His ultra-wonky effort may lack the populist, mix-it-and-forget-it appeal of no-knead bread, but you have to hand it to home baker Samuel Fromartz: his self-titled method for crafting a traditional baguette won in a blind taste-test overseen by the Washington CityPaper. His competitors? Just about every bakery in D.C.
As Samuel says, “the recipe may be intimidating,” and it is: he’s been baking for a decade, and if you’re not ready to measure yeast to the nearest gram and get your oven to exactly 470F, this recipe may not be the one for you. Even so, his poetic reflections on the method behind the madness (“the soft, slightly sweet crumb, the uneven and slightly chewy and bubbly interior, the crisp crust, delicately toasted in sections”) make for inspirational reading, whatever your own comfort with wrangling dough may be. Happy baking.
Not sure if it’s because of Mother’s Day, or because it’s just about time for summer picnics, or for some other reason entirely, but the food blogs all seem to be buzzing with recipes and ideas for chocolate desserts. We do hope that whatever’s been bringing all these recipes to the surface doesn’t stop anytime soon. Here are a few of our favorites:
Blackberries are just starting to come into season on the west coast — a time that happily coincides with lots of opportunities for outdoor get-togethers. We liked the Kitchn’s recipe for a nonalcoholic
Just about everyone’s concerned about buying local, reducing waste, and saving money these days: here’s an idea whose time has definitely come.
The aptly named Stonesoup has some sensible tips for