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| Sourdough (rec.food.sourdough) Discussing the hobby or craft of baking with sourdough. We are not just a recipe group, Our charter is to discuss the care, feeding, and breeding of yeasts and lactobacilli that make up sourdough cultures. |
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"BakerBoy" wrote in message m... I suggest you drop me a note off-list and we can avoid distractions from the troglodytes. So what is a troglodyte? Somebody who trys to lay some truth on knuckleheads, I suppose?!! |
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"Dick Adams" wrote:
"BakerBoy" wrote in message = I suggest you drop me a note off-list and we can avoid distractions=20 from the troglodytes. So what is a troglodyte? Somebody who trys to lay some truth on knuckleheads, I suppose?!! "Hear the words of the famous Troglodyte Philosopher." - Swift, 1709 Adios! BTW It's tries, not trys. -- Nick. Support severely wounded and disabled Veterans and their families! I've known US vets who served as far back as the Spanish American War. They are all my heroes! Thank a Veteran and Support Our Troops. You are not forgotten. Thanks ! ! ~Semper Fi~ |
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Nick Cramer wrote:
Mike Avery wrote: says... [ . . . ] In addition to the baking mix, they also sell the flour by itself under=20 the name "carbalose" for around 2.50 a pound. That would be something like 2 one-pound loaves. You may wish to offset that cost by using it in addition to flour-and what we do here is use 8% oatmeal as a high-fiber ingredient to slow carb uptake. You won't achieve as low a carb product as you'd wish, but it would be lower (especially if you use reduction and cut the slices thinner) than "normal." B/ |
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Brian Mailman wrote:
Nick Cramer wrote: Mike Avery wrote: says... [ . . . ] In addition to the baking mix, they also sell the flour by itself under=20 the name "carbalose" for around 2.50 a pound. That would be something like 2 one-pound loaves. You may wish to offset that cost by using it in addition to flour-and what we do here is use 8% oatmeal as a high-fiber ingredient to slow carb uptake. You won't achieve as low a carb product as you'd wish, but it would be lower (especially if you use reduction and cut the slices thinner) than "normal." Thanks for that, Brian. What kind of oatmeal do you use? All I have at the moment is pinhead. -- Nick. Support severely wounded and disabled Veterans and their families! I've known US vets who served as far back as the Spanish American War. They are all my heroes! Thank a Veteran and Support Our Troops. You are not forgotten. Thanks ! ! ~Semper Fi~ |
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Nick Cramer wrote:
Brian Mailman wrote: Nick Cramer wrote: Mike Avery wrote: says... [ . . . ] In addition to the baking mix, they also sell the flour by itself under=20 the name "carbalose" for around 2.50 a pound. That would be something like 2 one-pound loaves. and some change. Depends on the usual weight of your cup, and 2 cups to a pound loaf. You may wish to offset that cost by using it in addition to flour-and what we do here is use 8% oatmeal as a high-fiber ingredient to slow carb uptake. You won't achieve as low a carb product as you'd wish, but it would be lower (especially if you use reduction and cut the slices thinner) than "normal." For specialty diets, the rules to achieve a "just-like" are simple.. either dilution or reduction. In this case, I'm advising both. Dilute your regular flour with whatever the lower-carb stuff is, and eat less. Thanks for that, Brian. What kind of oatmeal do you use? All I have at the moment is pinhead. Just oatmeal. I don't use "gourmet" products in every day foods. B/ |
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Brian Mailman wrote:
Nick Cramer wrote: Brian Mailman wrote: Nick Cramer wrote: Mike Avery wrote: says... [ . . . ] For specialty diets, the rules to achieve a "just-like" are simple.. either dilution or reduction. In this case, I'm advising both. Dilute your regular flour with whatever the lower-carb stuff is, and eat less. Thanks for that, Brian. What kind of oatmeal do you use? All I have at the moment is pinhead. Just oatmeal. I don't use "gourmet" products in every day foods. B/ -- Nick. Support severely wounded and disabled Veterans and their families! I've known US vets who served as far back as the Spanish American War. They are all my heroes! Thank a Veteran and Support Our Troops. You are not forgotten. Thanks ! ! ~Semper Fi~ |
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Brian Mailman wrote:
Nick Cramer wrote: Brian Mailman wrote: Nick Cramer wrote: Mike Avery wrote: says... [ . . . ] For specialty diets, the rules to achieve a "just-like" are simple.. either dilution or reduction. In this case, I'm advising both. Dilute your regular flour with whatever the lower-carb stuff is, and eat less. Portion control is essential, for sure. Thanks for that, Brian. What kind of oatmeal do you use? All I have at the moment is pinhead. Just oatmeal. I don't use "gourmet" products in every day foods. Is pinhead a "gourmet" product? I thought it was just steel-cut whole groats, as still done in Scotland and Ireland? -- Nick. Support severely wounded and disabled Veterans and their families! I've known US vets who served as far back as the Spanish American War. They are all my heroes! Thank a Veteran and Support Our Troops. You are not forgotten. Thanks ! ! ~Semper Fi~ |
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"Nick Cramer" wrote in message ... Is pinhead a "gourmet" product? I thought it was just steel-cut whole groats, as still done in Scotland and Ireland? Pinhead oats is a common term, but not pinhead groats. You could find that out with a search, such as Google, if you did such things. "Gourmet" refers to unusual edibles, usually. One selling pinhead oats from a gourmet boutique would no doubt call them pinhead groats. That way, pinhead gourmets would be willing to pay more for them. Either way, they are not a usual component of sourdough breads. I know you did not want to learn these things. Now check my spelling. -- Dicky |
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Nick Cramer wrote:
Brian Mailman wrote: Thanks for that, Brian. What kind of oatmeal do you use? All I have at the moment is pinhead. Just oatmeal. I don't use "gourmet" products in every day foods. Is pinhead a "gourmet" product? I thought it was just steel-cut whole groats, as still done in Scotland and Ireland? Exactly. I mean I use what I have and don't pay attention to those kind of things for le quotidienne de ménage. I have a can or two of the imported oatmeal, but I'm not going to use that in something to sop up the gravy. B/ |
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"Brian Mailman" wrote in message m... ... I use what I have and don't pay attention to those kind of things for le quotidienne de ménage. Le mot quotidienne n'a pas été trouvé Nick, would you kindly check his spelling! -- Dicky |
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following up on this:
message, I said I would do this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cNfGpoGSmrI Sam |
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"Gourmet" refers to unusual edibles, usually. One selling pinhead oats from a gourmet boutique would no doubt call them pinhead groats. That way, pinhead gourmets would be willing to pay more for them. Either way, they are not a usual component of sourdough breads. I know you did not want to learn these things. Now check my spelling. -- Dicky Dick, you have made this old man's day, even if it is almost 9 PM here on the west coast of Canada! My wife of 60 years was brought up by Scottish grandparents and her mother, who although her mother was born in Canada, was a Scot through and through. So, Marie was fed a diet of oatmeal, in all of it's incarnations. Her mother had a recipe for stuffing for chicken, turkey, spareribs, whatever, which we do now, and is a 2nd cousin to haggis. Anywho, this stuff is great, and we do eat it whenever the occasion arises. And Marie also puts oatmeal in her loaves, and as she does the regular baking of bread and I do sourdough, we have a pretty good variety of healthy bread at our house. I am assuming that you meant the bonehead pinhead gourmets??? Cheers, old Doug on Vancouver Island BC |