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#the beginning | mother/levain
mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Note
Does this place have computers or TVs that function? Anything that you all can watch series or play games?
“Not here, in the nest. We, ah.. don’t really have any working electronics anymore.” Everything that hasn’t broken has long since run out of power.
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easyfoodnetwork · 4 years
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Everyone’s Making Sourdough Now — Here’s How to Get Started
Tumblr media
Stack of sourdough photo by Cavan Images/Getty; hand with magnifying glass photo by Bahrudin Yusoff/EyeEm/Getty
If you want to get into making sourdough bread, you need a reliable recipe, a starter, and some basic tools.
Over the past two weeks, as millions of Americans started working from home and sheltering in place to slow the spread of COVID-19 across the country, King Arthur Flour’s website saw its highest traffic since the day before Thanksgiving. Bill Tine, King Arthur’s VP of marketing, told Eater’s Meghan McCarron that usually the site’s top post is a recipe for easy cheesecake. But since the pandemic hit, millions of people, homebound and bored, have flooded King Arthur’s servers in search of recipes for bread — more specifically, sourdough bread, in all of its glorious forms.
To those who are taking this quarantined time to get into baking bread, can I just say: welcome.
I started baking bread regularly at home a few years ago and have learned a few things along the way, namely that you need very little to make a loaf of bread that’ll feed many and please all. A mixture of flour, salt, water, and wild yeast will result in a delicious loaf, no matter how you do it, and while the process may feel intimidating at first, just remember: Humans have been doing this very thing for millennia. We just didn’t always have Instagram to make bread-making appear harder — and the resulting loaves more perfect — than it need be.
Begin with a good recipe
With that said, there is no shortage of sourdough recipes from which to choose: The best online recipes are Claire Saffitz’s guide for the New York Times, Sarah Owens’s table loaf recipe on Food52, and King Arthur’s artisan loaf recipe. If you’re interested in delving deeper into sourdough, books on the subject abound. For a comprehensive, all-encompassing guide, I recommend Owens’s Sourdough: Recipes for Rustic Fermented Breads, Sweets, Savories, and More, and if you’re looking for a more hearty, whole-wheat-leaning loaf, Parisian sourdough priestess Apollonia Poilâne’s Poilâne: The Secrets of the World-Famous Bread Bakery is a solid go-to. I’ve written up my own bread recipe here (an amalgam of a few recipes I’ve used over time) and made a basic, instructional video that leads you through the process at this link.
Make your starter
Guides in hand, the first thing that you’re going to need to make bread is a sourdough starter. A starter — also known as a levain, a mother, or a pre-ferment — is a lively mixture of flour and water combined with wild yeast and good bacteria captured from the air. It’s the ingredient that enables your sourdough bread to rise and what gives it its signature tangy flavor.
If you don’t have a starter right now, don’t worry. This King Arthur Flour recipe will teach you how to make your own at home, and though the slow process means you won’t be able to make bread right away (you’re waiting for your starter to come alive — you’ll start to see some activity after three days), you’ll get bragging rights for having made yours from scratch. Alternatively, Cook’s Illustrated’s Andrew Janjigian is teaching people how to make their own #quarantinystarter through his newsletter, and baker Lexie Smith has enlisted volunteers through her site Bread on Earth to send dried sourdough culture to interested parties around the world. You’ve got options!
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Dayna Evans (@hidayna) on Sep 22, 2018 at 9:41am PDT
Tools you need to get bread baking
If you’re hoping to utilize this time of social distancing to learn this new skill in the absence of, say, taking up water skiing or bocce, there are a few tools you can invest in to make the most of your bread-making process.
A kitchen scale Most every baker will encourage you to invest in a kitchen scale, as nearly every bread recipe is written out in weight rather than volume. Different flours have different weights by volume and with a scale, you can get more precise measurements on smaller quantities of your ingredients, like salt and starter. I recommend the My Weigh KD-8000 scale, though any scale, preferably digital, should do.
A bench scraper I am borderline obsessed with my bench scraper. As the headline of this 2017 Bon Appétit story proclaimed, “Once You Have a Bench Scraper, You’ll Never Be Able to Live Without One.” It is sadly true. I sometimes consider tucking mine in at night. A bench scraper, when you hold it in your dominant hand while shaping dough, gives you more leverage and command than if you were only working with your hands. Even when I don’t end up using it to shape my bread, it’s a magical tool for scraping up bits of dried dough from my countertop, about 10,000 times more effective than a wet cloth. I love this one from King Arthur Flour — it has just the right heft.
A flexible razor blade I’d say the third most important tool to bake a successful loaf of sourdough is a good pack of flexible household razor blades — they’re about $10 for 100 of them. You’ll use one of these to score the top of your loaf right before it bakes, and you want to have at least a few extra in your kitchen drawer to swap in as the previous blade starts to dull. Typically, bakers will use a tool for scoring called a lame, which is a razor blade attached to a handle. It makes the process of scoring slightly more ergonomic and precise, but I’ve found a simple razor blade alone works, too, especially if you’re not looking to get too decorative or detailed with it.
A banneton
Some at-home bakers and most, if not all, commercial bakers own wicker baskets called bannetons (otherwise known as brotforms or proofing baskets). While they are not necessary, they do help bread keep its shape during the proofing, or fermenting/rising, stage so it’s not too slack and loose when you’re ready to put it in the oven. I find bannetons to be useful when I’m working with wetter doughs, as they wick away some of the surface moisture and encourage the dough to keep its shape. Bannetons also come in a variety of sizes, though ovals and rounds are the most common. In the absence of a banneton, a large bowl with a floured tea towel is a perfectly acceptable alternative for when your dough is rising, whether overnight or over a few hours.
A Dutch oven When it’s time to bake your bread, at-home bakers enlist Dutch ovens with lids to create the steamy environment necessary to give their loaves a crusty, crunchy exterior. This Lodge version is $45 and is perfectly serviceable for this purpose, though you can use most any heavy cast-iron or enamel pot, as long as it has a lid. (I bought my used Le Creuset from a reseller on Etsy, where they’re much cheaper and just as good.) If you’re not in the market for a new pot, there are alternative methods: I’ve used a baking sheet topped with a pasta pot as a jury-rigged solution. Just make sure that no matter what you use, you preheat your oven to 500 degrees at least 45 minutes before baking, preferably with your pot in it. Don’t have a lidded pot but you do have a loaf pan? I’ve put loaves of sourdough in this King Arthur 9-by-5 loaf pan plenty of times. Just tent the pan loosely with tin foil when you do, removing the foil 25 or so minutes into the baking.
What you don’t need
One thing you do not need is a dough whisk. Don’t bother!
Further Reading
If you want to understand more about the health benefits of sourdough bread, Vanessa Kimbell’s Sourdough School: The Ground-Breaking Guide to Making Gut-Friendly Bread gives great background. And for using your sourdough starter in many non-bread baked goods like banana bread and rye brownies (do it), Michelle Eshkeri’s Modern Sourdough: Sweet and Savoury Recipes from Margot Bakery is a fun resource. (One technical note: Shipping is likely delayed on these and the above titles through Amazon, so try your local independent bookstore online. Many are still fulfilling orders through their warehouses. In a pinch, I’ve downloaded one or two of these on my Kindle.)
All of these things — or, if you prefer, almost none of them, save for a sourdough starter — should help you hit the ground running in the sourdough bread department. If you want even more tips, Bread on Earth and the Fresh Loaf are good resources for any and all questions. And remember: While sourdough is a type of science, it’s certainly not rocket science. It should be fun and weird and cool and — above all — a good way to pass the time. I believe in you.
Dayna Evans is a Paris-based writer with a bread-baking newsletter you can subscribe to here.
Vox Media has affiliate partnerships. These do not influence editorial content, though Vox Media may earn commissions for products purchased via affiliate links. For more information, see our ethics policy.
from Eater - All https://ift.tt/2ylxcwT https://ift.tt/39t1E58
Tumblr media
Stack of sourdough photo by Cavan Images/Getty; hand with magnifying glass photo by Bahrudin Yusoff/EyeEm/Getty
If you want to get into making sourdough bread, you need a reliable recipe, a starter, and some basic tools.
Over the past two weeks, as millions of Americans started working from home and sheltering in place to slow the spread of COVID-19 across the country, King Arthur Flour’s website saw its highest traffic since the day before Thanksgiving. Bill Tine, King Arthur’s VP of marketing, told Eater’s Meghan McCarron that usually the site’s top post is a recipe for easy cheesecake. But since the pandemic hit, millions of people, homebound and bored, have flooded King Arthur’s servers in search of recipes for bread — more specifically, sourdough bread, in all of its glorious forms.
To those who are taking this quarantined time to get into baking bread, can I just say: welcome.
I started baking bread regularly at home a few years ago and have learned a few things along the way, namely that you need very little to make a loaf of bread that’ll feed many and please all. A mixture of flour, salt, water, and wild yeast will result in a delicious loaf, no matter how you do it, and while the process may feel intimidating at first, just remember: Humans have been doing this very thing for millennia. We just didn’t always have Instagram to make bread-making appear harder — and the resulting loaves more perfect — than it need be.
Begin with a good recipe
With that said, there is no shortage of sourdough recipes from which to choose: The best online recipes are Claire Saffitz’s guide for the New York Times, Sarah Owens’s table loaf recipe on Food52, and King Arthur’s artisan loaf recipe. If you’re interested in delving deeper into sourdough, books on the subject abound. For a comprehensive, all-encompassing guide, I recommend Owens’s Sourdough: Recipes for Rustic Fermented Breads, Sweets, Savories, and More, and if you’re looking for a more hearty, whole-wheat-leaning loaf, Parisian sourdough priestess Apollonia Poilâne’s Poilâne: The Secrets of the World-Famous Bread Bakery is a solid go-to. I’ve written up my own bread recipe here (an amalgam of a few recipes I’ve used over time) and made a basic, instructional video that leads you through the process at this link.
Make your starter
Guides in hand, the first thing that you’re going to need to make bread is a sourdough starter. A starter — also known as a levain, a mother, or a pre-ferment — is a lively mixture of flour and water combined with wild yeast and good bacteria captured from the air. It’s the ingredient that enables your sourdough bread to rise and what gives it its signature tangy flavor.
If you don’t have a starter right now, don’t worry. This King Arthur Flour recipe will teach you how to make your own at home, and though the slow process means you won’t be able to make bread right away (you’re waiting for your starter to come alive — you’ll start to see some activity after three days), you’ll get bragging rights for having made yours from scratch. Alternatively, Cook’s Illustrated’s Andrew Janjigian is teaching people how to make their own #quarantinystarter through his newsletter, and baker Lexie Smith has enlisted volunteers through her site Bread on Earth to send dried sourdough culture to interested parties around the world. You’ve got options!
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Dayna Evans (@hidayna) on Sep 22, 2018 at 9:41am PDT
Tools you need to get bread baking
If you’re hoping to utilize this time of social distancing to learn this new skill in the absence of, say, taking up water skiing or bocce, there are a few tools you can invest in to make the most of your bread-making process.
A kitchen scale Most every baker will encourage you to invest in a kitchen scale, as nearly every bread recipe is written out in weight rather than volume. Different flours have different weights by volume and with a scale, you can get more precise measurements on smaller quantities of your ingredients, like salt and starter. I recommend the My Weigh KD-8000 scale, though any scale, preferably digital, should do.
A bench scraper I am borderline obsessed with my bench scraper. As the headline of this 2017 Bon Appétit story proclaimed, “Once You Have a Bench Scraper, You’ll Never Be Able to Live Without One.” It is sadly true. I sometimes consider tucking mine in at night. A bench scraper, when you hold it in your dominant hand while shaping dough, gives you more leverage and command than if you were only working with your hands. Even when I don’t end up using it to shape my bread, it’s a magical tool for scraping up bits of dried dough from my countertop, about 10,000 times more effective than a wet cloth. I love this one from King Arthur Flour — it has just the right heft.
A flexible razor blade I’d say the third most important tool to bake a successful loaf of sourdough is a good pack of flexible household razor blades — they’re about $10 for 100 of them. You’ll use one of these to score the top of your loaf right before it bakes, and you want to have at least a few extra in your kitchen drawer to swap in as the previous blade starts to dull. Typically, bakers will use a tool for scoring called a lame, which is a razor blade attached to a handle. It makes the process of scoring slightly more ergonomic and precise, but I’ve found a simple razor blade alone works, too, especially if you’re not looking to get too decorative or detailed with it.
A banneton
Some at-home bakers and most, if not all, commercial bakers own wicker baskets called bannetons (otherwise known as brotforms or proofing baskets). While they are not necessary, they do help bread keep its shape during the proofing, or fermenting/rising, stage so it’s not too slack and loose when you’re ready to put it in the oven. I find bannetons to be useful when I’m working with wetter doughs, as they wick away some of the surface moisture and encourage the dough to keep its shape. Bannetons also come in a variety of sizes, though ovals and rounds are the most common. In the absence of a banneton, a large bowl with a floured tea towel is a perfectly acceptable alternative for when your dough is rising, whether overnight or over a few hours.
A Dutch oven When it’s time to bake your bread, at-home bakers enlist Dutch ovens with lids to create the steamy environment necessary to give their loaves a crusty, crunchy exterior. This Lodge version is $45 and is perfectly serviceable for this purpose, though you can use most any heavy cast-iron or enamel pot, as long as it has a lid. (I bought my used Le Creuset from a reseller on Etsy, where they’re much cheaper and just as good.) If you’re not in the market for a new pot, there are alternative methods: I’ve used a baking sheet topped with a pasta pot as a jury-rigged solution. Just make sure that no matter what you use, you preheat your oven to 500 degrees at least 45 minutes before baking, preferably with your pot in it. Don’t have a lidded pot but you do have a loaf pan? I’ve put loaves of sourdough in this King Arthur 9-by-5 loaf pan plenty of times. Just tent the pan loosely with tin foil when you do, removing the foil 25 or so minutes into the baking.
What you don’t need
One thing you do not need is a dough whisk. Don’t bother!
Further Reading
If you want to understand more about the health benefits of sourdough bread, Vanessa Kimbell’s Sourdough School: The Ground-Breaking Guide to Making Gut-Friendly Bread gives great background. And for using your sourdough starter in many non-bread baked goods like banana bread and rye brownies (do it), Michelle Eshkeri’s Modern Sourdough: Sweet and Savoury Recipes from Margot Bakery is a fun resource. (One technical note: Shipping is likely delayed on these and the above titles through Amazon, so try your local independent bookstore online. Many are still fulfilling orders through their warehouses. In a pinch, I’ve downloaded one or two of these on my Kindle.)
All of these things — or, if you prefer, almost none of them, save for a sourdough starter — should help you hit the ground running in the sourdough bread department. If you want even more tips, Bread on Earth and the Fresh Loaf are good resources for any and all questions. And remember: While sourdough is a type of science, it’s certainly not rocket science. It should be fun and weird and cool and — above all — a good way to pass the time. I believe in you.
Dayna Evans is a Paris-based writer with a bread-baking newsletter you can subscribe to here.
Vox Media has affiliate partnerships. These do not influence editorial content, though Vox Media may earn commissions for products purchased via affiliate links. For more information, see our ethics policy.
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Note
Have any of you ever seen some kind of NPC or scary creature out of their own game?
“…huh? What.. no, we haven’t-a seen anything like that.” Was… that a thing that could happen? Fictional characters coming to life? Sounds.. interesting..
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Note
Sitting behind Mother, holding— no, gripping his spear, someone was not happy about these new intruders. The only reason he was sitting still was because he was supposed to be resting. "... Mother, are you sure having all these outsiders inside are safe?"
((—Rye))
She hums. “If-a they become a problem we can-a handle it, piccolo.” And, well.. she didn’t know how to keep them out, so it was kind of out of her hands.. But he doesn’t voice that thought.
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Note
Of course! ^^ [bouncing Malt lightly. Enrichment for the baby.] Soooo what's the deal with the magic rock?
Enrichment for him!! So hapys..
“The-a… you mean-a the Star?” They must- not exactly a lot of ‘magic rocks’ around.. “It.. fell one day. It’s some-a sort of meteor that.. warps the world around it. Changes things. And.. people.” She wasn’t.. always like this..
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Note
I don't, but others might. We're not all so friendly, so be wary. Anyways awwwwh.... look! [Holding Malt up to show Mother. The littlest ever.]
“Ahh.. thank you for-a the warning, piccolo.” If anyone dared to hurt her children… they would tear them apart.
Malt beeps at Mother. Mama look! New friend!! For to holdings him!!!
It coos at the little one, patting his tiny lil head. “Si, he’s-a very friendly~” You’re-a so good at making friends, piccolo! Imma so proud~
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Note
Oh, hello mother! How are the children doing?
“Hello, dear. We’re-a doing well! No casualties for a while-a, enough food.. and new guests to talk to~” He smiles at you.
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Note
Awwwwwwwh.... [PATTING MALT SO GENTOL LITTLEST GUY EVER.]
Oh!! I'm an anon! Uhhh easiest way to conceptualize it is we can appear in universes Muns wanna show off! Ish, anyways. Exact lore is complicated and changes, but that's my understanding. It's nice to meet you! ^^
It is purring!! Little man!!! Curling around your hand and nuzzling you..
“I see..” That was.. interesting. “If you mean no harm to us, my little ones will leave you alone-a.” She smiles fondly at Malt. Her littlest Named one, so good at making friends..
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
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MALLLT MY BELOVED!!!! HIII!! Oh and hi Levain!!!! ^^
Malt blurbles at them. Hellowe weird grey thing!! So niceys to him :]
…it is nibbling lightly on your fingers.
Mother blinks at them. Ah.. who was this.. creature? They seemed nice, but.. “How did you.. get here, dear? None of-a my little ones saw you…”
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Text
Promo
Mother sits, in his room, in his Nest, the thoughts and emotions of his children thrumming through his mind - a constant, comforting reassurance.
Many of his little ones move through the tunnels of their home, safe under layers of tile and dirt and stone. Others, she can feel, scavenge the world above, a necessary danger to keep them all alive. She mourns for the ones she know she will lose. She hopes they all come back alive.
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Text
Muse Info
Mother (preferred)/Levain (Peppino)
Age: 40s
Height: 5’11 (mound), 9’8 (humanoid)
Pronouns: Yes
Appearance: A massive humanoid with black hair and eyes. Their fingers are partly fused together, their face appearing melted like wax in the sun. Its mouth is invisible when closed. He has dozens of sharp teeth, arranged in circular rows that line his throat all the way down to his stomach. Her skin is doughy in texture and is easily molded into different shapes, and leaves a slight residue if touched. In more humid weather his skin becomes sticky like too-soft dough. Usually she doesn’t bother with legs, settling into a pile of doughy flesh. Sometimes with arms, if she needs them.
Biga (Fake)
Age: 6 1/2
Height: 6’10
Pronouns: All
Appearance: A lanky clone with a melted appearance.
Malt
Age: 1 1/2
Height: 1’0
Pronouns: He/they/it
Appearance: A small clone with brown ‘clothes’.
Sprout
Age: 3
Height: 1’4
Pronouns: He/they/it
Appearance: A small clone with a greenish tint and a grass-green ‘shirt’.
Flour
Age: 6
Height: 3’3
Pronouns: All
Appearance: A large-ish clone with a purple ‘shirt’ and gray ‘clothes’.
Sour
Age: 6
Height: 3’3
Pronouns: All
Appearance: A large-ish clone with a purple ‘shirt’ and black ‘clothes’.
Yeast
Age: 5 1/2
Height: 5’0
Pronouns: They/it
Appearance: A large clone with an off-white ‘shirt’ and dark brown ‘clothes’.
Brew
Age: 5 3/4
Height: 5’3
Pronouns: He/they/it
Appearance: A large clone with a brown ‘shirt’ and dark brown ‘clothes’.
Soda
Age: 5
Height: 3’11
Pronouns: She/they/it
Appearance: A decently large clone with a reddish-brown ‘shirt’ with lighter speckled spots and darker orange-brown ‘clothes’.
Pumpernickel
Age: 5
Height: 4’11
Pronouns: All
Appearance: A large, round clone with an orange-brown ‘shirt’ and mid-brown ‘clothes’.
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Note
Don't worry, they won't touch me! Thanks, mama! ^^ [poofs away- presumably, to the crater.]
-Starry-Eyed Anon
Siiigh. Well, there they go.. Hopefully they would be ok..
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Note
*pats everyone* :]
Mother chuckles with a smile. “Grazie, piccolo~”
Malt and Sprout are chirbling!! Cheeping at you!!! The little snugglers,,,
Flour and Sour stare, unblinking… and then their faces slowly stretch into a too-wide smile. “Thank you” “friend”
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Note
What would you do if..someone were to be afraid of something or of you?
“Everyone is afraid of something. But, me..” She looks down, at…
His voice softens. “…many people are-a scared of me.” It.. he understands, really. He does..
Doesn’t make it feel any better, though.
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Note
C'mon, I'm an adult! Legally! I can go touch the star, it won't even dooooo anythingggggg probably.
He sighs. “Fine. It’s a few miles to the east, in a big crater. Don’t-a blame me when something goes wrong. And-a watch out for the mutated animals! They can be very dangerous.”
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mother-and-her-sons · 9 months
Note
This idiot really wants to go see the star, huh? Rye thinks, staring at the intru— No. Outsider. His grip on his spear loosens ever so slightly as he rests against mother. I say let them. It's their loss, anyways.
I suppose.. if they really want to… I would hate to be responsible for it though.. But, well, if they insist..
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