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🥖 Bake-Along Week 19 — English Muffins
This Saturday, we’re going on the griddle. Two recipes are live in the Recipe Pantry. Pick the one that fits your kitchen and your week. 🍞 My Overnight English Muffins Yeasted, beginner-friendly, optional rings: https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/overnight-english-muffins 🌾 Henry’s Overnight Sourdough English Muffins Intermediate, 78% hydration, biscuit cutter works fine: https://skoo.ly/english-muffins-sd 🛠️ What you’ll need A cast iron skillet, electric griddle, or 12-inch heavy pan. A 3 to 3.75 inch round cutter. Biscuit cutter works. Muffin rings if you have them. A clean tuna can if you’re old-school. Cornmeal. That’s it. No oven required. 🕰️ The plan Mix Friday night. Cold ferment overnight. Cut, proof, griddle Saturday morning. Split with a fork, never a knife. Butter melting into the craters is the whole point. 📸 Post your progress Tag your starter, your kitchen, your timing. Sandy, Bubbles, and Marshmallow are welcome. New members, this is a great one to start with. See you Saturday. ~ Henry ⭐🔥
🥖 Bake-Along Week 19 — English Muffins
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🥖 The Science of the Griddle
Four weeks in the oven. This week we're leaving it behind. 🔥 English muffins don't bake. They griddle. That's a different physics problem, and it's worth a few minutes to understand what's actually happening under your dough. The video walks through three things: 🌡️ Why 275 to 300 is the sweet spot, and what happens if you go hotter or colder. 🌽 What cornmeal is actually doing. Hint: it's not just dusting flour. It's a steam vent. 🍴 Why we split with a fork, never a knife. Structural reasons, not tradition. If you've ever ended up with a dense, hockey-puck muffin, the answer is in here. Watch this video before Friday night. Then mix. See you at the griddle Saturday. ~ Henry ⭐🔥
🥖 The Science of the Griddle
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Road to Kansas🩵 up date 5/19/26 11:55 l8 am central.
First, I would like to thank everyone that gave reached down and some gave twice to help Henry on his road to Kansas. It is looking so good because we are less than $450 away from reaching $3000. We just need that one last push to get there. We have about three days!! We can do this. Any amount is appreciated. Small amount to add up and every single dollar goes straight to Henry. There is no middle man in this, Henry gets all. . Take a moment to read the story he wrote . Very Touching🩵 Again from all of us that gave an a pushing for this, we greatly appreciate this, and Henry appreciates it more. Have a great work week.🫶. We are about $450. from our total.💯
Road to Kansas🩵 up date 5/19/26 11:55 l8 am central.
My new flour blend/combination…
@Henry Hunter I’m not familiar with flour enough to know why this is happening… but I’m extremely happy to have innocently stumbled upon this blend of flour when all I was doing was trying to get a more open crumb than the $0.48 per pound high gluten flour was giving me. I’ve been thinking all along this blend of flour has extraordinary properties that make bread making much simpler than ANY combination of flour I’ve used for making bread before. I noticed it the first time I used it. I used King Arthur bread flour and Bob’s Red Mill bread flour for a decade before finding this much, much cheaper high gluten flour. High Gluten flour… bought from a restaurant supply retailer = 60% King Arthur All Purpose flour 11.7% protein content = 27% King Arthur Whole Wheat flour = 9% The rest of the flour comes from Hank that is 25% dark rye flour And the important part is this: I noticed it before I had proof. At first it was just a feeling: * “Why is this dough behaving differently?” * “Why does this feel easier?” * “Why is the gluten organizing itself faster?” * “Why am I getting away with things I couldn’t before?” Then eventually the evidence piles up: * less handling required * stronger preshapes * cleaner shaping * better gas retention * higher hydration tolerance * stronger bloom * fewer folds needed * more forgiveness after refrigeration * and better survival during warm same-day baking. What’s fascinating is that my process is actually stress testing the flour. Most people never push dough hard enough to discover what a flour can really do because they: * use lower hydration * use cooler dough * handle excessively * ferment conservatively * or bake cold dough straight from bannetons. I’m doing almost the opposite: * warm dough * aggressive fermentation * minimal intervention * delayed scoring * high hydration * schedule disruptions * same-day soft dough. That environment exposes weakness immediately. And yet this blend keeps holding structure.
My new flour blend/combination…
Let’s Finish Strong!
Guys we are less than $500 from hitting Henry’s goal to see his son at the NCAA Nationals. If anyone can help - even if it’s a few dollars - it would be so greatly appreciated. Between this, YouTube, the Recipe Pantry, and Facebook, Henry provides us an incredible service that is worth SO much more than the $0 he charges. He’s also given us a beautiful community which is priceless! Thank you to all who have contributed 🙏🏻 https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-us-cheer-ryan-at-ncaa-nationals
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