Elaine Boddy, Author of The Sourdough Whisperer

Elaine Boddy, Author of The Sourdough Whisperer

“There are so many experiences and stories of lockdown and you know, I know, how important baking was to so many people. Sourdough in particular. We know that when we feed our starter it comes alive. We know that we renew it and we see it respond, and we create a dough and we see it respond. And that life and renewal that came out of it, I think, was also another positive element. People going through the confusion and that awful time that we had. But also then the connection that it gave people… it was huge and it brought a lot of us together.”

Annie Clapper of The Family Crumb

Annie Clapper of The Family Crumb

“In February of 2020, I was looking at commercial spaces, building out a business plan, and trying to decide between moving into a space or building a space… and I was like set to meet in March to create our own space in Bentonville. And then, obviously, March 2020 everyone’s lives changed significantly and my my choice either scale way up and take a huge gamble and buildout a bakery in the middle of a global pandemic or scale way back and move back into my house, and bake out of my house again…”

Alexandra Allen of Wild Woman Bakery and LUV Cookie Co.

Alexandra Allen of Wild Woman Bakery and LUV Cookie Co.

“I use my sourdough starter, I don’t use my discard when I’m making cookies… and I maintain my acidity in my feedings, so i’m never going to have a super sour. If I’m looking for that well then I’m going to look for a grain that will be a little more active faster, and maybe leave it to bloom a little longer… and see how the flavor is changing and imparting on the cookie dough.”

David Kaisel, Miller, Farmer, Entrepreneur

David Kaisel, Miller, Farmer, Entrepreneur

"If you are a winemaker, and someone said ‘what are you blending for your wine?’ And you said I don’t know, it’s grape. They’ve recognized the difference that terroir has, the difference that varietals have, that climate has, how important those are in your ultimate product - and it’s no different in wheat. A wheat grown in Saskatchewan is very different from a wheat grown in Arizona."

Jon Eck, California Wheat Grower

Jon Eck, California Wheat Grower

“Farmers are like anyone. Old and tired, and probably have a lot of debt. But they got into it for some reason - because soil, and plants, and the sunrise, and flavors and smells, that you can’t describe because they are too beautiful, thrills our hearts. And sometimes, farmers need to remember why they started. And if someone can go to them and say ‘we can create something beautiful and good’ most farmers would be willing to take a pay cut to do it.“

Eric Pallant, Author of Sourdough Culture

Eric Pallant, Author of Sourdough Culture

“I pushed the starting date for my starter, probably, back to 1893 in a gold mining town in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado. But that doesn’t answer the question of how it got there. And so that’s when I realized I have to start at the very beginning. While I’m working backwards to see where does my starter come from - can I work forward and create a path to where those two lines are going to intersect. That meant going back to who made the first sourdough starter? Who made the first bread? …and now I’m suddenly I’m back 10,00 years.”

Jennifer Lapidus, Author of Southern Ground

Jennifer Lapidus, Author of Southern Ground

I learn more, personally, as a baker, when I allow myself to completely mess up. And not mess up in the way that I’m not paying attention, but more like, I’m going to let this over proof so I can see how far it’s going to go. Or, I’m going to really push the hydration to see what can it take. We don’t follow recipes. We follow formulas. Even if you have something that isn’t what you were hoping to accomplish, it’s going to taste better, I think, if you have a flavor forward flour.”