by vagreys » Mon Jun 05, 2017 5:37 pm
Back in January, my wife bought the microbakery where she'd been senior baker for the prior 3 years (Tater Dave's LLC). On Wednesdays, she produces 40 pounds of sourdough sandwich loaves, 40 pounds of multi-grain sourdough sandwich loaves, and 16 pounds of multi-grain sourdough batards for her wholesale customers. On Fridays, the market bake, she produces on average about 125 pounds of bread including several kinds of sandwich loaves, a rye bread, several types of potato bread batards, baguettes, mini loaves, sandwich and dinner rolls, and sourdough rounds.Eight months out of the year, she also makes Portuguese muffins, English muffins and crumpets on the griddles. Other days of the week are for smaller custom orders, like the seven dozen sliders for a barbeque caterer, tomorrow, or the occasional order for brioche dough by another bakery in the commissary. We mix and first proof in an air-conditioned room, and depending on the weather, use the mabient temp of the bakery, a dough retarder, and a proofing rack for benching, pre-shaping and shaping. If we didn't use the environment and weather to make the dough work with us, we'd never be able to get it all done. It's a tight, constant schedule from arrival until the last loaf is packaged.
She uses a razor blade for slashing, and while some of the slashing is decorative, it's absolutely vital for positive identification of the various loaves when everything is cooling on the racks. If you want to see pics, you can go to the bakery's FB page (no link).
- tom
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