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Krusty got a brain transplant 🧠🍞
Krusty, our digital concierge on the recipe pantry, told one of you to use 100 mL. When the recipe said 50. That one stung, because you’re trusting him with your hands covered in dough. So we tore him open and rebuilt him from the inside out. Here’s what’s different the next time you hit “Bake With Me” in the Recipe Pantry: www.recipepantry.app 🥖 He reads the actual recipe card now. Every amount he gives you comes straight from the recipe data, and a built-in fact-checker verifies his answers against the card before you ever see them. If the recipe says 50, he says 50. ⚖️ He knows your batch size. Scale a recipe to 2× and Krusty answers in 2× amounts. Ask and he’ll give you the original too. 📍 He remembers where you are. Tell him “I’m on step 4” and he stays there. No more “ready to start?” after you’ve been at it for an hour. Refresh the page mid-bake and he picks up right where you left off. 🎙️ Voice mode works like a real conversation. Interrupt him mid-sentence with a new question and he stops talking and answers it. Phone across the counter, hands in the dough, keep talking. 👀 He points now. Chat moved to a side panel so the recipe stays in front of you, and when he mentions a step, the page scrolls there and highlights it. And when a recipe doesn’t cover something? He tells you it doesn’t, instead of inventing a number. General baking advice gets labeled as general baking advice. Put him to work on your next bake. And if you ever catch him saying anything that doesn’t match the card, tell me. A member catching that 100 mL slip is exactly how he got this upgrade. www.recipepantry.app Perfection is not required. Progress is. Now that includes Krusty. 🍞 ~Henry⭐️🔥
Krusty got a brain transplant 🧠🍞
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This Saturday: Summer Garden Focaccia, Two Ways 🌸
Look at what summer's handing us right now. Tomatoes coming in. Peppers, herbs, onions, whatever's crowding your counter or your garden. This week we turn all of it into bread. This Saturday's bake is Summer Garden Focaccia, and it might be the most fun we've had in the pan all year. You're going to decorate this one like a garden. Flowers built from peppers and onion. Stems from chives and asparagus. Tomatoes and olives for color. A wildflower meadow, a summer sunset, your kid's name across the top, whatever you dream up. No two loaves in this kitchen will look alike, and that's the whole point. We're running it two ways, so there's a lane for everybody: Yeasted, beginner-friendly. One bowl, no mixer, no starter. Mix Friday night, rest cold overnight, decorate and bake Saturday. If you're newer to bread, this is your week. pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/summer-garden-focaccia Sourdough, intermediate. For the starter crowd who wants the tang and the big, wild bubbles. Build your levain Friday, cold ferment overnight, bake Saturday. Sandy, Colleen, this one's calling your name. pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/sourdough-summer-garden-focaccia Both recipes have all four decorating tutorials built in, so you've got real guidance, not just "arrange some veggies." And they link to each other in the Pantry, so pick your lane or peek at both. Here's the rhythm: Friday, get your dough going (sourdough folks, feed that starter first). Saturday morning, decorate and bake together. Doors open 8:00 AM ET Saturday and we bake all day. There's one trick that decides whether your garden comes out beautiful or burnt, and I'll walk you through it all week leading up to Saturday. Stay close. So tell me: yeasted or sourdough, and what's in your garden or fridge right now that's going on top? Drop it below. Let's start planning our gardens.
This Saturday: Summer Garden Focaccia, Two Ways 🌸
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🫙 The Sourdough Starter Care Guide Just Got a Facelift
I went back through our Sourdough Starter Care Guide and gave it a complete refresh. It is not just prettier. It is easier to navigate, easier to understand, and much more useful when you are standing in the kitchen wondering what your starter is trying to tell you. The guide can always be inside the classroom button at the top of our page. https://www.skool.com/crust-crumb-academy-7621/classroom/5e132945?md=10b2221ee5774f8aaed5306cf692d08d Inside the updated guide, you will learn how to: ✅ Build a starter from scratch ✅ Feed it without wasting a mountain of flour ✅ Recognize peak activity and baking readiness ✅ Choose the right jar and keep it clean ✅ Prepare your starter for bake day ✅ Tell harmless hooch from contamination ✅ Dry and store a backup ✅ Understand starter temperature, flavor, and feeding rhythm I also added new visual examples, clearer chapter navigation, a starter resource library, and links to the tools we use throughout the Academy. Whether your starter is brand new, neglected in the refrigerator, or bubbling happily on the counter, this guide will help you understand what to do next. 🔗 Open the updated guide: https://sourdough-starter-guide.vercel.app/ Bookmark it. Keep it close. Come back whenever your starter starts speaking a language you do not understand yet. This free guide contains clearly labeled affiliate links. Perfection is not required. Progress is. ~Henry⭐🔥
🫙 The Sourdough Starter Care Guide Just Got a Facelift
The newsletter just went out. Go check your inbox.
If you didn't get it, that's a problem I want to fix right now. We send one newsletter a week from the Recipe Pantry. One. That's it. I'm not going to clutter up your inbox, and I'm not going to sell you anything. It's recipes and what we're baking. That's the whole deal. 𝗔𝗻𝗱 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗣𝗮𝗻𝘁𝗿𝘆, 𝗮𝗹𝗼𝗻𝗴 𝘄𝗶𝘁𝗵 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝗻𝗲𝘄𝘀𝗹𝗲𝘁𝘁𝗲𝗿, 𝗷𝘂𝘀𝘁 𝗴𝗼𝘁 𝗮 𝗳𝗮𝗰𝗲𝗹𝗶𝗳𝘁. I'm not being modest about this one, it came out beautiful. If you haven't been over there lately, you're gonna want to look. This week's went out this morning, and it's got the two Summer Garden Focaccia recipes we're baking Saturday, plus two more focaccia from the Pantry. Here it is: https://zgxxhqbickrlqkwmkfni.supabase.co/functions/v1/newsletter-og?id=f7c974dd-d848-4d1b-aa7f-eacd84b47c18 Now, housekeeping. If it's not in your inbox, go dig through your spam folder. It happens more than it should. When you find it, mark it "not spam" and add me to your contacts. That tells your email provider we're friends, and next week it lands where it belongs. And if you're not on the list at all? Scroll to the bottom of that newsletter. The subscribe link is right there. Takes ten seconds. One a week. That's my promise. Don't miss it. Perfection is not required. Progress is. Henry ⭐🔥
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Russell’s asking the right questions. Here’s the short version nobody gives you.
Starter timing. If you mix flour and water only, then rest, that’s an autolyse. If you throw the starter in with it, that’s a fermentolyse. Different thing, different name. The reason it matters is acid. A true autolyse sits at neutral pH, and that lets the enzymes in the flour work without interference. Protease loosens the protein, amylase starts breaking starch into sugar. You get extensibility. The dough stretches instead of fighting you. Add the starter up front and fermentation begins on minute one. The acid starts tightening things sooner, bulk runs shorter, and you’ve saved yourself a step. So who’s right? Both. If you’re running weak flour, a lot of whole grain, or 80 percent hydration and you need that dough to stretch, autolyse first. If you’re using strong bread flour at 70 percent and you want fewer steps, mix it all together like I do and move on with your day. Coil fold versus slap and fold. These aren’t competing. They’re doing two different jobs at two different times. Slap and fold builds gluten. It’s mechanical, it’s aggressive, and it’s what you reach for early when the dough is slack and there’s no structure yet. Front-load the work, get strength fast. Coil fold maintains. It’s for during bulk, after fermentation is producing gas. It organizes the gluten and adds a little tension without knocking the air out of what you just spent four hours building. Slap early. Coil later. Somebody doing nothing but coil folds is letting time and hydration do the developing, and that works fine if the schedule allows. Nobody explains this because the honest answer is “depends on your flour, your hydration, and your clock.” Doesn’t fit on a thumbnail. But it’s the truth. Perfection is not required. Progress is. ~ Henry ⭐🔥
Russell’s asking the right questions. Here’s the short version nobody gives you.
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