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This Week's Bake — The Pretzel Loaf, Two Tracks
Look at how far we've come. We've learned to watch the dough, not the clock. We've worked on shaping and scoring. We've handled wet dough and figured out how to manage it without panicking. We've built our first preferments and seen what a poolish can do. Now we're going to take everything you've learned and build on it. This week we're baking the pretzel loaf. Two tracks. Same loaf. Yeasted with a poolish if you don't have an active starter, or sourdough if you do. Same hydration, same flour weight, same bath, same bake. Just two different ways to get the dough started. Here's what we're adding to your toolkit this week. The alkaline bath. Most home bakers have never used one. It's the step that turns a regular loaf into a pretzel loaf. Three things happen in that bath, and once you understand the why, you'll never look at a pretzel the same way again. Scoring an alkalized crust. The bath seals the surface tight, which means your score has to do real work. We'll get into where to place it and how deep to go. Reading the bake. The five-minute butter rule. What success looks like when you cut into the crumb. The three most common mistakes and how to fix them before they happen. Here's the thing about doing this together that you can't replicate baking alone in your kitchen. When you bake on your own, you only see your loaf. You don't know if your bulk fermentation went too long or too short until you've cut into it. You don't know what underproofed looks like at hour four versus hour six. You don't know if your bath was strong enough until the loaf comes out pale and you're not sure why. In a bake-along, you're seeing dozens of doughs at every stage at the same time. Someone's hours ahead of you. Someone's hours behind. Someone's about to make the same mistake you almost made yesterday, and you can warn them. Someone else figured something out you didn't, and now you know it too. You get exposed to bread you might never have tried on your own. The pretzel loaf is a perfect example. How many of you would've boiled a bread dough in alkaline water if you weren't doing it as a community? Probably not many. But you'll do it this Saturday, and your kitchen's going to smell like something it's never smelled before.
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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
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Yeasted vs Poolish vs Sourdough Baguettes. Which One Should You Bake?
There are three ways to make a baguette at home. Yeasted, poolish, and sourdough. They all end up looking like the same loaf, but the journeys are completely different. In this video I walk you through all three. Who each one is for, when it makes sense to pick which path, and the three things that matter more than the recipe itself. If you've ever stood in your kitchen wondering which baguette you should actually start with, this is the breakdown you've been looking for. Pick yours for this weekend's bake-along: 🥖 No starter? Start here. https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/french-bread-baguette?utm_source=skool&utm_medium=community&utm_campaign=recipe-share 🥖 Want bakery flavor without managing a starter? https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/classic-poolish-baguette?utm_source=skool&utm_medium=community&utm_campaign=recipe-share 🥖 Active starter ready to go? https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/sourdough-baguettes?utm_source=skool&utm_medium=community&utm_campaign=recipe-share We've been climbing this staircase for three weeks. Couche on the ciabatta. Poolish on the ciabatta. Now scoring and the roll-out shape on the baguettes. Nothing wasted. Watch the video. Pick your path. Drop questions before you bake. Easier to fix dough than crust. Perfection is not required. Progress is. Come bake with us. — Henry ⭐🔥
Sourdough Baking
So I tried to make a sourdough loaf using Henry's white bread recipe. It doesn't have an ear, and I'm noy sure what I've done wrong. My guess is I didn't bulk ferment long enough, even though I let it rise for 9 hours. It was cold in my kitchen, temp around 69 F. What do you think?
Sourdough Baking
A Winner
We all grossed out over the banana pudding sourdough video @Henry Hunter posted this week. It isn’t exactly that recipe, but my version using a babka dough. I would make this again, especially for my “manner puddin’” loving friends and family. Recipe: Sourdough Banana Pudding Babka (Pullman Pan Version) 🥖 Dough (soft, enriched sourdough) Ingredients: - 500g bread flour - 100g active sourdough starter (100% hydration) - 200g whole milk (warm) - 2 large eggs - 80g sugar - 8g salt - 100g unsalted butter (softened) - 1 tsp vanilla extract (optional) - 20g milk powder (optional, for softness) Method: 1. Mix everything except butter until shaggy. 2. Rest 30 minutes. 3. Knead in butter gradually until smooth and elastic (windowpane stage). 4. Bulk ferment: 4–6 hours at room temp OR 2–3 hours room temp + overnight fridge 👉 Dough should be slightly puffy, not doubled. 🍮 Thick Banana Pudding Filling (freeze-dried version) Ingredients: - 1 box instant vanilla pudding (like Jell-O) - 300g cold milk (reduced amount for extra thickness) - 25g freeze-dried bananas (powdered) - 40g brown sugar - 1 tbsp cornstarch - ½–¾ cup crushed Nilla Wafers Method: 1. Whisk pudding mix + milk (use less milk than package directions). 2. Let set 5 minutes until very thick. 3. Mix in banana powder, brown sugar, cornstarch. 4. Fold in crushed wafers last. 5. Chill 20–30 minutes. 👉 Texture = thick, spreadable paste (not loose) 🌀 Shaping for Pullman Pan (standard 9x4x4” Pullman) 1. Roll dough into ~10x16 inch rectangle. 2. Spread filling evenly, leaving a 1-inch border. 3. Optional: sprinkle extra wafer crumbs for structure. 4. Roll tightly into a log. 5. Chill 20–30 minutes (critical for clean layers). 6. Slice lengthwise. 7. Twist halves together (cut sides up). 8. Place into greased Pullman pan. ⏳ Final Proof - Room temp: 3–5 hours until dough rises ~80–90% of pan heightOR - Overnight fridge → bake next day
A Winner
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