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Category Archives: Don Guerra Barrio bread

Welcome to My Bread Making Classroom and Grain Walks in Maine and Petaluma California

Welcome to My Bread Making Classroom and Grain Walks in Maine and Petaluma California

It’s been a while since I’ve written. Life moves fast and sometimes we don’t make blog writing a priority. Between working, gardening, farming, keeping up a home and caring for my husband, I haven’t stopped. There have been funerals, engagements, weddings, birthday celebrations to prepare for, beekeeping classes and more. It doesn’t matter. I’m back.

My husband Ken and me and our cousin Michael and Alexandra’s weddinghttps://letsmakemudpies.wordpress.com

I reported in my last blog that I would share recipes from my Maine Kneading Conference in Skowhegan Maine. I took classes all week and started with Lower East Side Manhattan’s Jaqueline Eng’s sourdough bread class at Kennebec College. I may have paid extra for this course, since it involved dinner with the bakers/instructors. Jacqueline owns Party Bus Bake Shop in New York City. She was young and fun and gave explicit instructions on how to form your loaf and even talked about the math and particular ratios that you need to make a sourdough loaf. I was out of my league. Tired to take notes. Maybe even took a video of her explaining how to change hydration, etc… I walked away defeated. But I’m a beginner, I have to remind myself. Whenever I’ve baked bread, I’m a rule breaker. I add an egg (from my girlfriends in the coop), dry milk, olive oil, butter, salt, sometimes molasses, or beer. You name it, I’ve added it to my sourdough loaves. That’s what’s so great about baking. When you have been doing it as long as I have, you have the courage to break the rules. Someone like my husband Ken, would be better at sourdough. He would follow directions exactly, and not change a thing. But that’s no fun.

Jacqueline Eng’s Bakers Math

Let’s go back to how the trip to Maine actually started. I asked my husband to confirm how to get the key, since he made the reservation. It was too late to call the night before we left, so in the morning, while I was packing, I called the VRBO. A man answered and informed me, his son lives in the VRBO now because of a divorce. He thought he had taken it off the website. 

I quickly ran to the office where my husband works. He was in the middle of a training lesson and couldn’t help me. So, I called my good friend Nancy Solomon, who is a travel agent. She promptly made a few calls and booked another VRBO 30 minutes away from the conference. I was grateful. I could finish packing and get driven to the airport by Ken and pick up my son Curtis. Nancy makes my life easier. Here was my trip with Nancy in Iceland.

Spent the weekend before in Calabasas in Southern California. My Aunt Teri and I had attended her son Michael’s bride Alexandra’s bridal shower. My Aunt Teri and I drove to Southern California on Saturday, attended the beautiful shower on Sunday and drove home on Monday. We were graciously invited to stay with the bride’s mother Saundra. My Aunt Teri and I love to travel together. She is like a mouse. Super quiet. I toss and turn, but she never snores or moves an inch.

Ken drove Curtis and I landed in Boston late July 25th. We stayed at a hotel in Boston, then got a shuttle to the rental car place at the airport the following morning. Curtis scored a 2023 Q50s Infiniti by talking the sales guy into an upgrade. We took off for our destination, only stopping in Freeport Maine for chocolates at A. Wilbur’s of Maine and lunch at Tuscan Bistro. Had to buy the chocolate covered blueberries, liquorice and a few dark chocolates with caramel.

A. Wilbur’s Of Maine Chocolates https://www.wilburs.com/

Curtis dropped me off at Kennebec Community College a few hours later and he then checked in to our VRBO in Heartland Maine. The place was located on Moose Lake. It was out in the middle of nowhere. My only two complaints were the wet dog hair smell in the house and how there wasn’t a bathroom upstairs. Each time we needed to use the bathroom, Curtis and I both had to walk down these creaky steps to the other side of the house. Overall, we were grateful to have a place to sleep, since our plans had changed at the last minute.

Don Guerra gave the keynote speech after a hearty breakfast made by Beesham Soogrim from Sweden also known as Beesham the Baker and his staff at the Skowhegan State Fair. Don’s speech about his start in his “garage bakery”was inspiring and started off our week with a positive message and warmth. Don is an internationally known baker, educator and advocate for local food systems. Similar to Berkeley’s own Alice Waters and Chez Panisse (a blog about her restaurant and mission here ), he is passionate about providing heritage grains to the local community and beyond. He has taught at the University of Arizona and affiliated with the seed to table program at Tucson Village Farm. He’s a James Beard Award winner, the founder of Barrio Bread, an artisan bakery in Tuscon Arizona. His newest enterprise will be bringing Sonoran wheat sourdough bagels, baguettes, breads and more to the new Gilbert location in Phoenix at Hayden Flour Mills’ kitchen one day a week. He is happy to be collaborating with Vermont’s Emma Zimmerman the co-founder and who recently received a James Beard nomination this year for her book “The Miller’s Daughter.” She was also involved at Amber Lambke’s co-founder of Maine Grain Alliance’s Kneading Conference and stood out sporting a dress made with an Arizona grain bag. Just stunning and so creative!

Here is Emma Zimmerman and Sheep and baker, wool curator at North Star Farm’s Lopez Island Washington

We ate well, trying several types of bread for the next three days. Beesham Soogrim shared his Walnut Bread recipe and his Beetroot Bread recipe which I have yet to try. He teaches sourdough master classes online and has a You Tube Channel. Andrew Janjigian (also known as wordloaf on Instagram) prepared his Armenian Tahini Spirals substituting mochi flour (or glutinous rice flour) instead of whole wheat. Andrew sells a popular Bread Baker’s Pocket Companion which provides conversion tables, formulas and bread recipes. I’m most excited to make this tahini spirals, since I’ve never tried baking anything like this before.

Nora Allen from Mel the Bakery in New York taught a rye bread (Smoorebrod) workshop at Maine Grain Alliance’s Kneading Conference. She shared a handout on Rye since she had a class on rye bread. Chef Ashley Patino from Pizza Bones in Richmond, Virginia Gave a pizza making class, and The Maine Meal taught a pasta class and explained how they got involved with a farm to school lunch program in Skowhegan during the pandemic. Of course they use Maine Grains flours and their pastas and soups can be found at the Belfast Farmers Market in Skowhegan.

I barely caught the end of Alex Bois’ flat bread class. Alex is from Lost Bread Company in Philadelphia Pennsylvania. He owns a bakery (Howard Street currently closed, but reopening soon) and mill and sells his breads and pastries at a few New York Farmers Markets and four Farmers Market locations in Philadelphia. Alex makes a smoked potato knish, a hominy biscuit, a buckwheat cherry loaf, a whole grain croissant, a spelt hand pie, pretzle shortbreads and more. My son Curtis and I had a lengthy conversation with Alex while running into him at Bloomfield’s Tavern, the local bar in Skohegan, Maine.

My son Curtis and Chef Alex Bois from Lost Bread Co.

One morning I woke up extra early for a Grain Walk with Richard Roberts a grain expert. He took us to a wheat farm similar to Tara Firma Farms in Petaluma which I haven’t written about yet. They grow the grain for their non-profit Honore’ Farm and Mills. Last May, Ken and I went to a community Hourani wheat, and Jaljuli planting day led by Mary Giles. Mark Squire co-owner of Tara Firma Farm shared his farm story.This day deserves a blog to itself and I promise to share more.

Mary Giles of Honore Farms and Mill and Mark Squire of Tara Firma Farms Petaluma

The best day was taking a drive into Skowhegan where I had lunch at The Millers Table Cafe and Bakery. The Maine Grain Mill was closed for tours that day, but the dry goods store was open. I had a ball looking at all of the gifts, books about growing grain and Maine Grain’s offerings. I would love to write more on this beautiful place as well. What was most inspiring was their library of cookbooks which were free to the public to check out. I was mesmerized by all of the famous authors and writers and wished I could have rented out a few.

Thanks for all the support and for taking the time to read my blog. It means the world. I’ve barely scratched the surface of writing about the Kneading Conference. Let’s see if I get my chef drive back into the kitchen to whip up a loaf. You know i will share it on Instagram, so keep a watch out.

Teri

 

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Maine’s Kneading Conference for Bread, Beer and Fun

Maine’s Kneading Conference for Bread, Beer and Fun

 Just got home from a Kneading Conference in Showhegan Maine. Oh my goodness did I get an earful and a full stomach. We ate and ate bread all week tasting, learning about local grains from Maine Grains, and eating fresh local, organic food grown nearby. I met dozens of famous bread makers, chefs, bakery owners, recipe developers, garage bakers, homesteaders, and just people who love to bake bread and feed people. Beesham Soogrim  “Beesham the Baker” from Sweden catered all of our delicious meals.  Don Guerra from Barrio Bread who won the 2022 James Beard Award for Outstanding Baker in southern Arizona gave the keynote speech, Jacqueline Eng from Party Bus Bakeshop gave a naturally leavened hearth bread and baguette class at Kennebec Valley Community College the day before the conference started, Dan Leader from Bread Alone and Dr Gemma Humbly-Smith from The Supplant Company spoke about reducing food waste in the baking field about utilizing the wheat stalk which when adding to the flour adds eight times more fiber than regular flour. Unfortunately, I didn’t arrive early enough to attend Dan’s class, but I did find myself getting into Skowhegan early enough to take Jaqueline Eng’s course. There were many more chefs and bakers. I will have to make a part II of this blog just to include everyone.

Me and my son Curtis in Freeport Maine at Tuscan Bistro

My adventure began when my son Curtis and I were driven to the San Francisco Airport by my husband Ken on Tuesday around 11:30AM. Ken stayed home to care for the farm. Curtis and I flew to Boston Logan Airport and proceeded to get a shuttle to the Town Place Suites. It was a long day and I didn’t have a TV that worked on Jet Blue, but I listened to podcasts and slept.

The hotel was fine and we were literally only there for a limited time. We shuttled back to the airport to rent the car and my son Curtis was able to talk the sales guy into giving us the upgraded Infinity Q50s for only $10.00 more dollars a day. Sweet!

This was the first time my 38 yr old son Curtis and I have traveled together and it was a hoot. We both have anxiety at some level, so we kept each other honest and real. We drove towards Showhegan only stopping once for lunch and libations at Tuscan Bistro in Freeport Maine as our final destination would take three hours. It wasn’t a cake walk getting to the University, or the class but we eventually made it there. Curtis dropped me off to check into the VRBO in Hartland Maine next to Moosehead Lake.

Jacqueline Eng, PartyBus Bakeshop teaching a bread class at Kennebec Valley Community College’s Kneading Conference 2023

I quickly felt at home there at the community college kitchen since I have taken lots of baking classes at our own Diablo Valley Junior College near my home over 20 years ago and have worked as a sous chef at lots of cooking classes at Andronico’s Market and Draeger’s Market. 

I was able to make my own personal with a high hydration levain loaf, using the autolyse method and adding whichever add-ins I wanted. They offered several types of flours from Maine Grains, all with different protein levels. Khorasan, rye, buckwheat, spelt, red fife, kamut and more. I used the high 75% extraction mixed flours which had the bran and germ sifted out which makes a lighter flour. Plus I added a kamut flour, sesame seeds, quinoa, flax seeds, molasses, olive oil and walnuts in my loaf. These loaves were baked off two days later at the kneading conference and had to wait until the pizza class had ended to use their oven.

This was my loaf after I added all of my ingredients, which unfortunately I didn’t get to try

I didn’t get around to looking for my loaf until day three. It was practically impossible to find my loaf because each loaf had a name taped at the bottom, but most were skewed and I just grabbed one that could have been mine. I didn’t grab my loaf, cause the one I cut today for breakfast was very plain. I did take a friend Cat’s loaf who had to leave the conference a day early. I gave it to the bartender Alexis at Bloomfield’s Tavern that evening where Curtis and I met for Allagash Beer and cocktails. Alexis’ father had a bakery that she worked at when she was a teen, so she was excited to be given the bread. I was hoping she and my son would hit it off. I’m always trying to get my boys married off. Shhh. Don’t tell them. Ohh. And we happened to see one of the presenters, Philadelphia chef Alex Bois, owner of Lost Bread Co.  Alex is a James Beard Rising Star Chef Award winner and owns one of the best bakeries in the country according to Food and Wine Magazine. 

I could go on and on about the event. It was magical. I’m home with dozens of recipes, new Instagram people to follow, and tons of inspiration to bake and feed people. I’m grateful for my husband Ken who graciously let me attend this even though it was all the way across the country. He attended to my vegetables, flowers and more importantly the chickens at the farm.

These wild flower arrangements were arranged all over the picnic tables and at each table to brighten our day. Many of these grow wild along the highways

More fun stories in part II and recipes to follow. Thanks for joining me and I’m in awe at all the love and support my fellow blog followers have given me through the years.

Teri

 

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