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📰 The Week 10 Bake-Along Recap is up.
Poppy Seed Loaf, Two Ways. 1,791 working thread comments. A 3 AM bake. A knee replacement. A birthday party. And while we were busy with all of it, we crossed 1,000 members. The full story is here: 👉 https://quick-dory-s4zc.here.now/ Win of the Day this week: @Betsy Carey. Read why. You'll understand. Member moments inside: @Stacey Avraham · @Sandy Chong · @Candi Brown-McGriff · @Colleen Vergara · @Lisa D · @Joseph Bilodeau · @Mary Nunaley · @Barb Kratzmann · @Robert Caldas · @Mauvette Bailey · @Kathee Judd · @Kathy Judd · @Cheryl Odden · @Donna Angelo · @Patt Stanaway · @Linda Glantz · @Ann Snow · @Judy Lyle · @Michele Nilson · @Susie Kendall · @William McNeely · @Ehsan Omara · @JoAnn Amato · @Nick Nebelsky · @Briana Rodulfo · @Linda Gregory · @Jill Hart · @Deborah Karaban · @Angela Everly · @Dianne Givens · @Rhonda Talamo · @Lara Sloan · @Gaylord Foreman · @Tracy Havlik · @David Smith · @Imani Hunter · @Maureen Kilbride · @David Bachman · @Karen Castillo · @Dar Brown
📰 The Week 10 Bake-Along Recap is up.
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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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🌅 Saturday Bake-Along: Working Thread
☀️ Good morning, bakers. It's bake day. 🥖🔥 Drop in here all day. This is the working thread. 📸 Photos ❓ Questions 📈 Progress shots 😅 Panics 🏆 Wins 🥣 Anything you've got I'll be in and out of the kitchen and in and out of this thread until the last loaf is out of the oven. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 📍 Here's where I am right now: [Drop photo of your levain or current dough state] My levain is ready and I'm mixing the sourdough version with toasted black sesame this morning. If you want to follow my pace, here's roughly when I'll hit each stage: 🥣 Fermentolyse: 8:00 AM 🧂 Add salt: 9:00 AM 🔄 First coil + seeds: 9:30 AM 🔄 Second coil: 10:00 AM 🔄 Third coil: 10:30 AM 🌡️ Bulk finish: 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM ✂️ Pre-shape: 1:00 PM 🪢 Final shape: 1:30 PM ❄️ Cold retard: 1:30 PM to 5:00 PM 🔥 Bake: 6:00 PM ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ ⚠️ Your timeline may run faster or slower depending on your kitchen temperature. Don't chase mine. Watch your dough. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 📌 A Few Quick Reminders For Today 🧂 The dough is going to look like it's falling apart after the salt. That's normal. Keep working it. It'll come back together. 💧 At 80% hydration, wet hands are your friend. Floured hands work against you. Keep a bowl of water nearby. 🌻 If you're using sesame, sunflower, pepitas, or any seed besides poppy... Toast it first if you haven't already. Cool completely before folding it in. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 📖 The Recipes Are Here 🥖 Sourdough:https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/poppy-seed-sourdough-loaf 🥖 Yeasted:https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/poppy-seed-yeasted-loaf ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🧡 For The New Bakers In The Room Welcome. You picked a good week to jump in. There's no wrong answer today. Bake what excites you.Ask whatever you need to ask.And don't apologize for being new. We were all new once. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 👇 Drop in below and tell us: 🥖 What you're baking
Henry
Please Crust & Crumb Academy family let's all donate and sacrifice a cuppa latte or Espresso from Starbucks this week to support this important event to help Henry out. I would deeply appreciate you all stepping up. We will all make Henry proud of us helping him when he needed it the most. He has done so much for us and still continuing to improve our baking skills. He has gone far above and beyond for us all. I know in my heart of hearts we can all do this together. Let's make it happen please. Much appreciated! https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-us-cheer-ryan-at-ncaa-nationals
Henry
When Your Scale Dies at Midnight: A Stiff Starter Experiment
🌙 Last night around midnight I went to feed my starters for a little experiment I've been wanting to run. Stiff starter, two jars, side by side. One fed with water, one fed with pineapple juice. Same flour, same ratios, same temperature, same everything except the liquid. Except my kitchen scale had other plans. ⚖️ Scale Trouble The display started flashing "unstable." Then the numbers just started running. 12g. 47g. 3g. 89g. Whether there was anything on the scale or not. I sat there for a few minutes trying to coax it back to life, recalibrate, reset, the whole routine. Nothing. So I did what bakers did before digital scales existed. I went by volume. A quarter cup of liquid in each jar (water in one, pineapple juice in the other), and a half cup of flour each. Stirred them stiff, capped them, and went to bed. 🔬 What I Found This Morning Nine and a half hours later, both jars had risen to about the same height. Domed caps, pulled away from the sides of the glass, looking active. From the front, they looked like twins. But from the top, the story changed. 🔹 The pineapple jar (left): glossy, slack surface. Bubbles broken open. Bigger, more open holes throughout the body when you look through the side of the glass. The structure had given way. 🔹 The water jar (right): tighter, drier surface. You could still see the swirl pattern from how I mixed it. Smaller, more uniform bubbles. The structure was still holding. 🧠 Why This Happens Pineapple juice brings two things plain water doesn't: sugar and acid. Sugar gives the wild yeast a faster food source, so fermentation accelerates. Acid drops the pH and starts breaking down the gluten structure. Together they push a starter past peak faster and degrade its structure even at stiff hydration. Same rise height. Completely different internal behavior. 📌 The Takeaway Pineapple juice is a great tool for waking up a brand new starter in the first few days. The acid suppresses the bad bacteria long enough for your wild yeast to get established. But once you have a healthy, mature starter, pineapple juice isn't doing you any favors. It just accelerates fermentation and breaks down the structure you've worked to build.
When Your Scale Dies at Midnight: A Stiff Starter Experiment
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