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Baking (rec.food.baking) For bakers, would-be bakers, and fans and consumers of breads, pastries, cakes, pies, cookies, crackers, bagels, and other items commonly found in a bakery. Includes all methods of preparation, both conventional and not. |
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Posted to rec.food.cooking,rec.food.baking,rec.food.sourdough
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![]() TG wrote: > atty wrote: > ...> > > indeed the no-knead method seems to fit very well with the setup at > > ancient egyptian bakeries discovered around the pyramids - and famously > > recreated by Ed Wood > > > > http://oi.uchicago.edu/OI/AR/93-94/93-94_Giza.html > > > > laters > > andy forbes > > Except there's paintings and statues of Egyptians kneading bread. I think you are probably right in particular http://www.insecula.com/us/oeuvre/ph...000027177.html the two women kneeling at the back do indeed look to be kneading though alternately can be interpreted as grinding as indeed is attributed at http://www.insecula.com/us/oeuvre/O0004972.html "In the bakkery, men crush the grain with pestles, after which it is ground to flour by two women. Men mix dough in tall tubs, and it is shaped into loaves and cakes by others. The four black ovens are each tended by a man with a poker." certainly clearly a man is making up into small loaves whcih probably NYT dough is too wet for. (interesting that brewery and bakery are portrayed as neighbours so we can assume this bakery was using the same yeast culture or barm? as the brewery) however why imagine that anceint Egyptians only had one method of baking? Ed Wood's Giza experiment involved recreating bakery shops found on the plain of Giza around the Pyramids. These were both Old Kingdom sites and much bigger than the bakery shop illustrated by the model above. I quote from the report " Our ancient bakeries were composed of low stone rubble and Nile clay walls with a marl floor in rooms measuring about five and a quarter meters (north to south) by two and a half meters (east to west). In both rooms we found a cache of bell-shaped ceramic pots, long recognized as bread molds in Egyptian archaeology and labeled with the name bedja in the Old Kingdom tomb scenes. The ancient Egyptians began to use bread molds of this type just about the time that the pharaonic state emerged around 2900 b.c. They continued to use them until near the end of the Old Kingdom, about 2200 b.c. While some have suggested that pot-baked bread was for special occasions - festivals, temple offerings, etc. - the Old Kingdom bread mold has been found as a major component of ceramic corpora in sites of all kinds from Egypt's traditional southern border at Elephantine to First Dynasty outposts in southern Palestine. Egyptians in many different settings desired and produced their pot baked bread. Old Kingdom tomb scenes show the pots placed rim to rim as a kind of portable oven for baking in open pits. Our bedja pots were unusually large, as much as thirty-five centimeters in diameter and up to thirty-five centimeters in depth. Put together in the manner of the tomb scenes they would create an interior space seventy centimeters in height. If the dough would swell to fill the entire space, this would produce a huge loaf of bread. Indeed, certain tombs scenes show offering bearers carrying huge conical bread loaves of the shape that would be produced by our pots. As I reported previously, we seem to have found all the essential tools required for the production processes depicted by Old Kingdom scenes and figurines: Both bakeries originally had three large ceramic vats in the northwestern corner, presumably for mixing dough. We further presume that a fireplace in the form of an open platform in the opposite southeastern corner was for stack heating the pots, a preliminary step often illustrated in figurines and wall art. Rows of holes at the bottom of a shallow trench along the eastern wall must have been for holding the dough-filled pots that were covered by another pot placed upside down. Hot coals and embers in the trench provided the heat that baked the bread." http://oi.uchicago.edu/OI/PROJ/GIZ/N...ll92_fig8.html most siginficantly here there deosn't appear to me to be any suitably sized work surface to knead or rest the quantity of bread this site obviously produced (this is just one chamber which is duplicated over a 300 metre site) a bread mould pot http://oi.uchicago.edu/OI/PROJ/GIZ/N...ll92_fig7.html tell me this doesn't pretty closely match the NYT no knead method? (at least to the point where anceient egyptians bake by making a pyrmamid of these twinned pots in a pit and setting a bonfire around this) Looks like possibly twin pot mould arrangement was used for both proofing and baking. http://oi.uchicago.edu/OI/PROJ/GIZ/N...ll92_fig9.html here you can see that the dough is apparently so wet that it is being poured from smaller pots into the moulds as a liquid, almost more of a batter!? what is actually more intersting to me is how much the move away from this style of wet dough to a stiffer dough was dictated by the move away in Europe from communal baking (as practised both in France and England) where indivdual households make their own dough and then bake in a communal oven to professional baking and then mechanization. Pre mechanization in European bakeris there is much mention of dough being made in large troughs and some indication of being mixed by a paddle, possibly with its bottom attached to the bottom of trough again indicating a very wet dough. Certainly a stiffer dough in troughs of the size portrayed in various illustrations at http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online...fova1/hfr4.htm would be impossible to imagine one man kneading or even mixing properly in the modern sense. However the wetter the dough probably the more difficult to move around and divide into equal portion loaves once out of dough trough. Maybe simply mechanization enabled the introduction of stiffer doughs that could at once be kneaded mecahnically (speeding up proofing) and were then more convenient for subsquent handling in a bakeshop . Of course one also has to factor in the introduction, particularly in the UK of harder wheats from the US, Canada and Australia. laters andy forbes |
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