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Sourdough (rec.food.sourdough) Discussing the hobby or craft of baking with sourdough. We are not just a recipe group, Our charter is to discuss the care, feeding, and breeding of yeasts and lactobacilli that make up sourdough cultures. |
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Posted to rec.food.sourdough
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Hi there,
I've had some excellent help from this mailing list, and have determined to repay the favor in my fashion – I had a very confusing time calculating percentages for flour, starter and water, and so wrote a small program to do it for me, and made it available online. You can try it out at this page: http://thenightkitchen.net/sourdough/ Let me know if anything seems wrong, or there's anything I can do to improve it. Happy baking! Yours, Eric |
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Eric Abrahamsen wrote:
> Hi there, > > I've had some excellent help from this mailing list, and have > determined to repay the favor in my fashion – I had a very confusing > time calculating percentages for flour, starter and water, and so > wrote a small program to do it for me, and made it available online. > You can try it out at this page: > > http://thenightkitchen.net/sourdough/ > > Let me know if anything seems wrong, or there's anything I can do to > improve it. Happy baking! > Interesting. a couple of things: functional: - salt % entered as 1.8 % are refreshed as 2 - desired dough hydration information disappears after submitting - I tend to print out pages and have them around in the kitchen when I make bread. In this case, I would have to remember and write it on the sheet. featu When I enter the values, I'd like to see the total dough weight. Or - when I make bread, have a certain amount of starter available - what do I have to use as ingredients to get a desired hydration? Or - I want x amount of dough, have a starter, what ingredients do I need to add to get the dough amount with a certain hydration?. I made a calculator long time ago and use it still occasionally: http://samartha.net/SD/ on the right side under baker's math Sam |
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Sam wrote:
> Eric Abrahamsen wrote: >> Hi there, >> >> I've had some excellent help from this mailing list, and have >> determined to repay the favor in my fashion – I had a very confusing >> time calculating percentages for flour, starter and water, and so >> wrote a small program to do it for me, and made it available online. >> You can try it out at this page: >> >> http://thenightkitchen.net/sourdough/ >> >> Let me know if anything seems wrong, or there's anything I can do to >> improve it. Happy baking! >> > Interesting. > > a couple of things: > > functional: > > - salt % entered as 1.8 % are refreshed as 2 > - desired dough hydration information disappears after submitting - I > tend to print out pages and have them around in the kitchen when I make > bread. In this case, I would have to remember and write it on the sheet. > > featu > > When I enter the values, I'd like to see the total dough weight. > Or - when I make bread, have a certain amount of starter available - > what do I have to use as ingredients to get a desired hydration? > Or - I want x amount of dough, have a starter, what ingredients do I > need to add to get the dough amount with a certain hydration?. > > I made a calculator long time ago and use it still occasionally: > > http://samartha.net/SD/ on the right side under baker's math > > Sam > I agree with your comments, but I want to make 2 1.5 lb loaves or maybe 3 or maybe only one 2 lb loaf. This makes the calculation a little tougher. John Andrews, Knoxville, Tennessee |
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John Andrews in Knoxville wrote:
> > > I agree with your comments, but I want to make 2 1.5 lb loaves > or maybe 3 or maybe only one 2 lb loaf. This makes the > calculation a little tougher Absolutely - adding, multiplying and dividing would be involved - that's far more complicated than clicking a button. S. |
Posted to rec.food.sourdough
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![]() "Sam" > wrote in message news:mailman.16.1227191859.3709.rec.food.sourdough @www.mountainbitwarrior..com... > > I agree with your comments, but I want to make 2 1.5 lb loaves > > or maybe 3 or maybe only one 2 lb loaf. This makes the > > calculation a little tougher > Absolutely - adding, multiplying and dividing would be involved - that's > far more complicated than clicking a button. I think he is trying to say that amateur bakers are not rocket scientists, or even close. So little faith! |
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Posted to rec.food.sourdough
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On Nov 20, 1:13*pm, John Andrews in Knoxville >
wrote: > Sam wrote: > > Eric Abrahamsen wrote: > >> Hi there, > > >> I've had some excellent help from this mailing list, and have > >> determined to repay the favor in my fashion – I had a very confusing > >> time calculating percentages for flour, starter and water, and so > >> wrote a small program to do it for me, and made it available online. > >> You can try it out at this page: > > >>http://thenightkitchen.net/sourdough/ > > >> Let me know if anything seems wrong, or there's anything I can do to > >> improve it. Happy baking! > > > Interesting. > > > a couple of things: > > > functional: > > > - salt % entered as 1.8 % are refreshed as 2 > > - desired dough hydration information disappears after submitting - I > > tend to print out pages and have them around in the kitchen when I make > > bread. In this case, I would have to remember and write it on the sheet.. > > > featu > > > When I enter the values, I'd like to see the total dough weight. > > Or - when I make bread, have a certain amount of starter available - > > what do I have to use as ingredients to get a desired hydration? > > Or - I want x amount of dough, have a starter, what ingredients do I > > need to add to get the dough amount with a certain hydration?. > > > I made a calculator long time ago and use it still occasionally: > > >http://samartha.net/SD/*on the right side under baker's math > > > Sam > Thanks for the tips! Should have known there would be plenty of these online already... I'll alter this to make it a bit more user-friendly, and probably add a "printable version" – that's something I'd find very useful as well. I'll repost when I've got another version. > I agree with your comments, but I want to make 2 1.5 lb loaves > or maybe 3 or maybe only one 2 lb loaf. *This makes the > calculation a little tougher. I think a calculator like this will only be useful for the initial dough mass – dividing it into loaves is pretty much the last step, and will take place after decisions about the ingredients have already been made. The only thing that might be useful here is adding metric to imperial conversion, but I'll save that for later... > > John Andrews, Knoxville, Tennessee |
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> Thanks for the tips! Should have known there would be plenty of these
> online already... I'll alter this to make it a bit more user-friendly, > and probably add a "printable version" – that's something I'd find > very useful as well. I'll repost when I've got another version. New version's up, now you can add annotations when you've got a recipe you like, and download it as a text file for record-keeping – that seemed a little more flexible than a printable screen version. http://thenightkitchen.net/sourdough/ E |
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Eric Abrahamsen wrote:
>> Thanks for the tips! Should have known there would be plenty of these >> online already... I'll alter this to make it a bit more user-friendly, >> and probably add a "printable version" – that's something I'd find >> very useful as well. I'll repost when I've got another version. > > New version's up, now you can add annotations when you've got a recipe > you like, and download it as a text file for record-keeping – that > seemed a little more flexible than a printable screen version. > http://thenightkitchen.net/sourdough/ > > E Doesn't work for me. I want to make 2 loaves of bread each weighing 12 ounces, or maybe 1.5 lbs. I want to use a hydration that will give me the proper result for say French or White or Ciabatta. That is my input. What you suggest is the output I want except for the hydration. I have a spreadsheet that does that, but it is not a straightforward calculation. You try. John Andrews, Knoxville, Tennessee |
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