I got so cross at a comment in this month’s BBC Good Food magazine that I simply had to respond with a rant. Oh no, not again! some of you will think. And rightly so – after all, it’s my first time co-hosting Angie’s weekly Fiesta Friday party, and the last thing you need is a grumpy co-host banging on and on about something you couldn’t care less about. Even better news is that I won’t be alone: The amazing Loretta, whose blog has been taking me on a right Safari of the Mind in the last year, is giving me a helping hand. Check out her incredible foods and travels: we both celebrated our first anniversary last week, but Loretta did so with a right firework: a Hyderabadi chicken biryani. Guess what we will be having for dinner soon … Anyway, at the core of a great party are great guests, and the beauty of Fiesta Fridays is that everybody is welcome: simply pop in at Angie’s Fiesta Friday blog and bring along a lovely dish or a story you’d like to share. What you bring along is up to you – as long as you link the post up to the blog and to the event’s co-hosts: this will remind us of our duties and we will make sure to take a peek and have a chat with you! It’s a wonderful way to get to know other bloggers – make sure you have a look around, visit other guests and leave a comment, as you would in a real party. You’ll be surprised at the amazing foods you’ll encounter from some of the most exciting bloggers from all over the world, really. It’s a hell of a party. I’ll be bringing along one of my sourdough breads – the perfect party food, really. But also my angry response to the throwaway comment in the Good Food magazine that anybody who’d ever ‘dabbled in sourdough’ would find ‘that it can take over your life – all that feeding and cosseting’. Now for someone who’s been ‘dabbing in sourdough’ for a few years, I have to point out that I never ‘cosset’ and only feed my starter if I absolutely have to. All that hiring a ‘sourdough minder’ when you go on holidays, and throwing away parts of it is – in my humble opinion – a waste of your time and of perfectly good food: surely all those bakers and farmers in the olden days had better things to do than to hire a nanny to mind their starter? And as for regularly discarding a part of their starter … somehow, with all those famines and wars ravishing central Europe in the last hundreds of years, I cannot believe it.
For this glorious bread you only need bread flour and water, and time: you’ll need to begin by making your own starter, which takes just over a week – that’s 14 minutes’ worth of adding flour and water and mixing it, and a lot of time to eat, sleep, work and play in between. Check out my simple starter recipe – my first post ever! – to see how easy it is! Once you got your starter, you’ve got it for good. Every time you want to make a loaf you ‘feed’ it: simply add a cup of flour and 1/2 a cup of water, stir it, cover it, and leave it to get on with it. 8 hours later it will have doubled in size: take away as much as you need for your recipe and pop the rest into the fridge for the next time. No need to talk to it, take it out for walks or feed and discard anything. Just forget about it until the urge to make another loaf hits you – up to two months later it will still be usable. In fact, I completely forgot mine. When I took it out, at least 2 months after I had fed it the last time, some of the liquid had come to the top of the starter, looking a little dodgy:
But as it all smelled great (yeasty, a bit like beer – trust me: you’ll smell straightaway when it’s gone off!) I simply fed it and waited. Within 8 hours, the cultures were back, alive and kicking, and the starter was ready to use. As for the bread itself – the first bread recipe I ever posted – this is all you need:
1 cup starter, 3 cups plain bread flour, 1 cup water, a teaspoon of salt and half a teaspoon dried active yeast. As easy as 1,2,3, surely!
Simply dilute the yeast in the water and mix t until it is diluted; after a few minutes it will start bubbling. Knead in all the remaining ingredients until it all comes nicely together. Not too stiff and not too runny. Cover the ball and let it rest for about 2-3 hours or until it has roughly doubled in size. This is called the first ‘proofing’. When your dough is ready, knock it back by kneading it a little, then form it into the shape you fancy. For Angie’s party, I decided to bake a couronne, a crown-shaped loaf. I split the dough into 8 pieces, which I formed into neat little balls and placed in a circle on a sheet of baking parchment. The parchment will help the crown to retain its shape when I place it in the oven. Cover and rest for another 30 minutes or so, the time you’ll need to fire up your oven. That’s your second proofing, in case you were wondering. Heat the oven to 250C / 480F. For best results, bake your bread in a large cast-iron casserole pot, like a Dutch oven, which you heat up inside the oven, as you would your baking stone or sheet: they need to be well hot before you place your bread in or on it! Once they’re all piping hot, remove the pot or sheet and place your bread on it. Now ‘score’ it, which means you cut along the bread where you would like it to expand:
Use a sharp serrated knife for it and cut at an angle, as if lifting a flap: this will help the bread opening in a nice flap, looking incredibly professional. Close the lid (if using the pot) and place the bread in the oven. If you’re using a stone or a baking sheet, throw 1/2 cup of water onto the sides of the oven before closing the door. Reduce the heat to 230C / 440F and bake the couronne for ca. 35 minutes, a round loaf for 40-45 minutes. It is done when the bottom of the bread sounds hollow when you tap it.
Remove the bread from the oven to cool – remove the lid of your pot at this stage, otherwise it’ll get all soggy. How much time did it take altogether, you might ask, still wondering about all those rumours about sourdough? Well, apart from around 3 1/2 hours’ resting and ca. 40 minutes baking, you actually only spent 20 minutes or so on the kneading, forming, scoring and placing it into the oven. If you are at work in the daytime, pop the dough or shaped bread into the fridge to prove: that way, you can extend the resting periods as the cold will slow down the yeasts. You’ll end up with a much more pronounced sourdough flavour for your finished loaf, which is a positive side effect! Not exactly an insane amount of time, is it?
Probably the same as if you had been using a ready-bought bread mix. Just not as delicious. And look at that texture:
So, get going. Once you’ve made two or three of them, you’ll feel ready to experiment: replace some of the flour with rye or spelt, wholemeal or malthouse. Add seeds – sunflower, sesame – nuts or oats. You’ll know by then how the dough needs to feel, you might want to add water or flour to get the consistency just right. And by right I mean the way you like it: a wetter dough makes for a flatter but more airy loaf, as opposed to a higher loaf that might be a little more dense. It’s your call. Intrigued? I hope so! Why not visit our Fiesta Friday site and sample a few of the delicacies on offer? That might inspire you to try out something new – and who knows, you might even be publishing your first sourdough loaf in time for next week’s party … 










Love the ring shape you baked it in! I think I’ll have to try that with my loaves today.
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I saw it on a photograph recently – it’s so simple that I could kick myself for not having thought of it before! Enjoy your bread!
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You’re definitely allowed a rant Ginger… and rightly so, how dare they! :)….I’m allowed to rave though, your bread is to die for…Love the crunch that come across the screen, all I’d need is butter and nothing more. The sourdough flavor would be the only thing I’d want to savor, no covering it up with jam or peanut butter or anything to mask that flavor. Gorgeous really, and thanks for being my co-hosting partner today, it looks like the party is already heating up. Catch you here and there 🙂
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I am already plotting to make your cheesecake! I can match your crappy light conditions but not your marbling skills 😉
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Sourdough is the only bread I can make so totally agree Ginger! Yours is so gorgeous!!!
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Thank you, Johanne! I am still chuckling about your comments on Loretta’s cheesecake post – if I had met my dentist after my root canal treatment I’d have downgraded him into the luggage storage area 😉
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I loveeeeee all of the information you’ve given us here!!!! You’ve just un-scared me from trying sourdough… which I LOVEEEE by the way…. LOVE LOVE LOVE IT!!!!!! I can’t wait to do it. This post made me laugh 😉 I am happy to know I won’t have to take my starter dough for walks, the dog is enough!!! 😉
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There’s so much hype and hysteria doing the rounds about sourdough – I suppose if everybody realised how easy it was there’s be no fancy bakeries and posh-sounding recipes …
Give it a try and share your results with us at FF!
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Your sourdough loaf is just gorgeous! I love the shape you have given and can’t miss the texture. Definitely in my list to try. 🙂 Happy FF!
Anugya
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Thanks for visiting, Anugya! And good luck with the bread 😉
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I love sourdough but have had 2 starts to die. You will know because it will turn a bit orange color. Anyway good for you and ranting at sourdough snobs…lol
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I’ve never actually managed to kill a starter. Yet. I chucked one out once because I had absolutely forgotten in in the fridge … I didn’t even check …
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What a beautiful crumb, and lovely shaping! And I’m so happy to hear that someone else “neglects” their starter too! I have, I’m afraid, let it get to the point where there is mold on top (shhh…forget that as soon as you’ve read it!!), which is usually around 4 months for me, so I just scoop a bit from the very bottom of the jar and refresh it from there.
This does mean, however, I am one of the people who discards starter–not when I’m using my starter regularly, but after four months, I do end up discarding most of it!
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Point taken. I took mine for a walk once or twice, too, when I parked my stuff at my neighbours whilst defrosting my fridge. So we’re both guilty, LOL
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Haha, alright! Anyways, I’m trying to work on neglecting the start for only a couple months at a time now 😉
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Ginger your pictures just keep getting better and better!!
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Thanks – but bait until I get my new glasses! (Who cares about camera lenses, LOL)
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Have you heard from Marta lately?
I hope she’s doing alright, I miss her punk ass :p
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How funny, I read that article too!!! I really hoped to learn something from that publication, the loaf of bread on the front cover promised so much…I learn far more from my fellow bloggers!!
Your bread looks perfect 🙂 happy Fiesta Friday xxx
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It was a bit of a disappointment. And there was me, thinking wow, I’m so trendy for once!
And you’re right, the interweb has so much more to offer 🙂
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Ginger thank you so much for cohosting! I have a starter that I need to revive that the wonderful Selma sent me. It already has a name so I guess I’ve already babied it but I still need to revive it. This beautiful sourdough is just gorgeous! Thank you for taking the guess work out of it. I don’t have much experience with sourdough yet. Happy FF!
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So looking forward to what you’ll come up with! What a prolific starter is is – I have already seen such a wide range of ‘baby’ pictures 🙂
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Your bread looks so beautiful – love the ring shape! And rant away – I read something similar in the Guardian – the comments were just ridiculous. Well, it is their loss!! Enjoy co-hosting and Happy Fiesta Friday.
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I think I know which article you are talking about – I even wrote a comment on in there and then, just because it annoyed me so much. It would be great if people realised how easy and how delicious homemade bread is, and how therapeutic. Let’s reclaim it from the hipsters 😉
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I cannot get enough of bread, and sourdough is one of my favorites. Thanks so much for sharing (and co-hosting) this week at FF! 🙂
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Thank you, Jeanette – this bread would be great to mop up the leftover sauce from your delicious chicken!
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Ooooh there’s an idea!!! 🙂
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This bread is just fabulous share Ginger ❤️.
Have fun at FF!
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Thank you – I hope you’re enjoying yourself, too!
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There’s bread and then there’s sourdough bread. Love the tangy flavor! The shape of your bread is great too, individual servings. Thanks for co-hosting this week and Happy FF 🙂
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You’re welcome – I absolutely loved your contributions, Judie – I wish we could have a bbq this weekend, but the thought of catching pneumonia … London summers and all that… 😉
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This bread looks awesome Ginger, I love sourdough! I need to make another starter, I had one but accidentally left it uncovered on the side overnight and woke up to it covered in flies, oops! When I first started with mine I did all the faffing with feeding and discarding and I’m soooo glad there’s people like you to tell us we really don’t need to do that! So rant away!
Have fun co hosting!
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Thanks. Michelle. For a while I thought I was just being incredibly lazy and lucky to get away with it, but now it’s more like I’m convinced theres is a faffy sourdough industry trying to scare everybody out of it.
Flies, hey, that’s a new one for me though 😉
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I’ve seen a couple people say you can just leave them, and it makes sense when you think about it, once you’ve got the yeast growing you’re good to go, it just needs waking up when you wanna use it…just like dried yeast!
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Absolutely. If it doesn’t answer back there’s no need to pay for a sitter if you’re away 😉
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Btw I need to get a new starter started, too – I mixed up my starters (wheat and rye) so I now don’t know which is which anymore. Perhaps I should have invested in a nanny after all – for me, though, not for my sourdoughs 😉
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haha you need a sourdough PA!
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A life coach, more likely 😉
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I’ve never made sourdough bread before, but you make it look so easy that I’ll have to try it! 😀 Happy FF, and thank you for co-hosting 😀
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Thank you, Amanda – do give it a try! I can already picture your beautiful photographs of someone tearing off a chunk … 😉 Have a wonderful weekend!
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You make it sound so simple Ginger. I am all geared to try. Your bread looks so right. Crusty outside, light and airy inside. Win Win!
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It is so easy, skd! And for someone with your skills, too! I still haven’t managed to attempt chapattis …
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Aww…thats so kind of you. When you can do such exotic baking in a simple way making. chapatis will be childs play for you Ginger….
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I wish!
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This is the approach to cooking that I like. Not too much work but a great result.
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Work I really don’t like, and this bread captures it perfectly 😉
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I so agree with you – sourdough stater is pretty self sufficient! Love the shape you baked with your loaf, very nice indeed. Perfect for ripping off a chunk and sharing!
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Absolutely – now I just need to decide on an appropriate spread … not marmite!
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Oh 😦 I love Marmite, I guess you fall into the “other” camp. I think good bread needs nothing more than a good slather of the best butter you can afford or a good drizzle of delicious olive oil!
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Butter all the way! And lightly salted one, which I only discovered when I moved to the UK!
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Oh wow Ginger! Your bread looks perfect! I should take this post as an example and start (again) my sourdough!
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Absolutely! Go for it!!!! I am looking forward to your ideas 🙂
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This looks so pretty! Luv the shape of the bread and the texture looks great too. Beautiful photographs, simple yet classy! 🙂
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I’d love to have the energy to ‘dress’ my pictures more, with props and stuff. But when I’m done cooking or baking I just want to get it over and done with so I can eat 😉
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perfect perfect – the third ingredient is the problem TIME!! But am tempted to try I usually make my sourdough with ready made starters – a quick query for you did you take the photos on your kitchen floor – those tiles remind me of the old granite floor I used to have in a kitchen I loved
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Ready-made starters are great – you can even feed them and then keep parts of if for further use! I use the fridge to make bread during the week, it’s no bother. Looking at the times spent proofing can be quite daunting, until you realise that the bread will fit around your schedule 🙂
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proofing times are daunting, I made baguettes once: https://polianthus.wordpress.com/?s=baguette – took a really really long time, but the results were also far beyond anything I would have expected to achieve in my kitchen!
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They look fabulous – baguettes are a little tricky as they do take so long! But the taste .. and the texture … mmmmmmmh!
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Oh, and some of the pictures are indeed taken on the floor: the light there is perfect! I wouldn’t put the bread there, though, so I am using a few spare tiles which I arrange on the worktop, with a large, black baking sheet for a backdrop 🙂
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Oooh very smart – !! the tiles do look lovely I love that type of floor tile!
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We are very limited when it comes to light – Life in the UK and all that! Thanks for your lovely comments – and for introducing me to your great blog!
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I am so excited about this! Making Sourdough has been on my to do list and have been intimidated by the starter so many times! The first time I made it the starter didn’t work and ended up making Ciabatta instead… Now I REALLY want to give it a go!! 😀
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Do that! It’s so easy, and once you’ve made bread a couple of times you know what you need to do 🙂 Looking forward to your sourdough experiments!
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Hi!
This sounds so easy, I might actually have to give it a try! 😀
I remember back in school there was sour dough going around that was named “Hermann”. In the beginning, it was all about resting and feeding and once the first excitement died off, there was no way you could bake that much bread, so you needed to find people to give some of the dough to, but eventually everyone already had his own “Hermann” at home and you had to chuck out most of the dough… Such a waste! I lost interest and never heard of it again, but now you really got me interested, especially if you can really just leave it in the fridge for a couple of weeks unattended – too nice!
I’ll let you know how it turned out – I’ll have to find a name for him or her first though! 😉
Have a baketastic day,
Your Backdirndl
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I remember the Hermann, Backdirndl! And jes, it became a right pain in the backside over time … The good news with this starter is that you don’t feed it unless you want to make a bread – no need to pester friends or force-feed elderly relatives 😉
Looking forward to the end result!
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Beautiful bread and photos!!! Still thinking about making my first sourdough bread – working up to it slowly! Thank you for the extra inspiration! 🙂
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You’re welcome! As the old saying goes: if can wait for a tres leches cake, you can wait for a sourdough starter 😉
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🙂 Exactly!!! 🙂
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Ginger,
If I could only reach and get some of that perfect sourdough bread! The texture of that yummy bread is making me drool….I can almost taste it. My family would love me so much more if I could make that bread, so I have to try making it:)
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Absolutely! Never has love been gained so easily 😉
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I LOVE sourdough bread! This looks amazing, and I have a feeling it tastes just as good as it looks!
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It did … not for very long though! The next one is proofing as we speak …
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This couronne is stunning and your bread is perfect 🙂 You have definitely inspired me to make this Ginger 🙂
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Gorgeous bread you’ve made there. And thanks for co-hosting this week.
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Thank you for stopping by, Hilda! It’s been a wonderful weekend, so many different posts, ideas and thoughts!
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Ginger, I can just imagine biting into the tasty crunchy crust and soft full flavored crumb! Great photos too!
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Thank you Gerard – so good to hear from you! How are you keeping? I’ve been working hard on the photography side of things, now I need to experiment more with breads 🙂
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I’m looking forward to more of your bread experiments and pictures! I’m doing fine, thank you!
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I’ve always wanted to try making sourdough, especially after seeing Hugh Fearnley Whittingstall make it on River Cottage. Im just not confident in getting a starter going. Will have to give a go with your method. Thank for sharing Ginger!
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The bread looks wonderful, and how pretty in a ring shape. Perfect! 🙂
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The bread looks delicious and you make it look so easy 🙂 I might even give it a go! I like the idea of making your own sourdough starter!
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I have always been too scared to try. I must give it a go! Looks delicious! 🙂
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Ginger, this is such an excellent post! I love how practical you are about this and that you ranted a bit about all the waste & babysitting and such, although I never knew people hired sourdough nannies to come in! So funny! I have been trying to eat less bread but this looks so tempting!
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That is a beautiful, beautiful thing! 🙂 I have never ventured into the sourdough world, but it’s on the bucket list! I wonder if my catsitter would also sit the starter….seems like with all the pet hotels and spas popping up in NYC, a sourdough hostel can’t be far off?! 🙂
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Ok, you’ve convinced me to give sourdough another try. And I even got help from Selma; she sent me her starter. I don’t know what else I’m waiting for! That bread is beautiful!! And the texture!! Thank you so much for bringing this to FF. I’m inspired!! And thanks for co-hosting. You and Loretta did such a wonderful job you’ll just have to do it again soon!! 🙂
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