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186 lines
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186 lines
12 KiB
TeX
If there is one food Germany is known for, it is probably bread.
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There are thousands of varieties in Germany,
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and making it has been an integral part of our culture.
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My bread journey began during childhood. My mother, being a parent
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of 3, would always use Saturdays to bake a delicious loaf for the family.
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It was a white fluffy sandwich bread, and she made it within one to two hours using store-bought yeast.
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Being a bit more experienced, I now realize it's
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ideal to wait a little while before cutting into your bread, but back then,
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we kids couldn't wait. Mom would cut for us a few slices straight from the oven, and we would
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immediately proceed to pour butter or jam on each slice. Within minutes, 1kg of
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flour would be consumed. Bread became an integral part of my weekly food.
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I was lucky that my parents could afford a yearly ski trip to
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Alto Adige in northern Italy. In the small town called Valdaora, we
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would try new restaurants every year, yet always end up in our favorite
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pizza place. The pizzas there were incredible. The dough
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alone was so tasty that we would order just the bread with a
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bit of olive oil and salt.
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Of course, my question would always be, ``Mom, can we make this at home, too, please?''
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So over the years, we became friends with the owners and would receive
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more and more clues as how to make the perfect pizza dough. There
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are no secret ingredients inside. It's just flour, water, salt, and a bit of yeast.
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How can such a simple combination of ingredients create such an incredibly delicious
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pizza dough? My parents, being creatures of habit, would return every year with us,
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and every year, my interest would grow. At home, Mom and I attempted to replicate
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the recipe. We tried baking on a stone and on a steel. We tried adding oil to the dough and herbs
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to the pizza sauce. We fell into an endless cycle of experiments. However, we never managed
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to get close to the experience we had while on vacation.
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Some years passed, and I eventually began my studies in the small German city of Göttingen.
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For the first time, I was faced with shopping for my own bread. It was never
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on my mind to actually start baking it for myself. I would just buy
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a good loaf while shopping at the supermarket. My favorite variety
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was a Schwarzbrot, Korn an Korn. It’s a very dark and hearty rye bread
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with added berries and sunflower seeds. Being a little naive,
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I'd never before examined the packaging of what I was buying. One day, that
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changed.
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I looked at the label and was shocked. The seemingly
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healthy bread consisted of so many other things aside from flour and water.
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The black color was not coming from the flour, but from caramelized sugar.
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The packaging stated it was a sourdough bread, but then why was there additional yeast?
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I thought that if it was really sourdough, it shouldn't require additional yeast, and I
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soon realized that something was wrong with the bread I was buying.
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I proceeded to check the other supermarket breads, only to discover that they, too,
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contained ingredients I'd never heard of. That was the day I lost trust
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in supermarket bread.
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At home, I decided to research the proper way to make bread, and much to my surprise,
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I learned that the recipes for making pizza and bread were actually quite similar, yet
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there were also diffferences. For example, some recipes would call for fresh yeast, while
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others would call for dry. Deep diving into various online forums and all their many
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discussions, I became even more confused.
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I tried using different flours and different brands, all in both organic and non-organic varieties.
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I realized then that I knew nothing about making bread. Recipes would often contradict each other,
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leaving me further confused. They seemed like little more than a collection of apparently random
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steps to follow. The baking instructions and temperatures were all different, too.
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Meanwhile, having completed my studies, I started work as an engineer.
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We engineers are faced with many challenges. The compiler or runtime is
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always screaming at you with errors, and it's your job to figure out how to fix them.
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It can take hours, sometimes days just to fix a simple problem. If you want
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to become a software engineer, you have to develop a certain ``never-give-up'' attitude.
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Frequently when writing code, a set of pre-made routines are required. These routines have been
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written by other engineers and can then be used to ship code faster.
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This pre-written code is commonly known as {\it a framework}. In many cases,
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these frameworks are not built by a single person but by engineers from all around the world,
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each of whom can help by improving and changing the source code. Frameworks have made many successful
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businesses possible.
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In most cases, frameworks do exactly what they claim they do. However,
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sometimes you are faced with issues you don't understand. In 99.95 percent
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of all software bugs, the developer is the issue. Sometimes, however, the framework has a
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bug. That is when the developer must dig deeper to see the what and the why behind what the
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framework is doing. You will need to read other engineer's source code, and you will be forced
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to understand {\it why} things are happening.
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Being unhappy with what I was baking, my engineering mindset took over and I had
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to do my own deep dive to understand what was going on. Much to my surprise, however,
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none of the recipes I'd encountered would tell me {\it why} I should use amount X
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of water and amount Y of flour, or {\it why} exactly I should use fresh yeast over dry yeast. Why
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should I slap my dough while kneading it on the counter? Why is a standmixer
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better than kneading by hand? Why should I let the dough sit for this long?
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Why is steaming the dough during baking important? Do I really need to
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get myself an expensive dutch oven to bake bread?
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The problem compounded when I started reading about sourdough. It all sounded like black
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magic. Why were some sourdoughs made from fruits, while others were made from flour?
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Why should one recipe use wheat while another used rye or spelt? How often should the
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sourdough be fed? The questions I had then could have filled 20 pages. I was confused,
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but became even more determined to learn how decent bread should be made at home.
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The feedback I received from friends helped me to improve with each
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iteration of homemade bread. Compared to coding, where you sometimes have to wait months
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for this feedback, bread making is much more direct. Plus, you can eat your successes
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(and failures!) And, much to my surprise, even those failures started tasting better than
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most store-bought breads. Eating a homemade bread that takes you hours to make allows you
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to develop a different relationship with your food, and baking bread from scratch with my
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bare hands was a welcome change after hours of working on the computer.
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I continued learning about the process of fermentation and various techniques of bread making.
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I approached the topic of sourdough in a manner similar to software, and after years of
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researching and documenting my progress, I decided it was time to share that progress with the
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world.
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When working on open source projects, it is important to see their history and how the source
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code changes over time. This way, you can easily jump back to previous versions. This was
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the perfect tool for documenting my recipes, because they, too, would change with each
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subsequent iteration. Much to my surprise, my open source work on sourdough was appreciated
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by other engineers, and the project became popular on the website GitHub, originally built to
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share open source software.
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Now, when baking great bread, you also need to learn certain techniques. I figured it would be
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easier to share these techniques in video form. Thus, my YouTube channel was born. I chose
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the name {\it The Bread Code} to capture my engineering-oriented approach to bread. It took some
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time to get right, but after choosing more engaging thumbnails and titles for
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the videos I made, the channel started gaining viewers.
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Now, three years later, I dedicate two days each week to follow my bread baking passion, while
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the other three days I continue to work as a software engineer, writing code on a day-to-day
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basis.
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My bread days fill me with both joy and passion. To me, there is nothing better than seeing
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how many people have made amazing bread thanks to my tips and explanations. The community has
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continued to grow, spawning many interesting discussions and ideas surrounding the topic of
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bread making. There is always something new to learn, and I feel that even now I am just barely
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scratching the surface with what I know and teach. Would you ever have imagined that fruit
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flies are like bees and are part of the wild yeast's success story? I made a video where
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I tried to cultivate wild yeast spores coming from fruit flies in order
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to bake bread. It worked; the bread turned out amazing and even tasted good! These kinds of
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experiments spark my natural interest. Conducting them and seeing how other people share in my
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interest makes me incredibly happy.
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The problem with running a YouTube channel is that all the information
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you see is filtered and then provided to you through an algorithm. I am concerned
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with how algorithms are shaping modern information, because they tend to
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put users into certain categories where they will then only see news related to
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those same fixed categories. A key metric determining visibility of your channel is how many
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people have clicked on a video after it's been shown, and the content you create
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is not even shown to every subscriber of your channel. If the algorithm determines the video
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is not engaging enough, your content starts to decay in YouTube's nirvana. Even if your video
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goes viral, the algorithm will stop showing it once engagement rates with new users goes down,
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and older videos fade over time as the decay punishment factor increases. I know, because
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I have developed similar algorithms myself as a software engineer.
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I've since decided to take some time off from the algorithm cycle to work on something more
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long term and meaningful. My mission has always been to share my knowledge with as many people
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in the world as possible. That's also why my content has been provided in English rather than
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German. After discussing with members of the community, I figured that writing a book could
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help me achieve that goal. Most of the books that exist today are collections of recipes. My
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idea, however, is to provide you with a deeper foundation of knowledge that you can use to
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follow other recipes.
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In software terms, this would be a {\it bread framework}.
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It is my goal for this book to help everyone facing issues with flour, fermentation, baking,
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and more. It should provide a detailed understanding as to why certain steps are necessary
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and how to adapt then when things go wrong while making bread.
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It is my desire for this knowledge to be accessible to everyone around the world, regardless
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of budget, and as such, do not want to charge for the book. That's why I've decided to make
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it open source and have asked the community to support my work financially via my ko-fi page
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(https://ko-fi.com/thebreadcode). The community's feedback has been amazing so far, and
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I've already raised much more money than initially expected.
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The first version of the book will only be available digitally---this way, everyone can read
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it---though there might also be a hardcover version in the future, depending on how well received
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and appreciated it is by bakers around the world. The hardcover version will, of course, cost a
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bit of money, but the digital version will remain free.
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In this book, I will try to be as scientific as possible. I in no way claim, however, that
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it will itself be a work of science. I have conducted several experiments that I will write
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about here, but to truly call this science, you would probably need to repeat the same experiment
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a thousand times in a lab environment, which I have not done. I will do my best, however, to provide
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scientific references where possible and to clearly distinguish between facts and personal opinion.
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I hope you have fun reading this and that you learn more about the fascinating world of bread
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making, and it is my sincere wish that this work provides you with the solid toolchain that I wish
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I'd had access to when starting my own journey with bread.
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Thank you.
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Hendrik |