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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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I picked up a banneton when I first started baking, but soon abandoned it for a bowl with a well
oiled and floured old cloth napkin inside. I like the shape better, and you can't beat the price .... :-) -- Jeff |
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![]() Jeff Miller wrote: > I picked up a banneton when I first started baking, but soon abandoned it for a bowl with a well > oiled and floured old cloth napkin inside. I like the shape better, and you can't beat the price .... > > :-) > > -- > Jeff I bought willow with liners from TMB baking a few years back. So I cannot speak to plastic (though I still like the prices and think it's OK if they throw the texture in for free <g>). Samartha's plastic looks better to me, but then you have to deal with Euros and ship across the ocean. If I were to do it again though I think I'd give these really cheapo baskets (see link) a try. A lined basket/banneton really gives a fine crust, one that slashes well and holds shape. TMB has a rather nice lame too. http://www.tmbbaking.com/supplies.html#baskets Rice, to Huchindi's point, works the best by far (for me). I buy a pound of white rice about once year and mill some whenever I want to clear/clean the mill from other stuff. I've never had dough stick using rice flour, even wet dough releases pretty well. |
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There are very few, if any, amateur bakers who succeed to
master the fancy footwork that goes with a masterful lame coup. For any that might, use of of a cheap substitute would be like conducting a symphony with a fly swatter. -- Dicky |
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![]() "Dick Adams" > wrote in message news:%b1Eg.60304$u05.43008@trnddc01... For any that might, use of of a cheap substitute would be like conducting a symphony with a fly swatter. -- Dicky And all this time I thought I got the idea for these great cheapo lames from something you wrote, but it must have been somebody else. Anyways, whoever I got it from, the chopstick weaved through the two ends of the slot in a double edged razor blade is about the nicest little trick for a curved lame I have seen. No super glue or sticky popcicle sticks to mess with either. Russ Hutch |
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I have one of those steel lames from TMB and it's nice. But I've heard
a coffee stirring stick that you see everywhere is about the same width so may not require any modification to slide into the double edged razor. Eric Jeff Miller wrote: > -- > Jeff Miller > Davies Murphy Group > 781-418-2429 (w) > 617-767-7537 (c) > 200 Wheeler Road > Burlington, MA 01803 > > -----Original Message----- > From: > ] On Behalf Of Will > Sent: Sunday, August 13, 2006 10:11 PM > To: > Subject: banneton in fridge???? > > > Will wrote: > > TMB has a rather nice lame too. > > I've become pretty cheap when it comes to my lame as well. I did buy a lame > early on from the Baker's Catalogue, but realized pretty quick that $10 was > awfully steep for a stick and a razor blade. So I started saving my > daughter's popsicle sticks (after she'd eaten the popsicle, natch) and > bought 100 double edged razors for about $10(includes shipping -- I couldn't > find them at my local drug store). > > A little super glue from the junk drawer in our kitchen, and I've got about > 100 lames. Cheap, cheap, cheap. > > -- > Jeff |
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Breadtopia wrote:
> I have one of those steel lames from TMB and it's nice. But I've heard > a coffee stirring stick that you see everywhere is about the same width > so may not require any modification to slide into the double edged > razor. > > Eric > > > Jeff Miller wrote: > > -- > > Jeff Miller > > Davies Murphy Group > > 781-418-2429 (w) > > 617-767-7537 (c) > > 200 Wheeler Road > > Burlington, MA 01803 > > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: > > ] On Behalf Of Will > > Sent: Sunday, August 13, 2006 10:11 PM > > To: > > Subject: banneton in fridge???? > > > > > > Will wrote: > > > TMB has a rather nice lame too. > > > > I've become pretty cheap when it comes to my lame as well. I did buy a lame > > early on from the Baker's Catalogue, but realized pretty quick that $10 was > > awfully steep for a stick and a razor blade. So I started saving my > > daughter's popsicle sticks (after she'd eaten the popsicle, natch) and > > bought 100 double edged razors for about $10(includes shipping -- I couldn't > > find them at my local drug store). > > > > A little super glue from the junk drawer in our kitchen, and I've got about > > 100 lames. Cheap, cheap, cheap. > > > > -- > > Jeff I was unable to fit a chopstick into a razor blade, and the coffee stirrers I found were too flimsy. I use a bamboo skewer, as would be used for shish kebab, and it fits into my standard issue double-edged razor just fine. Somebody needs to make a nice cheap lame that fits standard razor blades. |
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![]() "cumin" > wrote in message ups.com... > > I was unable to fit a chopstick into a razor blade, and the coffee > stirrers I found were too flimsy. I use a bamboo skewer, as would be > used for shish kebab, and it fits into my standard issue double-edged > razor just fine. Somebody needs to make a nice cheap lame that fits > standard razor blades. > Probably depends on what chinese resteraunt you get your chopsticks from ![]() The bamboo skewer is a great idea too. Russ Hutch |
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cumin wrote:
> Somebody needs to make a nice cheap lame that fits > standard razor blades. > You're forgetting the marketting strategy behind those handy razor blades in the first place! Still alive and doing well, here in the 21st century, as printers and ink cartridges... IF someone were to come up with that nice, cheap lame, it would *have* to use a non-standard blade! Dave |
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![]() > I was unable to fit a chopstick into a razor blade, and the coffee > stirrers I found were too flimsy. I use a bamboo skewer, as would be > used for shish kebab, and it fits into my standard issue double-edged > razor just fine. Somebody needs to make a nice cheap lame that fits > standard razor blades. Hi I don't slash my bread these days, I can't be bothered to be really honest. : -) I don't get any splitting, or blow out as some say. Anyway, a scalpel is cheap and the blades cheaper, you can get a whole host of different shaped blades to fit. But I have to admit that a good sharp knife works just as well if not better than a scalpel fresh out of the packet. TG |
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Sorry to be so dense but I did do a search of archives and still don't
know what TMB stands for... Help :-) nancy >> Will wrote: >> > TMB has a rather nice lame too. |
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On Tue, 15 Aug 2006 22:48:29 GMT, nancy
> wrote: > >>> Will wrote: >>> > TMB has a rather nice lame too. >Sorry to be so dense but I did do a search of archives and still don't >know what TMB stands for... Help :-) nancy > Hi Nancy, It is a company... Check: http://www.tmbbaking.com/ All the best, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
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"Jeff Miller" > wrote in message
news:mailman.1.1155512027.25523.rec.food.sourdough @mail.otherwhen.com... >I picked up a banneton when I first started baking, but soon >abandoned it for a bowl with a well > oiled and floured old cloth napkin inside. I like the shape > better, and you can't beat the price .... Yep. Same here. Got several of those ~$30 bannetons, cuz folks made it sound like they were absolutely indispensable for making bread. I soon found out different and haven't used 'em for years. I make everything free-form and don't even use a bowl & cloth. And, wonder-of-all-wonders, it continues to look and taste like SD bread...(:-{})! Finally, sold 'em last month to some lucky baker for about a buck at our garage sale when we sold the house (just wait'll he finds out that he wuz "ripped off" for a buck...(:-o)!). Sold him the *absolutely vital* 10-speed, 3-beater, 500-watt dough mixer, *most necessary* digital scales, *indispensable* digital thermometers and all of that other techno-rot as well...(:-o)!). L8r all, Dusty Who continues to hand make great SD bread by hand, out of a plastic bowl, by volume, baking into a cold oven sans minerals of any kind...(:-o)! -- |
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On Sun, 20 Aug 2006 08:44:24 -0700, "Dusty Bleher"
> wrote: [---] >Who continues to hand make great SD bread by hand, out of a plastic >bowl, by volume, baking into a cold oven A *cold* oven? |
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"Andrew Price" > wrote in message
... > On Sun, 20 Aug 2006 08:44:24 -0700, "Dusty Bleher" > > wrote: > > [---] > >>Who continues to hand make great SD bread by hand, out of a >>plastic >>bowl, by volume, baking into a cold oven > > A *cold* oven? Yep. Only way to do it when getting LP is 75 mile roundtrip much of which is over unpaved roads... D. |
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On Sun, 20 Aug 2006 17:09:00 -0700, "Dusty Bleher"
> wrote: >> A *cold* oven? >Yep. Only way to do it when getting LP is 75 mile roundtrip much of >which is over unpaved roads... Point taken ! |
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banneton in fridge???? | Sourdough | |||
banneton in fridge???? | Sourdough | |||
banneton in fridge???? | Sourdough | |||
banneton in fridge???? | Sourdough |