Sourdough rhythm

I used to really overthink sourdough. And, because of that, I didn’t enjoy the process, and I rarely kept a starter going, beyond a couple bakes.

I started baking small batches, often, leaving my sourdough starter on the countertop all the time. It’s been there for weeks now, with a tea towel. I suppose that will come to an end, keeping it covered with only a towel, once spring is in full swing and flies and fruit flies become a hassle again.

But, I think my aha! Moment with sourdough, and why it seems so easy to some and so complicated to others, happened when I took my starter along on a trip to our yearly campout, and made bread at the campfire.

I had my starter, flour, water and salt. And the supplied dishes in the cabin. I didn’t have all my usual tools and kitchen toys; not even my favorite bowl.

And it was in that moment, when I thought about my pioneer ancestors, who made bread because they had to feed their family. I’m betting they didn’t worry about hydration percentages. They used what they had, and experience, and baked bread.

My dad likes to tell a story of a great aunt or grandma, kneading bread and reaching over to feed the wood cook stove with dried cow pies, and returning to the kneading. I don’t know if it’s true. But, I know they didn’t have a fancy mixer, special bowl, or a way to tell if their sourdough was a particular hydration. For the most part, they were surviving. It always amazes me how much grit and perseverance our pioneer ancestors had.

So, I stripped off all the “required tools mindset” and used whatever flour I could find in the little town next to the campground. It wasn’t organic, and it was probably bleached. I dumped my starter in a bowl, kneaded it in the bowl with my hands, and baked it in the fire. It was fantastic.

And, it reminded me that although I love to read bread books, and even geek out over the science of what all goes on, bread is really quite simple.

So, sourdough, or wild bread; bread leavened with the wild yeast in the air…can be complicated or it can be super simple. I choose simple.

And what has made it so much easier, is making it a rhythm or habit. I’ve done it enough times and in close succession, that I’m past the part of thinking through the steps.

But, to get there, you have to make a lot of bread. Or, make bread often. I fell in love with the dutch oven method, and those loaves bake better if they aren’t so big. And, once wild bread/sourdough became a part of my natural rhythm in the kitchen, making enough bread for 2-3 days, and repeating, takes only minutes of actual work a day. The rest of the time, I’m doing my usual thing. Why 2-3 days? Well, part of that is because I like bread really fresh. The other part is because that keeps me from having too much starter on my countertop.

That’s what I would hope for anyone who wants to bake bread for their family; for it to become so common place, that it falls in rhythm with their life.

And feel free to geek out on the terminology of sourdough. I do. I love the science of it. But, for me to get to this point where it’s effortless to bake bread, naturally, with only water, flour, and salt and have it taste incredible, I had to cut it down to the basics and pretend I was a pioneer. (I do use my Bosch mixer most of the time at home! But, it’s the theory of it… Bread is not complicated. If it were, would we have expressions about daily bread, or staff of life? I don’t think so.)

Your friend and currently daily blogger, because I’m on a facebook fast. Thanks for hanging in there with me. Twelve days in and I have to say, no facebook posting aside from my challenge groups, and companies that are only on facebook, has been incredible!

Anne Dovel

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Sourdough sandwich bread

Baked on vacation, this sourdough sandwich bread is flour, water, salt, honey and milk. No commercial yeast added.

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Happy easter 2020

Our family Easter was different this year, as it was for a lot of people. My family, including Mom and Dad, siblings and their families, usually get together for Easter dinner. It’s a day of food, hiding and finding baskets, conversation, laughter, and games.

Because of the unknown and the fear of spreading a virus…I wonder if once this is all over, we’ll be less fearful or more?… We didn’t have our big family gathering.

We did, however, manage to get a good share of our family on a Zoom conference to see and hear each other. It pales in comparison to the real thing, but it still made me smile to hear the voices of the littles and the laughter of the bigs.

We don’t have to like the hand we are dealt, but how we play it out, is up to us.

Happy Easter, friends.

Your friend,
Anne Dovel

What are Egyptian walking onions?

I posted a video on IGTV (Instagram TV) the other day, about one of my favorite edible and decorative garden plants.

The Egyptian Walking onion, so named, because to make new plants, the sets that grow on top of a mature stalk, get heavy and bend over and grow there. So, it appears to walk across the garden, in slow motion.

First of all, every part is edible. You can use the early spring growth as scallions. You can dig up a clump and use the bigger white parts in anything that calls for onion. They tend to have a little more bite than a regular onion.

But, I must confess, that for the most part, I keep them around because I love how they look, how easily they grow, and for companion planting in my vegetable garden.

Even though they propagate easily, they don’t become invasive. Once you dig up a clump, it’s gone. It won’t grow again. If you trim off some of the green, like scallions, it will grow from that root. You can also eat the itty bitty sets that grow on top, if you like peeling. I tried pickling them once, but it was too labor intensive for the result. I have thrown them into a jar of pickled green beans, however, unpeeled, for flavor.

The video I posted is on Instagram. I’ll include the link here. And, if I figure it out again, I’ll post the video IN this blog post. Now, isn’t that all fancy?

Your friend,
Anne Dovel

Quarantine sewing

Now that I’ve had my soapbox time in prior posts, here’s what I’ve been up to, and huzzah….I figured out how to put a photo in my post. I don’t know…do you like that, or should I link to the picture on Instagram? I’ll even turn the comments on, if the random stranger who comes by this blog wants to comment on that!

One of the things that has just warmed my heart, is how art and craft businesses and enthusiasts have been so generous in providing some free or discounted patterns, or just simply moving up the launch of a much anticipated pattern or kit, to help people stay engaged in something other than worry during this time. (For future readers, “this time” is the very strange Covid-19 time.)

Along with doing my fair share of shopping, when I notice an account on Instagram sharing a free tutorial or pattern, I choose one and make it. Chouette Kit in France, has given 3 free tutorials recently. I’ve made all 3. I made the little stuffed whale from thrifted wool, a project bag from panel yardage, and this little bunny treat bag from linen and vintage tea towel.

We were supposed to have family Easter dinner, 40+ people at our house this Sunday, but that is not going to happen now. We can blame the stay at home order, but the weather has also played a spring trick on us and we are supposed to have a wet, sloppy snow on Easter Sunday.

Because the pattern is in French, I’ve been asked to show in English how to sew it. I love picture books, so maybe that’s why I could follow the pictures in the French pattern!

It always takes me so long to actually make a video, because of the setup process and then uploading the video. Since this is my hobby, I don’t have a video set up already in place where I can plop down and start recording, or someone to edit and upload, so I can keep sewing!

We’ll see what happens.

By the way, this is day 10, no personal facebook posts. I’ve gotten over the hump of feeling “I should go post this on Facebook,” for every silly, snarky thing that pops in my head!

So, tell me. Do you like having a picture on a post? If you are looking for all my quarantine sewing pictures, you’ll find them on Instagram right now!

Your friend,
Anne Dovel

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Sweet bunny treat bag

This pattern is free from Chouette Kit website.

I am using fabric that I have during “quarantine.”
The blue is a linen/cotton blend and the cream is a scrap from a vintage tea towel that someone had marked a cross stitch design on with pencil. I think that makes it even more charming.

The sweetest handmade bunny treat bag

One of the things I’ve enjoyed doing lately, is sewing the free patterns that some of my favorite Instagram maker accounts have posted.

This morning, I saw the free bunny treat bag that Chouette Kit from France, posted. Including printing and cutting out the template, the entire project took less than 30 minutes.

And it’s so sweet. I used a scrap of a vintage tea towel and some of a modern linen blend that I had leftover after making a shirt.

Bunny Treat Bag post on Instagram.

Your Friend,
Anne Dovel

What about that fabric stash, quilter?

My last soapbox on the masks, concerns the meme that basically criticizes quilters for their stash of fabric, saying that finally, they’ll have a reason to use it.

Okay. Here we go. Quilters receive a lot of criticism, from themselves and from non-quilters, about buying fabric “just because.”

There are people who spend thousands of dollars going to football games. Hundreds are spent on hair color, nail polish, tattoos. Tens of thousands on antiques and antique car collections. And a quilter comes home with $100 worth of fabric for her stash and it’s …excessive?

I don’t buy into that. If your family has no food to eat, and you come home with fabric that you don’t have a plan for and have to find a place to shove it because all your cupboards are full. Yes, I believe that would be irresponsible. Someone needs to point that out to you. You aren’t reading this blog, so we are an an impasse.

If, on the other hand, let’s say you use fabric. You don’t want to always be running to town, wasting hours, when you come up with a project you want to sew, and keep a good stash of a wide variety.

What about people like me, who just really love textiles. I love the texture, design, color, feel. Why is it any weirder for me to buy a couple yards of a fabric that I love, instead of buying clearance stuff at Target to fill my shelves? (Nothing against Target)

People often like to tell others how to spend their money, if it doesn’t line up with their priorities. It’s okay. It is, what it is.

On the flip side, if you follow me on Instagram, I always encourage you to use your fun fabric. Either display it, so you can see and touch it, or make it into something. It’s so much more fun to use favorite fabrics, than to hide them away. It’s more fun to use beautiful quilts, than hide them in a vault to keep them safe.

And guess what? If you use those beautiful fabrics that you bought and are saving for just the right project, you’ll find more beautiful fabrics. You’ll make room for new discoveries. It’s like how meditation can help clear out the cobwebs so you have room for other thoughts. When you use fabric that you’ve hidden away, it opens up space in your storage or life, for new treasures.

When we had little to spend on fabric, I got so much joy out of buying even 1/8th yard. It was often my time out of the house, when the hubs would come home and give me a break from the demands of being a mom. I would go to the quilt shop, buy a snippet of fabric. It’s all I could afford. But, it brought me great joy. A

And, then, I would save it. Not use it. It was special fabric, I should have a really special project to use it in.

Let me tell you, when I finally flipped that thinking around, and started using my favorites, it brought more joy than when I found or bought it. Because, instead of folded up in a tub, hidden away, it’s now a runner on my dresser, or a placemat, napkin or mug rug, that I see every day. And it brings that charm into my whole house, instead of hidden away in a tub.

More on how to use your fun fabrics, in the future.

Until then, you’ll find me using recycled/upcycled fabrics and brand new fabrics, on my Instagram page.

Your friend,
Anne Dovel