It’s become a Saturday ritual. We huddle inside
a small building, our hats and gloves giving off that scent of damp wool, our
chilled hands cupped around mugs of fresh-brewed coffee. Thanks to our friends Sage and Nathan,
soon we’ll be nibbling apple or pumpkin scones—or maybe one of each—still warm
from the couple’s wood-fired oven at Barn Bread Bakery.
The caffeine and sweets fuel us to
decide which of their artisan breads to buy. Will it be Pain de Campagne, Flax
Sunflower, Raisin Coriander, the twisted baguettes called Tordus, or the
naturally leavened gluten-free round? I savor the smells, have a mental
debate about which variety to buy, and end up unable to settle on just one.
Sage and Nathan moved to Lopez Island, WA a couple of
years ago from Berkeley, CA where Sage apprenticed with baker, Eduardo Morrell,
at the Marin Headland Center for the Arts. Eduardo taught her to use simple
ingredients and traditional techniques to make naturally leavened bread and
baked goods and then bake them in a wood fired oven. When Sage and Nathan
arrived on Lopez, Sage continued to bake bread in a tiny home oven; within a few
weeks she was baking more bread than she could give away to new friends, so she
painted a sign and took her loaves to the Farmers’ Market. One customer, Ken, loved
the bread and offered the use of his wood-fired brick oven.
After that first summer, the couple launched
themselves wholeheartedly into a baking business and made hundreds of loaves of
bread for Lopezians. The owner of the farm where they live in a converted
granary offered them space on his land to build their own brick oven and
bakery. You can read more about
that process and their successful Kickstarter campaign at Wood-fired
Bakery on Midnight's Farm. Oh, and along the way, Sage and Nathan gave
birth to their daughter, Eden.
On Saturday mornings, Sage and Nathan make it look easy, but
I know much happens behind the scenes.
Sage mixes dough, lets it rise, weighs it and shapes the balls into
rustic loaves, often with Eden overseeing from her perch in a backpack. A couple of hours before baking time, Nathan
gets the wood fire going in the brick oven. He’s mastered the art and science of
maintaining the right temperatures for whatever is baking. Conversation pauses
every time Nathan slides the long-handled wooden paddle into the oven and pulls
out scones, golden loaves of bread, or pizzas bubbling with melted cheese.
Thank you,dear Iris, for the thoughtful story.It was a gift! Below, a simple gift to you!
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Catching up here and loving all these entries, dear Iris. Hope you had a great T'day on your island. x0 N2
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading - and posting, N2. So glad to know you stopped in! Yes, super Thanksgiving! Hope all is well with you.
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