I'm very jealous of your bread making skills. My wife won't let me buy a bread maker. I just love the smell of bread baking!!
Russ
You already have a bread maker - your hands and your oven!
I'm very jealous of your bread making skills. My wife won't let me buy a bread maker. I just love the smell of bread baking!!
Russ
You already have a bread maker - your hands and your oven!
Ok, I got this German clay bread baker for Christmas. Look at the size of this thing!
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I was going to point out that it certainly made a wide pan loaf!Given the back and forth discussion that Morning Glory and I recently had about the word Pan meaning Bread, it comes as no surprise that the word Pane is imprinted upon your new German Bread Maker.
You're married ? Right? I'm not going there,lol.
Russ
She gave me the look when she said.....WE DONT need one!!
Nuff said!
Ruds
I bought my wife a Mercedes. She didn't care what I bought for myself.
CD
Let me get this straight. You do all the cooking in your household? Does she eat bread?
CD
this baker says it must be started in a cold oven, to prevent cracking from the temperature shock,
Yeah, it's all in Russian, and the (Russian) woman working there just said, "Dark flour! Dark bread!"Hmmm... not heard of that before. I seem to remember I once had a similar baking dish and it had to be soaked and then heated in the oven from cold before using for the first time. I never really got on with it. I prefer to freeform or use a banneton.
That can't be rye. Rye on its own produces quite dense bread and is darker. What is written on the packet? Is it in Russian?
I like that dark crust BTW.
Light rye is somewhere between white bread and basic wheat bread - very light in color.
Yeah, it's all in Russian, and the (Russian) woman working there just said, "Dark flour! Dark bread!"
We do have different rye breads here, that generally fall into either dark rye or light rye. Light rye is somewhere between white bread and basic wheat bread - very light in color.
These are all listed at "light rye bread" at their respective sites. That third one is local to me (Klostermans).Maybe I'm not familiar with Light Rye. I am familiar with three types of Rye Bread, Dark, Russian and Jewish and none of them would I describe as being between White Bread and Wheat Bread, particularly.