Food Stamps.

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(Edited)

Funny enough, during these supply disruptions we get many requests for bread that we usually don't prepare. Store-bought-sugar-flour-blends. I don't like to call it bread, but many people like it. Our answer is always the same: "No, but we can make something better using our own dough."

"This doesn't look like the one I buy in the Supermarket!" Well, yeah, genius. This is a ciabatta style, long fermentation, no additives. "It's not sweet enough!" - okay, come here, have a very close look into the oven...

It's not easy to maintain the balance between my personal preferences and what I find healthy based on what I know, and what many people want. I've compromised a lot throughout the years, but there's always a point that I rather lose business than lowering the quality. There are so many other bakeries that prepare that stuff that can be bought in supermarkets.

A lot of times, people want exactly the same that they're used to, but just with the "sourdough" stamp on it, or the "artisan" promise. I talked about that with a baker buddy from Ibarra, who runs a chain of "normal" bakeries there. They were asked a lot for sourdough, so I helped him setting it up. He did a great job, delicious sourdough - but his clients didn't want it. They asked for the same bread, but sourdough.

Because the doctor told them so. "Bread without yeast, sourdough" they tell their patients - those who make bread start laughing now. Sourdough contains yeast. Quite a bit of it, actually. It's wild yeasts, but it's yeast. Most doctors have no background in nutrition, and especially here they generally repeat the stereotypes that their moms have told them.

This batch of loaves went into the oven at perfect timing. It rose beautifully.

I just leave people to their believes. It doesn't really matter to me. The important part for me is to be coherent, not to lie about what we make and how we make it. If they decide to buy, great. If not, no biggie.

It's sad to see how little people know about nutrition these days. And how much they think they know, following the stupidity of the TikTok vultures. And no, I don't claim to know everything. I like staying up to date, but it's hard these days. Most of my knowledge is based on what I learned when I went vegan and had to start knowing stuff, and I think that the bigger part of that is still true.

I do listen to Dr. Greger's podcasts and videos, though, as he always explains everything based on published studies, and not mom's aunt's dog's walker's instagram channel, because, you know, she's really hot and fit, so she must know what she's talking about. Or the 70 year old optometrist with a BMI of 30 who swears it's only because he has heavy bones, but lectures you about your carbohydrate intake and how a meal without meat is not a real meal, showing you his dentes canini as undeniable proof for his statement.

But I digress.

Coherence also means being true to our brand. We do artisan bread, yes, and we have a wide choice of high quality and healthy bread. We do make white bread as well - but nothing like others. It's a 20h process from first fermentation (yeast fermentation, sorry, doc) to baking on most of them. Just like sourdough, that degrades most of the hard-to-digest sugars that wheat contains - something that a lot of people confuse with a gluten intolerance.

That should be enough for 2 more weeks of baking - if the gas doesn't run out, first. But we're creative about everything these days. Even installed a little electric oven, though we won't be able to prepare the same quantity with it.

These days, it's hard to get the flour we usually use. We stocked up a lot on whole wheat and rye, as those come from a friends of mine who run a farm and mill a few villages over - but they can't come into town now. The white flour is running low, too - we had to buy a few of a different brand, that is not the same quality.

But people understand. I apologized the other day for the bread not being the best, as we have many orders and have to be extremely careful with our gas. That means that we can't respect the resting times for the dough 100%, sometimes it's a little too long - but until now, never too short.

Our clients don't mind. They know the situation, they're happy that we're able to produce for them, and are also happy to support us. Community stuff. And they know that we're doing our best, always. And that includes trying our best to meet the wants of those clients who prefer spongy and sweet bread - our best, but without changing what we are and do.


What are your thoughts about this topic? Please feel free to engage in any original way, including dropping links to your posts on similar topics. I'm happy to read (and curate) any quality content that is not created by LLM/AI, as well as read your own experience and point of view, I love to learn!



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13 comments
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The best and most important aspect about this wonderful enterprise is that you have every consumer at heart, the approach of making sure you make produce at every given time it is demanded is topnotch. This are things client's don't joke with, "availability". It doesn't matter if its not the best in the whole world but that positivity and being coherent goes a long way. @beelzael

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It's the best way of doing business. Creating situations where everybody wins.

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I am currently reading The Supernova Era by Cixin Liu. There's a part where kids are shown an incredibly long train of salt and msg. They're asked to estimate how long it will last the people of the country. They all think weeks. The kid's mind boggles when they're told that a bunch of carriages that they all ran past, around a mountain, for most of the day, would be a single day's supply.

So I wonder, in your picture of the stacks of 50KG stuff. How many days supply is that with your bakery operating at capacity?

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(Edited)

50kg of flour, yes. We produce loaves based on 500g of flour (around 700g after baking), so each bag is 100 loaves. Makes it 600 loaves in total. We can put 30 loaves into the big oven at once, so he have to bake 20 times. That uses around 3 cylinders of gas (we currently have 3).

Most people buy 1 loaf per week, sometimes 2 loaves. In a normal week, we use 250kg of flour, but we can't reach the coast nor the nearby towns these days, so we're using around 150kg per week. Meaning, we have enough for this week and the next - white flour that is.

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okay, come here, have a very close look into the oven...

Best said in a German accent?

Oops, even blacker humour than yours - sorry!

Sugary bread - that must be because of how they're raised hey? As do you think it's like that in Europe so much? European bread doesn't taste sweet to me, unless of course you're intentionally choosing a brioche or something? And Europeon bread is great imho.

Sourdough bread is uber popular here. Even the supermarket chains do their own versions, and then there are the more independent and more expensive bakeries for special treats, that is, if you're not making it yourself. It's so much nicer, and more filling too - nothing worse that a sugary white loaf to make you get high, come down, and require more...

My Mum makes gorgeous sourdough. I used to, but the temperature fluctuates so much in my house I gave up. I may start again when we move into the new place. Currently, we're on such a tight budget that I get all our bread from the free food waste charity. It's day old, but who cares? And it's quite often good sourdough too, and if you're even luckier, sourdough from the independent bakers.

I do think it's important to back up your nutritional understanding with research/science. People are so gullible. And they dont realise that bodies are diverse as well, and what works for one, may not work for another.

I was raised vegetarian by a mother who taught herself nutrition because her family's health mattered. She made me care about it too. And it was all from scratch, unlike some of the fake 'deli' meats and sausages that are 'plant based' but basically flour and seasoning! Mind you, I had a really great 'plant based' 'salami' the other day from the charity that I really enjoyed!

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Best said in a German accent?

🤣🤣🤣🤣

I just made "flour and seasoning" the other day for a BBQ, it turned out really, really good. I have to work on the consistency a little, but everyone loved the flavor. And it is indeed very similar to making bread.

IMG_20251011_143509(1).jpg

I remember going dumpster diving during my university years. It wasn't really necessary, but we hated seeing food to waste. And why not save a few bucks and food? Supermarkets started building fences around their garbage area soon... Spending a lot of money to make sure that their trash is secured and can't be taken advantage of. That logic...

My first loaves of bread were super-sour. Just how I love them. I like sour and bitter stuff, because, you know - I'm sweet enough. Have to balance it out. I tuned that down quite a bit for my clients, both because I got more experienced in how to handle sourdough and because it sold a lot better. But a hyper-fermented loaf from time to time... still my favorite.

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For some reason this comment didn't turn up in my alerts. I thought you sAw my comment and hated me haha. Glad you found it funny.

I really like sour. Sour bread, yoghurt, pickle. Much better than sweet imo. That bread looks great x

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I always love a good joke, especially when it's about Germans. people think we don't have any humor, but we're just so efficient that nobody notices it.

The Ciabatta style was actually a bit disappointing. We used our regular white dough, and though long fermentation, it just wasn't the same as the Ciabatta that I know. The consistency is of. Now, and that is ironic - the business who bought it loved it that way. Seems like they, too, only wanted a label to make it more interesting, with a different shape. At least they didn't want me to put sugar in it.

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My Dad was German. I know all about you weirdos 😜 And yes, you have great humour.

I guess the flour, the humidity, all kinds of things would change the ciabatta ..

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It was the dough. We didn't do an extra dough, but just used the regular dough that we use for pretzel for the Ciabatta :-D I had thought that they used the focaccia dough, which is closer to ciabatta, but they didn't. Anyway, the clients liked it, so all good 🤣

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There's some guy online who makes all these mad focaccia flavours, like gochujung, pumpkin spice, apple pie, etc. some sound terrible but some are tempting! Like a patisserie in town that makes croissants with all kinds of fillings - pistachio cream with raspberries, banana and caramel etc.

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