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๐ŸŽ‰ 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 โญ๐Ÿ”ฅ
๐ŸŽ‰ Meet Member #1,000.
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๐Ÿฅ– Saturday Bake: Poppy Seed Loaf, Two Ways ๐ŸŒพ
Weโ€™re staying on the road weโ€™ve been building together. Baguettes. Pretzel bread. The Foolproof Sourdough Loaf. And this Saturday, weโ€™re going somewhere beautiful. โœจ Poppy seed bread. โœจ Two versions. โœจ One bake-along. ๐Ÿ“Œ 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. ๐Ÿฅ– 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: โœจ Open โœจ Airy โœจ Flecked with seed โœจ That nutty crunch you only get when the seeds keep their integrity This one teaches you: ๐ŸŒพ How to handle higher hydration ๐ŸŒพ How to time bulk fermentation in a warmer kitchen ๐ŸŒพ Why we use 3.5 sets of coils instead of 4 (Hint: 80% hydration with wholemeal doesnโ€™t want a fourth set. It tightens the crumb.) ๐Ÿ“– Full sourdough recipe in the Recipe Pantry: https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/poppy-seed-sourdough-loaf ๐Ÿž The Yeasted Version Same flavor. Same beautiful crumb. Simpler timeline. โœ… Same-day bake โœ… No starter required Weโ€™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 youโ€™ve been wanting to bake along but felt like sourdough was a barrier, this is your week. ๐Ÿ“Œ Iโ€™ll have the yeasted version uploaded to the Recipe Pantry by end of day today. Watch for the post. ๐Ÿ›’ What you need to know now: ๐ŸŒพ Pick up poppy seeds this weekMost grocery stores carry them in the spice aisle. ๐ŸŒพ If you can find T55 flour, grab it.If not, a strong all-purpose around 11โ€“12% protein works beautifully.(King Arthur AP is the closest match.)
๐Ÿฅ– Saturday Bake: Poppy Seed Loaf, Two Ways ๐ŸŒพ
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New Series: Baking Through the Seasons (Plus a Free Cheat Sheet)
Started a new YouTube series this week, and I want you to be the first to see it. ๐Ÿ”ฅ Itโ€™s called Baking Through the Seasons, and itโ€™s built around something I see every single year in our community. ๐Ÿฅ– Same flour. ๐Ÿฅ– Same starter. ๐Ÿฅ– Same recipe. Different bread. โ˜€๏ธ When the kitchen warms up in spring, your starter rises faster.โฑ๏ธ Bulk fermentation finishes earlier.๐Ÿซ“ The dough feels softer, stickier, more relaxed than it did a month ago. And most bakers blame the recipeโ€ฆ when really, the room changed. โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ” ๐ŸŒฑ The first video is live. The Spring Baking Protocol covers the seven adjustments that take you from frustrated to in control when your kitchen starts heating up. I also put together a one-page cheat sheet you can print out and keep next to your scale. Itโ€™s the quick-reference version of the whole series. No email opt-in. No signup. Just yours. ๐Ÿ“„ Grab the cheat sheet here: https://skoo.ly/spring-baking ๐ŸŽฅ Watch the first video here: https://youtu.be/E5E2sNhgSXE โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ” โ˜€๏ธ Spring Baking Protocol ๐Ÿ”ฅ Summer Baking Protocol ๐Ÿ‚ Fall Baking Protocol โ„๏ธ Winter Baking Protocol By the end of the year, youโ€™ll have a full year-round playbook for every kitchen condition youโ€™ll ever face. โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ” ๐Ÿ‘‡ Drop a comment below and tell me which season has given you the most trouble. Thatโ€™s how I know what to dig deeper on next. โญ Perfection is not required. Progress is. Come bake with us. Henry โญ๐Ÿ”ฅ
Quick heads up: Poppy Seed Sourdough Loaf is back
A few of you hit a 404 trying to open the Poppy Seed Sourdough Loaf this weekend. Sorry about that. Here's what happened: the recipe was live in the Pantry, but the app on your phone or browser was holding on to an older cached version that didn't know the new recipe existed yet. So when you tapped the link, your device looked in its own memory first, didn't find it, and threw the 404. The recipe itself was never missing. I pushed a fix that tells the app to always check for fresh content first before falling back to the cache. No more trapped sessions on stale versions. What to do if you still see the 404: 1. Close the Recipe Pantry app or browser tab completely 2. Reopen it 3. Tap the link again If you've installed it as an app on your phone, force-close it from your recent apps list and reopen. That pulls the new version down. Direct link to the recipe: https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/poppy-seed-sourdough-loaf Thanks for the patience and for flagging it. That's how we keep this thing sharp. Henry
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Stiff Starter & It's Benefits
A stiff sourdough starter is typically maintained at 45 - 50% hydration. It offers several advantages over the liquid (100% hydration) starter. Key Benefits: Longer Peak Window: Stiff starters are not as time sensitive as a liquid starter. Why? Because they are denser, they ferment more slowly and stay at peak much longer than liquid starters. In most cases, several hours longer than liquid starters. Liquid starters which might collapse within an hour of peaking Enhanced Yeast Activity: The lower water content boosts yeast growth over lactic acid bacteria (LAB), leading to a milder flavor profile that is less sour and more yeast forward, making it ideal for enriched doughs like brioche, panettone, or cinnamon rolls. Honestly I use my stiff starter for any recipe without issue. Improved Dough Structure: Using a stiff starter helps preserve gluten strength because it reduces enzymatic activity that otherwise breaks down gluten proteins. That gives you.... Better oven spring (taller loaves). Easier handling and shaping, as the dough is less likely to become "slack" or sticky. Resilience in Heat because stiff starters are more stable in hot climates (80ยฐF+). A liquid starter can quickly over-ferment and turn soupy & gloopy in the heat. But a stiff starter holds its structure and ferments at a more predictable pace. Easier Maintenance: Fridge Longevity: Stiff starters can survive longer in the refrigerator between feedings. Sometimes several weeks without developing the strong vinegar smells or acidic breakdown common in liquid starters. Less Mess: Stiff starters are dough-like and do not leave behind the sticky, liquid residue typical of a milkshake or pancake consistency starter. If you'd like to begin your journey with a Stiff Starter say "Squad Me" in the comments!! Here's how to start your Stiff Starter: 3g Active Bubbly Starter 15g Water 30g Flour Mix starter and water together until the water looks milky and the starter is dissolved. Then mix in flour, stirring untill it's too stiff to stir. Pour it out onto a clean counter top, every crumb, and knead the ingredients together until you have a cohesive dough like substance. Lastly roll into a ball or roll out into a strip and roll up like a cinnamon roll and place into your jar. This feed ratio is a 1:5:10 giving you a 50% hydration stiff starter. This will take about 10-14 hours to peak at 73*F. You only need to feed once every 24 hours. I feed at 6pm the next morning when it has peaked I place it in the fridge until time to feed again at 6pm. I don't keep my starter in the fridge for days or weeks... That's my personal preference.
Stiff Starter & It's Benefits
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