. Tell them what you see. Ask questions. Share what's worked for you. That's how we all get better. This is a teaching environment. We're not here to collect compliments. We're here to make better bakers. Perfection is not required. But growth is the goal. Let's get to work. ~Henry
A Note About the Culture We're Building Here
Kids Can Bake
One of our members reached out to me about a project she's working on. She's part of a program teaching kids in her school system how to cook real food from scratch. Not box food. Not microwave food. Real food. She told me the kids made Mac and Cheese from scratch for the first time and their faces said everything. They couldn't believe that's what it was supposed to taste like. Now the kids want pizza. And she needed help figuring out a recipe that works without scales, without mixers, without any fancy equipment. Just cups, spoons, a bowl, and their hands. I was happy to help. Actually, I was more than happy. It hit me hard enough that I went ahead and built a full recipe for it. Kids Can Bake: Personal Pan Pizza https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/kids-can-bake-personal-pan-pizza?variant=yeasted Every kid makes their own dough in their own bowl. No sharing, no dividing. The recipe uses basic volume measurements, common ingredients, and zero equipment most kitchens don't already have. It walks them through the science of what yeast is doing and why dough rises, because kids are curious and they deserve real answers. This inspired something bigger. I'm building out a "Kids Can Bake" section in the Recipe Pantry. Recipes designed for children, parents baking with their kids, scout troops, after-school programs, summer camps, whoever wants to put real food in front of young people and teach them something valuable. If you've got a recipe idea that would work well for kids, or know of a project we as a community can get behind, drop it in the comments. I want to hear what you'd bake with your children or grandchildren. More kid-friendly recipes coming soon. Perfection is not required. But teaching a kid to make their own pizza from scratch? That's progress that lasts a lifetime.
Kids Can Bake
🧠 Pop Quiz: How Well Do You Know Japanese Milk Bread?
We just spent the week breaking down Japanese Milk Bread, from the tangzhong to the final pull-apart. Now let's see what stuck. I put together a quick quiz to test your knowledge. No grades, no judgment. Just a fun way to see how much you picked up and maybe learn something you missed. Take the quiz here: https://bread-quiz-master.lovable.app/quiz/japanese-milk-bread- Drop your score in the comments. No shame in getting a few wrong. That's how we learn. Perfection is not required. Progress is. 🍞
🧠 Pop Quiz: How Well Do You Know Japanese Milk Bread?
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