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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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On 2/23/05 2:05 PM, "Dusty" > wrote:
> I have a question for those of you with home mills, do any of them permit > you to separate the flour? By that I mean; can I "dial-in" that I want > "white flour", or is it always--by definition--"whole grain"? Dusty, That would be a nice unit indeed. About the only way you can "dial it" to white, or some version approaching white, is shake it through a sieve system. Sieves, and shakers if you want to get techy, can be found at Fisher Scientifics' web site. The sieves are not expensive. The shakers can be. I believe the site searches better using the keyword: screen. > Also, is the difference between bread made with freshly milled flour really > noticeable? Or is it more a matter of: "I have a my own flour mill next to > my 6-digit precision scale...nah, ni, na, ni, nahnaaa?" A good question. For me, it's not so much a flavor issue as a freshness issue. Everything I read says, aged flour gives better dough handling characteristics. But the germ oils oxidize quickly. So it becomes a tradeoff: extensible dough vs. potentially rancid oils. > As most of you know, I eschew the use of most of today's modern > technological advances in my baking. But I'm looking at this issue from a > health and nutrition point of view. I think there's a gain to be made > there...but I'm not sure if it's worth it. I like whole wheat bread, but > I'm not a fan of 100% WW--tends to be too dense for my liking. Well, it is certainly an acquired taste. I like to cut the whole wheat with spelt which is why whenever a noobie wants a recipe to practice on I recommend Kenneth's venerable Poilane formulation. Lots of flavor, modest density. > As an aside, does anybody know of someplace in the bay area (left coast, > USA) where I might be able to purchase some freshly milled flour for > testing, before I spring for a mill? I Googled but didn't come up with > anything useful... > Can't help you there. But if you own a KitchenAid mixer, Ebay usually has a number of resellers carrying the grain mill attachment. It's usually $85. It works well and if you looking for health benefits, it does a fine job cracking grain for hot cereals. If you like fresh cornbread, it is indispensable. Will |
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