infjarchninja

joined 4 weeks ago
[–] infjarchninja@lemmy.ml 2 points 8 hours ago

Hey Shortstack

Thank you for the link

I have looked at tangzhong before buy not tried it.

The hot cross buns in the link do look super soft.

I will store it in my to-do list.

[–] infjarchninja@lemmy.ml 2 points 8 hours ago

Hey SatansMaggotyCumFart

It is an eye opener when you start getting used to long bulk rises.

It definitely improves bread

[–] infjarchninja@lemmy.ml 1 points 8 hours ago

Thanks KOLANAKI

pesto sounds good

It is such a nice bread that almost anything will go with it.

even dunking in Olive oil

[–] infjarchninja@lemmy.ml 2 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

Hey Jake Farm

Thank you

I can see why you would think a 90% hydration dough is Ciabatta.

The crumb looks too tight and uniform for classic ciabatta.

classic italian ciabatta is made with a biga dough.

Many years ago I worked with an Italian Swiss-trained patisserie chef and Master baker. Stefano piccinno. He only made ciabatta with Biga.

[–] infjarchninja@lemmy.ml 3 points 8 hours ago (2 children)

Hey SatansMaggotyCumFart

Thank you

I do usually use just a small pinch of yeast with a longer bulk.

I thought that by developing the dough in a few hours it would make it a little easier for the not so experienced bakers to get used to a high hydration dough.

It still tastes great with the classic Shipton Mill White No 4 organic bread flour

[–] infjarchninja@lemmy.ml 3 points 13 hours ago

Thank you you are very kind

 

yeasted version of glass bread:

I saw these so called 100% hydration Glass bread recipes online a few years ago.

They looked like the ideal sandwich breads for me. crusty on both sides. Cut in half, filled with what you like.

So I decided to try out some of the recipes.

The recipes I tried were far too wet at 100% hydration. The doughs had no body or strength. They failed badly.

The recipes I found online said they were 100% hydration, but the dough they work with did not look like 100% hydration. The doughs looked more like 80-90% hydration.

So I have opted for a 90% hydration glass bread.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Makes 4 glass bread rolls, with a fabulous textured crumb with a crispy thin crust.

No kneading, just bowl folds with a scraper in the same bowl.

line 2 baking trays with baking paper.

A fish slice to transfer the dough onto the baking sheets.

I use Shipton Mill's No 4 organic bread flour.

I use a bench scraper to mix the dough and do the bowl folds.

However, you can use your hands too.

Keep a small bowl of water handy, just wet your hands before doing the bowl folds.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

MAKE THE DOUGH

350g organic white bread flour.

7g fast action dry yeast

8g salt

315g bottled/filtered room temperature water

15g olive oil, to be added after the first rest period

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

METHOD

put flour, salt and yeast into a large bowl, whisk to mix

pour in the water.

stir with wooden spoon for 2 minutes until smooth

scrape down bowl and cover with cling film

rest for 20 minutes

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

pour the olive oil over the dough

now do some bowl folds for a minute or so.

Keep folding until the olive oil has mixed into the dough.

basically: While turning the bowl, fold the dough into the centre

I used my bench scraper to do this.

scrape bowl down and cover with the film

rest for 20 minutes

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

now do 2 more bowl folds with a 20 minute rest in between each one.

same technique as above

Turning the bowl and fold the dough into the centre, but only for one turn this time.

scrape bowl down and cover with the film between folds.

  1. First coil fold: a little more puffier and bubblier

  2. Second coil fold: looking and feeling stronger

rest for 20 minutes

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

tip dough onto well floured work surface

The dough is extremely sticky. so lots of flour, but not too much.

flour the top of the dough

gently pat dough and shape into a square with the bench scraper.

The dough feels amazingly soft.

divide the dough into 4 equal pieces.

shape into squares with the bench scrape

gently transfer the dough onto the lined baking sheets.

I use a plastic fish slice to transfer the dough.

I flour the work surface next to the dough and quickly slide the fish slice under the edge of the dough.

do a final proof of 20 minutes uncovered

after 10 minutes heat the oven

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Heat oven

200C fan or 220C

bake for 30 minutes

Swap the baking trays around after 20 minutes

bake for 10 more minutes until nice a golden

remove from oven

let cool. eat!

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

 

Hello raspberrypiers

I just dug these out from my old tech box.

I set up these Raspberry Pi Touch Displays a few years ago for my 8 year old grandson. So we could contact each other. Pretending it was a walkie-Talkie, except with face to face chat, when he was camping in the garden or bedroom.

I used a Raspberry pi model 3B, with sparky-linux and "SimpleX chat" for instant-messaging and video-calling.

Over the time we used it, I found the cables absolutely useless. They kept failing, bad connections and creases. I replaced them multiple times.

I did initially think it was just little hands squashing the cable or being randomly thrown on the ground, kids will be kids, but it also happened to me.

I know they are really cheap, but is there a better alternative to using the Raspberry Pi 7” LCD Touchscreen Display cable?

A more secure solid connection method?

Maybe connecting through the GPIO pins, usb, or even a "hat" that would connect the raspberry pi to the touch screen without the cable.

I have two of these gathering lots of dust and want to do something with them.

[–] infjarchninja@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 day ago

Thank you Björn

I knew someone more technically gifted in the community would have a good answer as to why this happened.

[–] infjarchninja@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 day ago

Hey BCsven

We definitely do.

"Some people go their entire lives without hearing news that good" – Neo

 

imagemagick Montage:

I can only create a montage if all the exif data is cleared.

As a new user on Lemmy, going through the learning curve, I had issues uploading images.

Simple, I turned to imagemagick to reduce the size of the images and create a montage, rather than uploading 20 images for a simple bread recipe.

!bready@lemmy.world

========================================

I transfered my recipe images from my phone to my laptop and set about using Montage.

The images on the phone, and in the directory on my laptop, were clearly orientated in Portrait and not landscape.

========================================

Problem:

I ran montage to create a simple 4 image montage:

montage 1.jpg 2.jpg 3.jpg 4.jpg -geometry +2+2 1-montage-image.jpg

I checked the output file, the images were in the right order but had changed from portrait to Landscape. They looked terrible

I then tried some different images.

These came out as expected, in portrait and in order

=======================================

I compared the images,

identify -verbose 1.jpg

the ones I transfered from my phone still had all the exif data intact and the other ones had no exif data

========================================

So I cleared the exif data for the files.

exiftool worked perfectly:

exiftool -all= *.jpg

created an "original-images" directory, then moved the originals to "original-images" directory

mv *.jpg_original original-images

when I cleared the exif data all the images in the directory reverted to landscape

========================================

so I set them back to portrait:

One liner to change orientation by 90 degrees

find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -name "*.jpg" -exec convert {} -rotate 90 {} ;

or mogrify:

mogrify -rotate -90 *.jpg

or

mogrify -rotate +90 *.jpg

========================================

created the montage image:

montage 1.jpg 2.jpg 3.jpg 4.jpg -geometry +2+2 1-montage.jpg

========================================

Now I reduced the size so I could upload them

create an "images" directory if you do not want mogrify to overwrite the originals.

mogrify -resize 50% -quality 80 -path "/path/to/reduced/images/" *.jpg

or

mogrify -resize 50% -quality 80 -path "images" *.jpg

job done

========================================

A lot of messing about to upload an image

[–] infjarchninja@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago

hey MysteriousSophon21

I did use the larger and medium models with Open whisper and Fast whisper.

I did not consider the lower termperature settings

Thank you

[–] infjarchninja@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 days ago

Thank you Domi

[–] infjarchninja@lemmy.ml 2 points 3 days ago

Hello PlantJam

Thank you.

I am assuming that the all purpose flour you mention is the American all purpose flour.

As far as I know American all purpose flour has a high protein content and is generally used for bread. Though dont quote me on that.

I am sure this recipe will be OK with all purpose flour.

It is flat bread after all.

I only use organic bread flour because I buy 16Kg bags of the stuff, which is cheaper than buying from the local supermarket.

[–] infjarchninja@lemmy.ml 5 points 3 days ago

sorry I forgot one of the montage images

 

Perfect Tortilla wraps

Far better than those rubberised, chemical tasting things you buy in supermarkets.

These turn out really well.

I make falefal avacado salad wraps and fried egg wraps with these.

makes 8 x 60g x 10 inch wraps

INGREDIENTS:

250g white organic bread flour.

170g boiling water.

2.5g or half tsp salt.

5g or 1 x level tsp baking powder.

50g butter melted.

OR MAKE WITH 20% WHOLEMEAL:

200g organic bread flour

50g organic wholemeal flour

METHOD:

In a medium bowl combine the flour, salt, and baking powder. whisk to incorporate.

cut the butter into small pieces and microwave for 20 seconds, or until very soft, stir with a spoon to mix.

boil kettle. weigh 170g boiling water into a jug/cup/container/pot.

Add the softened butter to the boiling water and stir until butter has fully melted.

pour into the flour mix, stir with a fork until there is no dry flour visible, then use a spatula to fold the mix into a rough dough.

Cover with cling film and rest for 30 minutes.

Tip/scrape the warm dough onto the floured worktop and knead for 1-2 minutes.

Turns into a nice soft dough. A bench scraper helps to scrape the worktop if the dough sticks.

Divide/weigh the dough into 8 x 60g pieces. A perfect size for my frying pan.

Shape into balls.

Place the dough balls on a plate or tray and cover with film.

Refrigerate for at least 1 hour if you want to cook them straight away. chilling them firms up the dough and makes them easier to roll out.

I keep them in the fridge until I use them, sometimes for 3-4 days.

Once chilled, roll the dough balls out using a rolling pin with lots of flour.

you can roll these really thin without the dough tearing. Lots of flour is key.

Cook in a preheated pan on high heat for about 2 minutes on each side. dont over cook.

I sometimes batch fry them, wait for them to cool, put them in a zip-lok bag and freeze them.

30 seconds in the microwave to unfreeze.

 

82% poolish ciabatta rolls

makes 8 ciabatta rolls

INGREDIENTS:

250g pre-ferment poolish

300g filtered/bottled water

375g organic bread flour

5g fast action yeast

9g salt

910g total weight

bakers percentages;

Total four = 375g + 125 = 500g flour

Total water = 285 + 125 = 410g water

410/500 = 0.82*100 = 82

bakers % = 82% hydration


THE NIGHT BEFORE: 21:30

make the poolish

leave on worktop for 12-16 hours

125g flour

125g water

big pinch yeast

mix well and cover


MORNING: 10.00am

MAKE THE DOUGH:

Add poolish to large bowl.

Add water and mix.

Add the dry ingredients

Mix into rough dough.

Tip into lightly oiled container.

Autolyze/rest for 30 minutes.


10.45am

Do 2 stretch and folds at 30 minutes intervals.

10.45am S+F rest for 30 minutes

11.15am S+F rest for 30 minutes


12.15pm

Tip dough out onto well floured work surface.

use loads of flour, the dough is extremely sticky.

pat the dough into an oblong shape using hands and bench scraper.

cut down the middle into 2 lengths and divide into rolls.

Line the baking sheet/trays with parchment/baking paper.

Place dough on the baking sheet/tray.

Cover and leave to rise for 30 minutes.

Bake: 12.45pm

preheat oven to 450ºF- 230C - 210C fan.

Transfer tray to oven and bake for 30-40 minutes until dark brown.


 

82% hydration Sourdough Ciabatta

I make this loads, bread turns out beautiful,

Oven to 450ºF - 230C - 210C fan.

A mature sourdough starter


INGREDIENTS:

900g organic bread flour.

200g active sourdough starter.

670g filtered/bottled water, warmed for 20 seconds in microwave.

50g virgin olive oil

25g salt.

1845g total dough weight

total water: 820g water: total flour: 1000g flour

820/1000 = 82% hydration is extremely wet

If you want to make a single loaf, weigh out 645g, shape, put in banneton and in fridge over night.


THE NIGHT BEFORE: 6:00PM

50g starter + 100g water + 100g flour = 250g

left to rise for 3-4 hours then put in fridge for the night.

remove it in the morning for an hour to warm up.

make sure it has warmed before building the dough.

make sure everything is warm


METHOD:

start main dough in the morning and allow 6+ hours to prepare dough before putting in fridge.


MIX THE DOUGH: started at 9am

Dough is 82% hydration so very wet.

Add 200g sourdough starter to a large bowl.

Add 670g filtered/bottled warmed water and mix well

Add 50g virgin olive oil

Add the 900g organic bread flour and 25g salt

mix with a wooden spoon and spatula until it resembles a rough dough

then scrape/pour the dough into a lightly oiled plastic container

cover and rest for 30 minutes.

9:15am


STRETCHES AND FOLDS: 4 @ 30 minute intervals.

9.45am I did two rounds of stretch and folds, from a wet mess, it now has some body.

10.15am S+F

10.45am S+F

11.15am S+F


BULK FERMENTATION: 11:15am

Transfer the dough to a well oiled straight sided container. press down evenly, Cover.

Let rise at room temperature until the dough nearly doubles in volume (ideally a 75% increase in volume). Mark the side of the container to estimate the 75% rise.

Times will vary depending on your environment/temp and the strength of your starter.

It usually takes about 4 hours for me.

Cover container with a lid.

once dough has reached the 75% mark put it in the fridge for 12-24 hours.

3:15pm done

NEXT DAY: 9.00am

Remove container from fridge. Remove lid. Sprinkle top of dough with flour. Turn dough out onto a well floured work surface. Gently Pat dough into a rectangle. Sprinkle top with more flour. Use a bench scraper to cut the dough into four equal lengths vertically.

be extra gentle with the dough. try not to knock the air out if it.

For long Ciabatta: divide into 4 lengths

For ciabatta rolls: make three or four cuts equally spaced along the long ciabatta to create 12 or 16 small rolls.

Line the baking sheets with parchment/baking paper.

With floured hands or baguette board, gently transfer each piece of dough to the prepared pan.

Cover the pan with a well floured towel/couche. Let stand for 30 minutes to one hour.

BAKE:

preheat Oven to 450ºF - 230C - 210C fan.

Transfer baking sheets to oven

bake long ciabatta for 35-45 minutes.

bake ciabatta rolls for 20-30 minutes

rotate pan/pans, half way through to get an even bake.

Remove pan/pans from oven.

Transfer ciabatta to a cooling rack.

Let cool for 20 to 30 minutes before slicing.

eat!

 

make 8 x 210g Baguettes with poolish

MAKE POOLISH THE DAY BEFORE

250g organic bread flour 250g bottled/filtered water big pinch yeast

Mix into as thick batter Cover with cling film

Leave out over night for 16-24 hours on the kitchen worktop

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

MAKE DOUGH

500g pre-ferment poolish 400g filtered/bottled water 750g organic bread flour 7g fast action yeast 18g salt 1650g total

Add poolish to large bowl Add water and mix with the poolish until smooth Add the dry ingredients

Mix into rough dough Tip onto work surface Knead lightly Place into lightly oiled container Autolyze/rest for 30 minutes

Do 2-3 stretch and folds at 30 minutes intervals The dough is ready when it looks like a large pillow

Tip out onto well floured work surface Weigh into 210g pieces mould into small rounds place into container Rest for 10 minutes Mould into loose oblong shapes place into container Rest for 15 minutes

Shape into baguettes

Place seam side up in a well floured couche Cover and leave to rise for 45-60 minutes check at 30 minute intervals

Lightly oil baguette trays Gently lift the dough from the couche using board Place the dough seam side down in baguette trays Score the dough

Bake with steam at 230C / 210C fan for 30 minutes

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

bakers percentages Total four = 750 + 250 = 1000g flour Total water = 400 + 250 = 650g water 650/1000 = 0.65*100 = 65.0 bakers % = 65% hydration

 

Yeasted Rye tinned loaf

92.3% hydration

Makes one small tin loaf. No complicated kneading required, just stirring.

A traditional box style 2lb loaf tin measuring approximately 19cm x 12cm x 9cm deep. You will have a very decent loaf in about two hours.

Ingredients:

300g warm filtered/bottled water. 10g clear honey 8g fine sea salt 5g easy bake yeast 200g organic light rye flour. I used organic wholemeal 125g organic dark rye flour (wholemeal rye) 30g sunflower seeds 30g pumpkin seeds plus extra seeds for the topping

alternatively you can add 60g a mix of different seeds to your own taste, caraway seeds, anise seeds, fennel, sesame seeds etc

total weight: 625g without seeds

I use this seed mix: 20g pumpkin 20g sunflower 15g sesame 5g poppy seed 5g fennel total 65g of seeds

Prepared bread tin, lined with parchment/baking paper

Instructions:

  1. Add rye flour, wholemeal flour, salt, yeast and seeds to large bowl. mix well

  2. Add honey to the warm water, mix, add to the above and mix together

  3. Stir well with a sturdy wooden spoon, until well combined

  4. Leave to rest for 10 minutes.

  5. stir the mixture for a second time. Stir for about two minutes. You will be left with a bowl of splodge that has the consistency of freshly made thick porridge

  6. Spoon the dough into the tin. you can pat the surface even with wet hands/knuckles. Make sure you press it into the corners. The dough should fill about half to two-thirds of the tin depending on the size of the tin.

  7. Sprinkle the surface with sunflower seeds and pumpkin seeds, until the surface is fully covered and pat them down so they stick to the surface of the dough.

  8. Cover the loaf tin in lightly oiled cling film, so the dough doesn’t dry out. Let it rest at room temperature for about 45 minutes.

  9. Preheat the oven to 230C or 210C fan with a rack in the centre of the oven. Remove cling film. Put the tin in the oven on the middle shelf and bake the bread:

Bake timing:

10 minutes at 230C or 210C fan then turn the oven down and bake for 30 minutes at 200C or 180C fan,

  1. After 40 minutes remove the loaf from oven. Gently lift the loaf out of the tin and remove all the paper. put the loaf back into the oven again. Oven gloves needed for this

Bake for a further 15 minutes at 200C or 180C fan, without the tin.

  1. Remove bread from the oven and let it cool completely on a rack. Do not put the loaf back in the tin to cool as it will absorb condensation and water.

The loaf will have dense crumb as rye should have and it is my favourite, especially with my seed mix.

I like this for breakfast with butter and raspberry jam or as a daytime snack with cheddar cheese and sun dried tomatoes

Enjoy!

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