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The Bread Builders
 
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The Bread Builders (Kindle Edition)

by Scott, Alan (Author), Wing, Daniel (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (34 customer reviews)

Digital List Price: $35.00  What's this?
Print List Price:$35.00
Kindle Price: $19.25 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
You Save:$15.75 (45%)

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Paperback $23.10  

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

In recent years, a revived and burgeoning interest in wholesome, locally baked bread has swept the country, with bakeries springing up in small towns and major urban areas alike, producing an astounding variety of interesting, crusty, tasty, handmade breads. The Bread Builders explains the grains and flours, leavens and doughs, the chemistry of bread, and the physics of baking in a big book filled with helpful drawings, photographs, recipes, and tips. In a unique angle for a book on baking bread, it also includes detailed diagrams and instructions for building your own masonry bread oven from scratch.

As Laurel Robertson, author of The New Laurel's Kitchen says, "This book is ice cream for a baker! We visit legendary bakeries, meet wonderful people, learn all sorts of fascinating scientific information with practical usefulness in bowl and oven, and best of all, get the skinny on masonry ovens, the cherished fantasy of us all." The enthusiasm of the authors in their search for the perfect loaf of bread permeates this detailed but lively and accessible book, and will offer much of use to both amateur and professional bread makers. --Mark A. Hetts

Review

"...sets out to teach you the basics under-lying baking bread with no commercial yeast... and succeeds very well. -- Darrell Greenwood, webmaster

"Definitely an important book for any serious baker of good bread." -- Countryside & Small Stock Journal, July/August 2001

"Wing and Scott do more than get the details right: they get the right details." -- Thom Leonard

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Customer Reviews

34 Reviews
5 star:
 (28)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (34 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
63 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best book on natural leavens I have read, May 19, 1999
By A Customer
Date: Fri, 14 May 1999 16:33:05 -0700

From: Darrell Greenwood<darrell_greenwood@mindlink.net>

Subject: The Bread Builders -Hearth Loaves and Masonry Ovens

I had a very interesting book pop through the mail slot yesterday, 'The Bread Builders - Hearth Loaves and Masonry Ovens' by Dan Wing and Alan Scott.

When Dan wrote me for my address so he could send me a review copy he noted in his enthusiasm for his newly minted book "It's a really good book." After receiving it yesterday I noted in my enthusiasm for his newly minted book, "It's a really good book" and it is :-).

You get for your $35 the best book I have read on "natural leavens" or sourdough. It has no recipes but sets out to teach you the basics underlying baking bread with no commercial yeast... and succeeds very well. The book is 254 pages, paperback, indexed, and well illustrated with color and b&w photographs, graphs, line drawings and a glossary.

Starting out with interesting introductions by Alan Scott and Dan Wing, the book's chapters wind their way through Naturally Fermented Hearth Bread, Bread Grains and Flours, Leavens and Doughs, Dough Development and Baking, Ovens and Bread.

Interspersed in the chapters are 'visits' where a separate article describes a visit to an interesting bakery or baking related location ranging from Vermont to California. The book's clear and easily readable style is assisted with sidebars and notes clarifying various points. I do like the notes in the margins as this book does rather than at the bottom of the page.

But wait, that is only half the book. You get thrown in for free another book, on how to design, build and operate a masonry oven. Its chapters range through Masonry Ovens of Europe and America, Preparing to Build a Masonry Oven, Masonry Materials, Tools and Methods, Oven Construction, Oven Management and A Day in the Life at the Bay Village Bakery. If you are not up to rushing out to build a masonry oven right away, 3 methods are given to approach the results in a masonry oven, cloche, baking stone, and you'll have to read the book to see what I am going to be doing with a metal pot, cookie sheet and pie plate.

All in all I believe this book is a good read for aficionados of sourdough, and they would find it a good reference work for inclusion in their library. As a book for someone switching from baking yeast bread to "natural leaven" bread they would probably regard ownership of this book as priceless gift. For someone starting out in bread baking it would allow them to get a really good understanding without all the "old wive's tales" that unfortunately dog some sourdough advice. I know it will find a treasured place in my library and be well thumbed through as it assists me in achieving the perfect loaf.

Cheers,

Darrell

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105 of 111 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A must-own book for any serious baker, June 10, 2000
By Plasbo (Lopez Island, WA USA) - See all my reviews
This book is not a bread recipe (or formula) book, it is not a learn-to-bake book and it is not a baking reference book. It is a treatise on hearth bread and it is not one you want before you have already become very serious about bread baking and have become a full and fanatical convert to baking with natural leaven ("sourdough"). If you are not already there, then I recommend Peter Reinhart's "Crust and Crumb" and Paul Bertolli's "Chez Panisse Cooking" (it has a single great chapter about baking naturally leavened bread). Once you have arrived at good, satisfying, naturally leavened bread and bake it as a matter of routine, "The Bread Builders" will give you a very good understanding of what is really going on or what should be going on and what you can do to make sure it is. Even though I currently bake in a bottom-of-the-line, electric Jenn-Air oven, the book gave me enough knowledge, science, technique, hints, tricks and understanding that I could take my bread one or two steps further towards perfection, and for that it was worth buying. You also get to understand that the ultimate step towards perfection is baking in a brick oven. When I get around to taking that step and building my oven, this is the book that will guide me.
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43 of 43 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful book, wonderful resource, March 9, 2000
By kdenzer (France) - See all my reviews
Dan Wing and Alan Scott have answered all the questions I have ever asked about bread and ovens, and then some. After baking regular yeasted bread for years, I learned to make small, wood-fired ovens out of mud, and started making naturally leavened breads. In the process, I stumbled onto some of the "secrets" of good bread, for which I was very happy. For people who don't want to spend years stumbling, however, The Bread Builders is a thorough, authoritative, and inspiring door into the hows and whys of really good bread. For people who already know the "secrets," it's an absolutely brilliant explanation and exploration of what makes good bread (part of which is, of course, the oven).

If you want to understand the principles of what you're doing, this is it. And if you want to build a commercial quality oven for baking your own bread, here are plans and detailed instructions. I have had the pleasure of meeting, and learning a little about ovens from Alan Scott. I am very happy that now, in addition to having a master baker on my bookshelf, I also have a master oven builder as well. Thank you both very much.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Super resource
If you are considering building a brick oven and making real bread, you need this book.

While the late Alan Scott garners primacy of place in most online resources,... Read more
Published 4 months ago by B. Hedges

5.0 out of 5 stars We built a marvelous oven
Although this book has not explicit instructions building an oven, we used the recommended proportions and our oven works fabulously. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Cleome P. Graham

5.0 out of 5 stars New Trend
Great book - I go back to it and reread points given. The writer states that creating the perfect loaf of bread - is now the rage!
So true.
Published 7 months ago by Lucy Tully

5.0 out of 5 stars Bread and Oven wonder
Thanks for the great book.
I've been looking for this information for a while and struck the jackpot. Read more
Published 7 months ago by S. A. Leijen

5.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring book, written with passion
A lovely book.
A book about two passions: baking bread and wood-fired ovens, passions that the Authors want to share with us, and you can feel it's a love story... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Daniele Giuffrida

5.0 out of 5 stars interesting very interesting
am now building a alan scott oven from plans ordered from scotts family great book to get you started baking real bread {LIFE} not science project factory bread
Published 14 months ago by D. hunter

5.0 out of 5 stars This book is more than I expected.
This book is wonderful. This was the most highly recommended book on building and cooking with a fire brick oven and rightfully so. Read more
Published on June 4, 2008 by Randall L. Bailey

5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful Resource - Don't Listen to the Whiners
This book is enormous, far larger and more complete than I had imagined. As others have said, it is not exactly a step-by-step "how to" for baking break or for building an oven,... Read more
Published on February 14, 2008 by mdh49

4.0 out of 5 stars how to make sour and acid bread the old way
One of the authors has a German cultural background and the conclusions of the book are somehow biased. Read more
Published on January 21, 2008 by Rafael Cobo

5.0 out of 5 stars Bread minutia
I was looking for a book that would help me understand how to build a masonry oven. This book provides that along with much much more. Read more
Published on July 20, 2007 by Robert S. Henderson

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