How to Store High Quality or Homemade Bread

A large wheat sourdough miche, with cut side down on the countertop.

I am always surprised by how often I get asked this particular question! My customers that buy sourdough loaves at my bakery here in Central California often want to know how best to preserve their investment in good bread each week, and we would end up having a conversation about it on my porch (for me sometimes many times a day!).

After Bread Baking for Beginners was published, I was suddenly the bread mom to a growing herd of brand new baby bakers. They also wanted to know how to best store their bread that they had invested their time, care, and high-quality ingredients into making at home.

I will now reveal to you these mystical and magical secrets only known to me! The very finest methods of storing good bread!

If you have a large crusty sourdough loaf, you can simply keep it with the cut side down on the countertop. The exposure to the open air will keep the quality of the crust on the loaf. This method is great for loaves that are large, have a lot of whole-grain flour in them, and are made with sourdough like the bread I sell to my customers. It’s also great for bread you plan to eat over a couple of days while it is still fresh, although I have had bread like this 6 days after baking and it was still lovely to dip in soup. This method will not work as well for smaller, yeasted, mostly white flour bread, or bread made with less moisture, those will dry out and stale stored like this, but don’t worry we aren’t done talking about bread storage…

Bread for customer pickup at Alchemy Bread in brown paper bags.

Bread for customer pickup at Alchemy Bread in brown paper bags.

If you have ever bought good bread from a quality bakery, you have likely received your bread in a brown paper bag. We bakers love brown paper for a few reasons, it’s natural, it’s compost-able and often (always in my case) recycled. Paper has a breathable quality that improves the keeping quality of a crusty loaf while keeping it from getting to hard to cut. If you are baking bread at home and want to gift it to someone in a paper bag or store, simply be sure to cool it completely before bagging. You don’t want steam and condensation trapped inside the bag with the bread, this can make the crust very soft.

Kindergarten Honey Wheat loaves with beeswax wraps

Kindergarten Honey Wheat loaves with beeswax wraps

With some loaves, keeping the loaf soft is the overall goal of storing the bread. This is especially the case with sandwich-type loaves, like the Kindergarten Honey Wheat Bread that I make with my kids, and all enriched bread; like brioches, challahs, and milk bread you find in my book. My favorite way to store these types of bread that must be kept soft is with beeswax wraps. These are fabric coated in beeswax, they are washable, reusable, and when you warm the beeswax with your hands the fabric will stick to itself. These are also a great all-purpose replacement for plastic wrap around your kitchen, you can wrap half a lemon, a sandwich, or cover a bowl of rising dough with these wraps. As you can tell, I typically can’t say enough how much I love these things. I have them in lots of sizes and use them every day. You can find them on my Materials List (along with many other baking tools I recommend).

Sliced Sourdough

Sliced Sourdough

For longer-term bread storage scenarios, I recommend slicing the entire loaf, Ziploc bagging, and freezing. This is great for people that live alone and can’t go through a whole loaf in a few days, or people that live far from their favorite bakery (you can stock up on multiple loaves and freeze them!) For best results it’s important to slice the loaf when it’s still fresh and make your best attempt to get all the air out of the bag before freezing. The slicing is important because then you can thaw one or two individual slices as needed in your toaster (or by toasting in butter in a skillet). I have had a friend make me grilled cheese on frozen bread that she bought from me, and I was surprised how good it was and how perfectly it had held up in the freezer. If you need more convincing on this method you can read this manifesto on freezing bread in the New York Times.

If you haven’t started baking your own bread yet, you can get started with this free recipe, with my book, with the tools on this materials list, and with my online techniques class and I’ll get you started on the right path! With my book, class, and a handful of tools, you can have an enriching and relaxing new hobby, and impress your friends and family with your new skills. Don’t forget to tag me in your baking adventures on Instagram @AlchemyBread so I can be proud of you! Happy Baking & Keep Rising! -Bonnie

Loaves with Little Ones

With kids out of school and a lot of free time on our hands, this might be the perfect remedy. Here is an article I did for Parents Magazine in August of 2019. I felt now would be a great time to archive it here so you all can access it. I hope you enjoy, and please feel free to tag me on instagram @alchemybread I love to see kids baking bread! <3

If this little project inspires you to do more bread baking this year, you can find a link to my book and a thorough baking materials list here: www.alchemybread.com/book

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2019 Year Review in Cookbooks

I probably did more cooking, for more people (and for more of a social media audience for that matter) in 2019 than in any year prior. It was a year of branching out from my typical cooking style and repertoire of faithful recipes. Surprisingly, I did not have much of a learning curve with this, which I would attribute partially to experience in cooking, but more-so to the high quality of cookbooks I had to guide me this year. I thought I would share those with you here since I get many requests for recipes and cookbook recommendations. These books were not necessarily published this year, they are just the books that defined my personal cooking and baking year.

Since I’m a baker by trade, I feel like I have to mention first the baking book that I enjoyed the most this year.

The Tivoli Road Baker I’ve only had since the spring and it is already showing signs of wear due to how much I have used it as a reference. It’s almost like 4 books as it has so many recipes and so much utilitarian advice in it. I’ve made sprouted buckwheat sourdough, spelt plum galettes, perfectly spiced gingerbread, and lemon curd filled doughnuts from this book as you might expect from a high quality baking book. Perhaps surprisingly, I’ve also made roasted garlic mayonnaise, pickled carrots, curry chicken, a variety of salads and salad dressings, meat pies, and Cornish pasties. I can’t more highly recommend this book, not just for leveling up your baking and all the small notes of valuable advice tacked into the margins, but the sheer volume of quality recipes in every category. This book never quite makes it back into my bookshelf before I want to look at it again. I wish I had this book when I first started cooking and baking, I have learned so much from it this year.


I started out the year planning to working on my Japanese cooking. Our family has a sustained interest in Japanese food since my husband is half Japanese. I was also inspired because my friend Yukimi, a baker from Japan, planned to come visit us in the summer. I picked out this book:

I mostly wanted to try to understand the type of cooking possibly made at home or as street food. By the time my friend Yukimi returned for a 2nd visit from Japan we had made: ramen, okonomiyaki, tempura, soba, oyakadon, takoyaki, donburi, tonkatsu, udon, and so many more recipes with this book as my guide. I found the recipes thorough, informative, fun, and approachable. Even things that I wasn’t quite sure how it should taste (squid pancake balls? savory cabbage pancakes?) came out beautifully thanks to the explicit instructions. I really enjoyed this book and how it opened the door to talk with my friend in the kitchen somewhat confidently, in spite of our language barrier. Food can really open the door for so much more.

As many of you know, I went to Paris for the first time this year, which was an incredible experience, When I came home I definitely wanted to recreate in my kitchen some of the things I loved to eat there. I brought home a cookbook from Paris that was in French and used my google translate app to interpret the recipes which was a fun exercise, but I definitely needed a little more guidance in my native language. I found this book secondhand in a bookshop and I was so glad that I did.

I had followed David Lebovitz online for a very long time, and I felt that buying this book was extremely overdue on my part. I was correct. I have cooked 3-4 meals per week out of this book consistently since I bought it. Possibly since David originally hails from Northern California a little bit near where I live, his take on french cooking feels somewhat familiar and very attainable to me. I like the breadth of this book a lot, there are plenty of simple recipes as well as more “project” type recipes that are fun to tackle and the desserts are fantastic as well. Get this book.

Finally, we have a book that I received at the end of the year as a gift from a dear friend.

I have only had this book about a month, but I am so excited to use it as a reference throughout the coming year. It is laid out seasonally which is very useful as a newbie to having a small garden. It’s extremely visual in nature which is great for showing recipes to my kids. We do like to cook with a lot of produce, so this is a nice book for our family. I have only made a handful of recipes from it so far and they have all been delicious and helpful for me since I cook a lot but don’t always feel the most inspired and creative when I see a carrot!

Here’s to a new year filled with plenty of good cooking! I hope perhaps you will like one of these books as much as I have.


Bread Baking for Beginners Class Scrapbook

After much demand following the success of my first book, I finally started offering bread baking classes here at Alchemy Bread in September of 2019! As of this writing, we have put 12 sold out and incredibly fun classes in the books, with many more on the calendar for the future. My friend Marilyn was kind enough to drop in on one of my first classes and capture some beautiful photos. Enjoy this scrapbook, and consider joining us for a class! You can sign up for one in the shop, or if you don’t see an available class, sign up for my email newsletter, follow on facebook or on Instagram to keep in touch with what’s happening here, those links are at the very bottom of the page.

BBGA ARTICLE

Friendship Bake:

Building Community

(Article for Bread Lines, Bread Baker's Guild of America magazine)

Bonnie scoring loaves of bread in her kitchen.

Bonnie scoring loaves of bread in her kitchen.

It’s quarter to five on a warm late summer evening. Sourdough loaves glow in the amber light in the small dining room of our tiny 1920’s bungalow in downtown Modesto, California, the results of a full night and day of hand mixing, shaping and baking. I  pull the last of the baguettes from the oven as steam floods the tiny kitchen. Outside I can hear the familiar squeaking of the picket fence gate as my front yard begins filling with a small crowd, arranging themselves into a line. Animated with conversation, the line trails out of the yard, onto the sidewalk and down the street. I open the front door and shout hello to friends and neighbors , greet newcomers, and capture a few hugs from kids as I spread colorful blankets and cushions onto the grass next to the garden beds overflowing with wildflowers. It’s story time at Alchemy Bread. Children gather close to hear a picture book with a bread or baking theme. I read the story to the sound of giggles from the children, their families waiting to buy their weekly bread. 

Guest, author and illustrator Ben Hatke, doing storytime at Alchemy Bread's friendship bake.

Guest, author and illustrator Ben Hatke, doing storytime at Alchemy Bread's friendship bake.

 

The hands of my regulars are laden with treasures. Homemade plum jam, eggs from backyards hens,  a large bag of  coffee roasted in a home kitchen, salsa, a packet of foil steaming with freshly made tortillas, bundles of flowers and a bags full of tomatoes and peppers and herbs. They are all here for our weekly tradition called ‘Friendship Bake” an opportunity to barter anything homemade or homegrown for fresh bread. 

Breads on display on the porch.

Breads on display on the porch.

 

How did a tiny cottage bakery with no storefront, no marketing and no listed address on the outskirts of a rough downtown neighborhood grow to draw a crowd? The answer is community. I started baking out of my tiny home oven and delivering my bread around nearby neighborhoods in my cargo bike 3 years ago. I started small by investing a lot of time in my community. I partnered with my friend who is a doula, to give my bread to postpartum moms after their new baby was born. Donated bread to preschools, elementary schools, church dinners, and made meals for friends that were sick or injured. Taught baking classes to kids through local culinary classes and 4H clubs. Donated bread to art gallery openings, poetry readings, community garden work days, and for sharing at potlucks. Going to a weekly park playdate and arriving with a big basket of bread to share with moms and kids. This same park is where I started an initiative with a few other small businesses to make lunches with local jams coffee and fruit, load it into my bike and take it to the park to serve the homeless that live there. Each small act has touched a new web of people, and as those connections are nurtured and grown, positive word of mouth has extended the line in front of my house. 

Happy customers in line, Willow flower truck making bouquets in the driveway.

Happy customers in line, Willow flower truck making bouquets in the driveway.

 

As Friendship Bake has flourished,  it became an opportunity to support local artists. Featured once a month during bread pickup as part of downtown Art Walk have been watercolorists, photographers, printmakers, textile artists and florists adding beauty to our weekly gathering. A collaboration with our poetry center created “bread bag poetry”, featuring local poems in our bread bags each week, and promoting poetry events in our city. We hosted Porchfest, a community music festival put on in our neighborhoods, where anyone was welcome to stop by and hear acoustic tunes in our front yard and socialize on our porch. We even had a children’s book author and illustrator do our story time and a book signing here. These events have brought new dimensions to what we can do with bread. 

Colorful line stretching down the block, children playing in the wildflowers.

Colorful line stretching down the block, children playing in the wildflowers.

 

Engaging with the community has continuously amended the lovely cast of characters that assemble here each week. The fruits of their labors in their hands, conversations shift from the usual “what do you do?” to “what do you love to do? or, What did you make?” and while the eclectic group includes schoolteachers, gardeners, yogis, musicians, artists, poets, woodworkers, makers, farmers, crafters, cooks and all sorts of interesting folks, bartering as a community and storytelling together has given us a glimpse into the reason we are all here; for a deeper connection, and the opportunity to really know and serve one another.

children eating cookies and listening to Mattea Overstreet sing and play guitar at Porchfest.

children eating cookies and listening to Mattea Overstreet sing and play guitar at Porchfest.

 

When the sun sets on friendship bake and all the bread has sold out, some regulars stick around to gather on the porch. They know that I’ll disappear into the kitchen, and reappear with homemade pizzas and a few bottles of wine. It’s over this food and conversation that we forge the next great thing we’ll do in the spirit of community, together.

Tiny artists always welcome on the porch.

Tiny artists always welcome on the porch.

Pizza with friends on the porch

Pizza with friends on the porch

pizza love &lt;3

pizza love <3

Cosmic Gathering: Huntress Moon

Cosmic Gathering is our women only invitation to connection and self care brought together by Candace of Lovely Woods press, Michelle of Cosmic Bath &Beauty, and Myself. Our fall gathering was a beautiful pause to the autumn season for an evening of spiced and spiked drinks, fall flavors, and an opportunity to support local female entrepreneurs while spending time with old friends and connecting with new ones. Offerings included fall flower crowns, portraiture, tarot readings, hand scrub bar, vintage dresses, crystal jewelry, henna, live typewriter poetry, sourdough specialties, and artful creations. Here are some behind the scenes photos by wonderful Marilyn Days Photography, I hope they entice you to attend our next gathering in the spring and to follow some of these local female powerhouses. 

Lovely, Cosmic, Alchemy.&nbsp;

Lovely, Cosmic, Alchemy. 

prepping Alchemy Bread family meal for all the craftswomen

prepping Alchemy Bread family meal for all the craftswomen

bread and cheeseboard for craftswomen

bread and cheeseboard for craftswomen

Kitchen Alchemy&nbsp;

Kitchen Alchemy 

Arranging a feast for huntresses and gatherers

Arranging a feast for huntresses and gatherers

Persimmon meditation

Persimmon meditation

Alchemy Bread sourdough baguettes&nbsp;

Alchemy Bread sourdough baguettes 

Spiced apple bourbon elixir handcrafted by Lovely Woods

Spiced apple bourbon elixir handcrafted by Lovely Woods

flower crowns made by Lovely Woods

flower crowns made by Lovely Woods

Lovely Woods Display setup.&nbsp;

Lovely Woods Display setup. 

Chelsea America our portrait artist warming up in her beautiful vintage chairs.&nbsp;

Chelsea America our portrait artist warming up in her beautiful vintage chairs. 

Portraits in watercolor by Chelsea

Portraits in watercolor by Chelsea

Felicia of The Rad Vintager setting up delicate dresses.&nbsp;

Felicia of The Rad Vintager setting up delicate dresses. 

Tarot reading with Lili of Black Moon Healing.&nbsp;

Tarot reading with Lili of Black Moon Healing

Christina of Moonlit Substance setting up her display.&nbsp;

Christina of Moonlit Substance setting up her display. 

Michelle of Cosmic Bath &amp; Beauty offering hand scrubs and warm hugs.&nbsp;

Michelle of Cosmic Bath & Beauty offering hand scrubs and warm hugs. 

Beautiful crowd of wonderful women a mixxin' and a minglin'&nbsp;

Beautiful crowd of wonderful women a mixxin' and a minglin' 

Gillian and Stella of MoSt Poetry writing poems on the spot on vintage typewriters

Gillian and Stella of MoSt Poetry writing poems on the spot on vintage typewriters

Sophia, Gillian, Lili, Candace, Michelle, Bonnie, Brook, Felicia, Gigi, Christina, Stella, Chelsea.&nbsp;Poets, card readers, carvers, soapmakers, bakers, artists,&nbsp; curators, handcrafters, writers and painters. The makers of Cosmic Gathering ma…

Sophia, Gillian, Lili, Candace, Michelle, Bonnie, Brook, Felicia, Gigi, Christina, Stella, Chelsea. 

Poets, card readers, carvers, soapmakers, bakers, artists,  curators, handcrafters, writers and painters. The makers of Cosmic Gathering magic. 

All photography by wonderful Marilyn Days Photography.&nbsp;

All photography by wonderful Marilyn Days Photography

Community Culture - Soup Club

You will need a bigger pot.

Last year I came across an article about a group of women in New York who had started a Soup Club, The basic premise being that each week one member would cook a big batch of soup for all the members of the club, taking turns around the group. I found this idea so charming and fun, I asked around until I finally found in my friend Sarah, someone who also had the desire to make it happen. Before long, being the great organizer that she is, we had 7 members in our little club and we set about delivering jars of soup to each others homes and texting back an forth to arrange soup delivery amongst our neighborhoods.  

Over time it occurred to us that we needed a central meeting place for our weekly soup exchange.  

We settled on Wednesday mornings in a central park, and that was when soup club really blossomed. 

Our children became fast friends, and what had once been a scattered grouping of rushed hellos on doorsteps became an epic weekly picnic of glorious proportions taking over one of the large tables in the middle of the park. Seasonal fruit, deviled eggs, lemon bars, brownies, brie, sourdough and homemade lemonade proliferated.  Soup was no longer the main attraction, although we did all enjoy the opportunity to flex our culinary muscles and broaden our creativity on a canvas of veggie broth, we also bonded to each other with a fierceness fueled by laughter, exhaustion, and sharing the big and small trials of everyday life over thermos' of coffee on foggy fall and winter mornings.

We did have some gorgeously artistic and classy soups and garnishes. This butternut squash, pear and ginger bisque (by Courtney) with arugula salad (by Hayley) was one of my personal favorite pairings.

Another favorite of mine was Sarah's butter braised root vegetable soup with sourdough croutons and lacey parmesan crisps. The golden color was so stunning! Other points for creativity definitely need to be awarded to Lacey's bright pink beet and pasta soup, it was very memorable and loved, I only wish I had snagged a photo. There were a few editions of tomato soup (Alice's was particularly nice), a couple variations of potato soup, and a few with noodles or beans. I'm so excited for next season of soup club, I think we all raised the bar on each other's cooking and introduced each other to new concepts of deliciousness we hadn't considered before.  

So, now you probably want to start your own soup club right? Here are my tips for success.

1. Choose at least 4 people that all have something in common, this makes it easier to meet up. Same neighborhood, same workplace, kids go to the same school, similar schedule. Ideally your lives can intersect on a weekly basis without a ton of additional scheduling to meet. Most of our group are homeschooling work at home moms, so we had the flexibility to meet on a weekday morning. If you can turn your soup exchange into a weekly playdate or gathering, I highly recommend it!

2. How will you communicate? Email? Group text? Facebook group? I like the idea of a facebook group because then you can have comment chains/replies to different topics and it's a fun way to share photos within your group.

3. Dietary restrictions? A few of our members are vegetarian or veggie leaning, so we had a vegetarian soup club. Make sure you are all on the same page so everyone enjoys the sharing experience. 

4. Get some big glass jars and a big pot! It's time to make some soup! 

I'm including my rough recipe for what I call "Lentil and Farro Soup" and what my kids simply call...

The Good Soup

Plan ahead when making a large quantity of soup. I make my own veggie broth simply by saving odds and ends of carrot, celery, and onion in a bag in my freezer. Once a month when its my turn to make soup, I put all my mirepoix scraps into my slow cooker and turn it on low over night. In the morning, strain and you have a rich homemade veggie broth. This is an affordable soup to make, and the key to the beauty of it is an ingredient that is free, time. What makes this peasant soup taste rich are 3 things: homemade broth, roasted garlic, and caramelized onions. It doesn't cost anything extra, but a bit of extra effort takes ordinary ingredients and makes them extraordinary. The other key to soup in large quantities is adequate seasoning. Never underestimate the importance salt and pepper, Never. 

To roast garlic: My favorite way to roast garlic is to cut the heads, place them in foil, drizzle with olive oil, and bake at 450 for about 30 minutes until the garlic cloves are soft and pop right out of the papery bulbs, It's not much work, and your house will smell like heaven, If you are going to roast one head of garlic, you might as well roast six, at least that's my opinion, but I digress. 

The Good Soup (A large quantity)

1/2 cup olive oil

1 cup red wine

4 onions, diced

4 carrots, diced

4 celery, diced

2 whole heads roasted garlic

6 quarts homemade veggie stock

2 15 oz cans diced tomato

2 cups red lentils

2 cups pearled farro, barley, or bulgur.

pinches of fresh rosemary, thyme,marjoram,oregano, and 2 bay leaf. 

Take time to slowly caramelize your diced onions in the 1/2 cup of olive oil, this can take up to 35 minute, so listen to some good music, have a glass of wine and be happy while making your soup! I like to chop my carrot and celery while I'm waiting for my onions to slowly caramelize into sweet smelling heaven. When they are lovely golden and juicy, deglaze the pot with your red wine. Let the wine simmer down into a syrupy consistency and then its time to go in with the carrots and celery, plenty (plenty! a handful!) of salt and pepper, and let the mirepoix get soft just for a bit sprinkling in all your beautiful roasted garlic and fresh herbs and stirring about with an old wooden spoon. Next it's time to put in your tomato and let it get acquainted with your other veggies for a moment. When this all has a sizzle going, add your veggie broth, plenty more salt and pepper, and your lentils and grains. Red lentils and pearled grains both only take between 15-20 minutes to cook, but it will take a while for your big soup pot to come up to a boil. Make sure to test your soup for seasoning and adjust as needed. If the flavors just don't seem to pop, you often just need more salt and pepper. You can easily pare this recipe down, but it's worth making a big batch because it holds up so well and is so economical, it's a weekly staple at our house. Sometimes I add a bit of small diced potato along with the other veggies and it's very nice, it is also lovely to add ribbons of greens towards the end of cooking time. It's endlessly adaptable, I hope you'll make it your own!

With Love, Bonnie

A Declaration of Food Sharing

We declare that soup shall be Shared.

Why soup? Soup scales up and Travels well.

Soup is economical, basic, and Nondenominational.

Soup Club is A State of Being, not a monthly meeting.

We are not limited to Special Occasion soup for holidays, births, moving or grief.

Salt your soup. Embrace crushed red pepper.

A black belt is a white belt who Never Quit. Make your soup.

Never Apologize for your soup.

Make soup with Abandon.

Remember, it’s just Soup.

 

Customer Scrapbook-Candace Jenkins of Lovely Woods Press

Customer Scrapbook is an ongoing collection of the Alchemy Bread enthusiasts who make our community vibrant in unique ways. I'm happy to use the third installment to introduce you to Candace Jenkins, the jane-of-all-trades behind Lovely Woods Press.

"My focus as a small businesswoman and farmer is to support local products that are created mindfully. Bonnie's passion for quality and creativity shines through in the amazing flavor and texture of every loaf...I mean.. I ate 6 pieces of toast slathered in butter in the past hour with the excuse of doing research for this quote! I can't get enough!" -Candace

If Candace already looks familiar to you, you've likely seen her running the pastured and organic eggs booth at the downtown Modesto farmer's market. She spends her days in muddy boots doing farm work, collecting eggs and caring for free roaming hens.

The first thing that you'd likely notice about her is her easygoing demeanor, folksy charm and wry wit. A wanderer and a dabbler, talking to her is a pleasure because she has so many endeavors under her belt. She spends her free time venturing in the wilderness, gardening, playing guitar and working on her archery skills, but first and foremost she's an artist.

Her personality shines through in the whimsical but rough hewn style of her art. Wildflowers, antlers, arrows and oak leaves reflect the sense of wilderness present in her prints and carvings.

She created a custom stamp from my artwork for my bread packaging. Candace is a thoughtful listener,easy to trust, and a pleasure to exchange creative ideas with. 

Aside from carving beautiful logo stamps for the discerning brand that wants that authentic  handcrafted feel to their identity, she creates rustic and primitive wall art from reclaimed wood. 

Thank you Candace, for making the valley a little more beautiful just by being your wild, warrior, huntress, animal guardian, self.

Follow along with Candace to keep up with her adventures and artistic offerings.

www.facebook.com/lovelywoodspress

www.instagram.com/lovely.woods

www.etsy.com/shop/LovelyWoodsPress