My name is Carol Sturgeleski.
About 43 years.
I learned just by doing.
Probably in 1962.
Challah
Honey Whole Wheat and Challah
Sunset Cook Book of Breads, Red Star Centennial Bread Sampler, Better Homes and Garden Cookbook, sometimes the newspaper, and whatever recipe hits my fancy.
KitchenAid with dough hook, but then I always knead with my hands.
In summertime, I leave it in the metal bowl with a cover over it. In wintertime, I warm the oven then shut it off and put the bowl in the oven with a cover.
On my stone and bread pans depending on what type of bread I am baking.
Working with my hands, smelling it and knowing what I put in the bread. No preservatives.
Ciabatta. It is always worth it when you can learn from your mistakes.
I put sauteed onion and garlic in my Challah bread.
I have learned you can put fruits, nuts, seeds, cranberries, anything you like in bread.
White Bread.
Dakota Maid Bread Flour and Mississippi Coop Organic Unbleached, Bob’s Red Mill Organic. Sometimes I mix them.
Mississippi Coop bulk yeast.
Klecko gave me some of his sourdough and I made French sourdough and it was delicious.
Convection Oven.
I sometimes use a stone and sometimes I put a pan of water in the lower rack, but don’t use water with the stone.
KitchenAid dough hook and my hands.
9×5 Bread pans and W shaped non-stick for French Sourdough and Stone.
Round or oblong on Stone.
I have made 10 loaves at one time. That was when I first started to make bread and I got the water for the yeast too hot and it was a mess, but that is how you learn.
Yes, but more in Winter.
SuperValu, Natural Ovens.
Sunset Cook Book of Breads. Very old.
I really don’t know. I believe if you can read you can bake. Find the time; it is worth it.
Klecko was demonstrating at the Mississippi Coop on Selby and I met him. Then a few weeks later I saw an article in the Highland Villager about him starting a Bread Club and I attended the meeting.
We met at Mississippi Coop on Selby Ave. There were about 8 people there.
Learning from one another and meeting great people. You are never too old to learn.
Little different hints on yeast and how it reacts, flour and moisture in baking.