Mike G wrote:It's some kind of dark, dense, bitter rye, I forget exactly what he said.
MAG wrote:But back to the original point, what is good bread: flour, salt, yeast. And yes time, but very little active time. So, yeah, I don't know what to say about $8.00 a loaf.
MAG wrote:But back to the original point, what is good bread: flour, salt, yeast. And yes time, but very little active time.
Sounds corny, I know, but think about this when you sample artisan bread.
A few years ago, there was a side-by-side bread tasting conducted. The clear winner was not available commercially, rather it was MAG who makes her own bread from a starter she's been nurturing for at least 10 years now. Heck, the starter is significantly older than her son.
his sense of the appropriate temperature ranges, rest times, etc. was so precise and narrow
MAG wrote:Boy, I hadn't gone through this thread before I was complaining about $7 The jist of it is, the problem with the organic movement is that it equates the "organic" movement with good taste and with decency, without acknowleging that many people with good taste cannot afford organic products. I guess the best quote I can find is in the last 2 paragraphs.
"With his gastronomic tests, Brillat-Savarin sought to find others like himself, of whatever economic status, who truly enjoyed food. It's easy to do the same today, but the method isn't to assume that everyone at Whole Foods at Whole Foods is wise and everyone at the Western Beef benighted.
Instead, look at their carts. Some shop at Western Beef for nothing more than diet cola and frozen bagels; some at Whole Foods for premade sushi and overdesigned bottles of green tea. These people have much in common. So too, do the professorial types poring over the sweet corn and dewey blueberries at the greenmarket and the Honduran family at the discount grocery, piling their cart high with rice and dried beans and canned tomatoes and all the other stuff you need to make something out of nothing."
Mike G wrote:Bill, do you get Edward Behr's The Art of Eating? I ask because an issue or two back there was a review of several bread books by some guy who clearly knew his stuff and then some... but he made the process of making bread sound basically impossible,
Bill/SFNM wrote:Mike G wrote:Bill, do you get Edward Behr's The Art of Eating? I ask because an issue or two back there was a review of several bread books by some guy who clearly knew his stuff and then some... but he made the process of making bread sound basically impossible,
No, Mike I haven't seen it, but the process of making bread couldn't be simpler. Cultures all over the world have been doing it for thousands of years so it isn't exactly rocket science. Like BBQ, a newbie can create a result better than most commercial products. But from that point, there is no limit in terms of improvements. As with all cooking, with practice there is a point where you gain enough experience that you can disconnect from the rigidity of recipes and proceed more and more on your own. Sounds like that author had long surpassed that point.
MAG wrote:"The "Crust" bread that I tried from Bleeding Heart was a little too dense for my taste, and I do like a chewy bread. "
Mike G wrote: . . . the rich, gooey-buttery-creamy cheese on the bread... and the result was more than the sum of its parts. This one, at least, of Crust's breads needs something on it.
Mike G wrote:and a third washed rind cheese, the one which stank up my hotel room from inside the fridge. I gave that to G Wiv, he'll have to say how that was.
G Wiv wrote:Mike G wrote:and a third washed rind cheese, the one which stank up my hotel room from inside the fridge. I gave that to G Wiv, he'll have to say how that was.
Mike,
As Trixie-Pea surmised, it's Red Hawk, one of my all time favorite cheeses. Thanks!
I will say though that this bad boy is one of the most exasperatingly stinky cheeses that has ever graced my refrigerator. I mean really over the top, can't open the refrigerator door, get out the WWII gas mask my dad used to use for making horseradish, stinky.
Last night, around 3am, I hear noises downstairs, slight banging and a coughing sound. I go on full-alert, get the 9-iron and a flashlight, creep down the stairs.....noises coming from the kitchen.....quietly approach, Bang the refrigerator jumps straight up 7-8 inches, makes a weak sputtering sound, and the door starts to puff out.
What the hell, I get dropped in a Wes Craven movie? Nope, just the fridge trying to expel the Red Hawk before it dies of asphyxiation.![]()
Speaking of stinky cheese, maybe I should have put this post in the What's That Smell thread.
Enjoy,
Gary