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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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Before you buy another baking tool, read this first
A few of you have been asking me lately for recommendations. What scale do I use. What lame should you buy. Is that proofer really worth it. For a long time the only thing I had to point you to was my shopper's guide. And I'll be honest with you, I never sent it out with much confidence. I've been picking at it, off and on, for three years, and it never got to a place where I felt good putting my name on it. That changed this week. The guide is done. It's presentable. And more important than presentable, it's honest. Every item in it is either something I use in my own kitchen, or it's made by a company whose product I use and believe in. If I don't stand behind it, it isn't in there. That's the whole rule. Some of these companies I've built real relationships with. Wire Monkey. Brod & Taylor. Holland Bowl Mill. Sourhouse. ModKitchn. I'm an affiliate partner with these folks, and what that means for you is that I can sometimes get you a discount. And when times are good, a discount on top of whatever sale they're already running. So here's what I want you to do. Before you buy a new tool, a new appliance, anything for your baking, check here first. If it's in the guide and there's a promo code attached to it, that's money back in your pocket. Now the honest part, because you deserve it straight. On some of these products I may earn a small commission. It does not change your price, not by a penny. And that money doesn't disappear into my pocket and stay there. It goes right back into making Crust & Crumb Academy a better place for you and for every baker who walks through that door. 👉 https://holiday-gifts-2025.lovable.app I'm putting this in the Classroom, on the first or second row, so it's always easy to find. Any time you need it, go to the Classroom at the top of the page and look for it. It'll be right there waiting for you. Bake well, Henry⭐🔥
Before you buy another baking tool, read this first
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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
Lobster Rolls?
A friend asked me to bring the roll part to her dinner of Lobster Rolls this week. I’m thinking of using the hot dog bun recipe I recently made from The Recipe Pantry, but would like your suggestions, please. Thanks! 🦞🥖
Pullman Pans
Look what just arrived. I am so excited and thrilled and was hoping a recipe would be provided unfortunately not. This is my brand new toy. I have never ever owned one especially this great USA baking pans, I keep hearing great things about it. Hubs ordered it for me. I opened the box and I told him they made a mistake as there are 2 in the box. He told me buying 2 separately was cheaper than buying 2 together as a set. I only wanted 1, but he knows I always bake 2 at a time. I was very surprised as he did not tell me and I am truly blessed. It's better than Christmas. I have never owned a Pullman pan before. Please help me out with recipes. How to wash, clean and maintain it? Do I need to oil, place parchment paper etc. so the bread dough does not stick. For bulk fermentation, how do I know it's ready shutting it up with the lid on etc. It's all very new to me as I am definitely a beginner using this pan. What would you suggest what recipe to initiate it for the very first time. Please provide me with all your hints, tips and experience using this awesome Pullman pans.
Pullman Pans
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