Reports of travels around the world searching out great bread experiences. Australia, Canada, UK...oh and a few pics of Italy, Scotland and France!
Monday, July 26, 2010
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Why this blog.....
- Martin Barnett
- January to March 2009. I was on Professional Development leave from my teaching Job at the Culinary Institute of Vancouver Island Universtity. I chose to take a 3 month leave to visit bakeries and teachng institutions in Australia. Thank you to VIU and my union (BCGEU) for supporting this venture. The aim of this blog was to keep an ongoing diary of my experiences and share them with my students and colleagues. This sure beats coming up with a report and slide show months later. I mean "FRESH" is what baking is all about! Learned to bake back in 1978....making granola...but that is another story. .
5 comments:
Martin,
Looks like you had an excellent day baking in the garden. What a great setting!
Ron Rathburn
Warren, RI
Great post! My question: how do you harvest and thresh the small amounts of wheat grown in the garden?
Cut the heads off with shears.
Thresh with a food processor with a plastic pastry blade.
Winnow with a fan or hair dryer
These ancient wheats such as Einkorn, Spelt and Emmer do not free thresh, so you have to remove the husk by running them through a mill with the stones set widly apart, then winnow again Traditionally the millstones were driven backwards so they do not cut.
This is a rare variety of Einkorn "Triticum sinskajae" that is reputed to free thresh. If it does I will bulk it up until there is enough to bake with. We started with 10 or so kernals from a seed bank.
Einkorn makes a very yellow loaf - high in carotene.
I'd love to have some triticum sinskajae seeds. Can anyone send me a few of these seeds?
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