Love love the class this June. I enjoyed the company of true bread aficionados, wuich made me realize iba Pala feeling pag ang mga kasama mo are like you. I barely noticed the time and it was so much fun.
We created large breads on our last day and I ate almost all of the Raisin Soft Monay. Actually, i woke up at 2 am and sneaked into the dark kitchen to take a bite of the bread. Yum!
You see, I am truly blessed to have the knowledge of making breads at a whim. I just thought about adding glazed fruits and cranberries next time or maybe my favorite chunky Skippy peanut butter and guava jelly. Mmmm.
Exciting. Going back 1995, I made the right decision enrolling in a 2 year culinary school instead of a computer course. I wouldn't be this happy. I would not have met these beautiful people, my students.
More photos to come.....
Enrollment still on for July to November at www.breadmakinglessons.com
For starters i cannot make this Hard Monay if i did not bring any 3rd class flour or soft weak flour to New York. Once i ran out of 3rd class and tried Cake Flour, it turned bad, do not even think of using All Purpose, it will be soft but not chewy as this one made with yes, 3rd class indeed. So third class is hard to find here in the US if you will use that term. You have to say or look for soft wheat flour, that's it, not hard wheat flour, not cake or All purpose but something in between these two. It is easy to find in the Phil., just ask your local bakery suppliers and they know it is Tercera. Tercera is not for bread, bakers use it basically for cookies, cakes and other pastries, but we bakers know how to create bread recipes using part of this flour with the bread flour or hard wheat flour. It makes a softer version of any of your fave breads, with a cheaper price tag. Plus if i own a bakery, i get to use the third class for my cakes and cookies, lowering my food cos
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