Submitted to: Contest #306

How to Bake Sourdough Bread and Alienate Everyone You Know

Written in response to: "Write a story in the form of a recipe, menu, grocery list, or product description."

⭐️ Contest #306 Shortlist!

Contemporary Creative Nonfiction Funny

Are you stressed out? Strapped for time? About three to five minor inconveniences away from total burnout?

Now is the perfect time for you to start baking sourdough bread.

Maybe you’re short-staffed at work, you’re house-training a new puppy, or one of the kids has the stomach bug and your washing machine smells vaguely of cheese curds. It could be any combination of internal or external life stressors that has convinced you that you are now the kind of person who bakes from-scratch, gut-friendly, personality-transforming sourdough bread.

If this is you, let’s begin.

Step 1. Nurture your interest

Once that initial spark to become a bread-slinging Barbie hits, you want to give it some air—let it build into a full-blown burning desire. It is recommended you take approximately six to eight weeks to scroll Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube and really deep-dive into the world of sourdough. Pay special attention to any influencer sporting gingham and high ponytails: immediately subscribe if they have a Midwestern accent and a “Gather” sign hanging in the kitchen.

Now, scroll, scroll, scroll! Scroll in the morning, on the toilet, in the car line, in your bed late at night until your eyes feel like someone’s been aiming a blow-drier at them for hours. Follow every link and add every product mentioned to your “Sourdough” Amazon wish list. You should be dreaming of dough, joining Facebook groups, preaching to every stranger, friend, and family member about its glorious health benefits.

Only when you feel simultaneously insufficient as a human being and electrified with the energy of beginning are you ready to move on to the next step: outfitting.

Step 2. Outfitting

Pause. Before you can even consider perusing advanced tools like banneton baskets and humidity sensors, you must start with the most basic of basics. Your superhero cape. Your uniform. Your new identity.

The apron.

This is your chance to reinvent yourself. Are you a gingham girl? A floral feminist? A nautical nana? A doughy daddy? Maybe your ideal apron is a sleek, black utilitarian number. Or maybe your apron of choice is a blend of snark and humor—a good bread pun embroidered in red: “If you think my buns look good, you should see my stretch and folds.” Whatever heats your yeast.

Polyester will suffice. Cotton is ideal. Linen says I WAS BORN FOR THIS.

Once you’ve chosen your apron, pull up that Amazon wish list and add to cart! Add it all! It doesn’t matter if you already have glass bowls and mason jars and kitchen towels. Those are the supplies of the old you, of mediocrity—run-of-the-mill, plain-Jane housewares. If you want to bake like the masters, then you must shop like the masters! If @St. Louis_Sourdough_Suzzanna has a $500 robin’s egg blue enameled Dutch oven, then by God, so do you! This is your rebirth. This is an investment.

Step 3. Limbo

As you wait for your thirty-four shipments to arrive, it is imperative that you do not let your zeal deflate like an overproofed sourdough loaf. If any modicum of doubt or regret creeps in, return to Step 1 and scroll, baby scroll!

(If you have time during this waiting period for an entire kitchen remodel complete with a white subway tile backsplash and brushed gold hardware, it is encouraged [though not required] to achieve successful sourdough. Follow this link for kitchen renovation inspiration →)

Step 4. Unboxing day

It’s Christmas morning! Or so it seems as thick-calved delivery men bound up your porch steps and erect a cardboard pyramid with all your precious packages. Emerge from your house like the razor-knife-wielding cave troll you’ve become and drag them inside. Make a pile of your treasures on the kitchen table and organize them however you feel led. Starter supplies here. Glassware over there. Scale and thermometer here.

Snap a photo. #sourdoughhaul

Eee!

Take a deep breath. You can almost smell that yeasty goodness wafting through your kitchen. Hear the crackling of a perfect crust. Taste the grass-fed butter spread over its porous crumb. Feel the course fur of milk goats and the smooth feathers of your hens—okay, slow down. Focus on the bread, you overachieving, crunchy dreamer you.

Step 5. Halftime

Whew, that last step was a lot! Outfitting and organizing can be exhausting, and baking sourdough is best done with a fresh brain. You accomplished so much already; you deserve a break.

Relocate your supplies to an unused surface of your home. Leave them there overnight. Plan to begin your sourdough starter the next day, then delay it when [insert excuse] happens and today just isn’t the best day for it. Repeat this step as many times as necessary or until the Amazon return window closes and you have no choice but to eat the money or actually make bread.

If, at this stage, your spouse has inquired multiple times: a) if you’ve made any bread, b) when will you make the bread, or c) will you ever make the bread, do not lose heart. You are not alone; they simply don’t understand.

Follow this link to find a sourdough emotional support group near you →

(This is often the step where sourdough bakers are tempted to abandon the task altogether and jump ship to another hobby. If this is you, please return to Step 1, refresh, and meet back at step 6.)

Step 6. Recommitting

Welcome back! There’s that borderline-obsessive trend-crazed glow you thought you lost. Your excitement is palpable. You’re ready to begin your starter! Congratulations!

For this step, you’ll want to whip out that little packet of starter culture and carefully read the instructions. Read them again. Now watch this attached YouTube link approximately twelve times before you feel confident enough to combine real ingredients à

You got this. Measure, mix, cover, breathe. See, that wasn’t so bad now, was it?

Shove over Martha Stewart; there’s a new domestic goddess in town.

Step 7. The christening

Now, here is one of the most crucial steps of the breadmaking process: naming your sourdough starter.

This will be no peanut butter-smothered Sunbeam wanna-be bread; this is sourdough. This is sacred, living bread. This starter is not just another ingredient; this is your child now. And if you care for him properly, you’ll be scraping out his yeasty discard for generations to come. Your grandchildren will brag to their friends about their 100-year-old sourdough starter, gloriously shaming the baking imposters of the future.

He will need a name, but not just any name. Something regal, immortal: Romulus. Methuselah. Orion.

None of this cheesy “Dough-lene” or “Glutinous Maximus.” You are naming your legacy. Take it seriously.

Step 8. Activation

Forgot what life was like with a newborn baby? It’s all coming back now, isn’t it? You’re feeling a little tied down, aren’t you? Thought you’d just slip away for a short weekend getaway—a little R&R where you don’t have to worry about taking care of anyone but yourself. Well, SORRY, but your sourdough starter is not active yet!

“No one told me it would be this hard!” you say. Well, slow-fermenting, prebiotic, gut-friendly bread doesn’t just happen, now does it? Get back in the kitchen and feed your dough child. He’s a growing boy and needs flour and water twice a day.

It’s a hard season. Sleep when the starter sleeps.

Now, feed.

(If at any point he begins to smell like your grandma’s bathtub gin, he hasn’t died! Just pour some off and trust the process. Follow this link to read “12 Reasons You Might Be Tempted to Throw Away Your Starter” →)

Step 9. Becoming bread

Look how much he’s grown! After ten days of attentive nurturing, your dough baby has matured from murky goo creature to a beautiful stretchy bubble boy. If your dough child is doubling in size within a few hours of his feeding, he’s ready!

Take a whiff, really breathe it in through the nose. Smell that? That light, bready tang? That smells like you know how to pressure-can your home-grown organic produce. Like you’ve knitted a Christmas sweater for your entire family from the wool of your own Merino sheep. That’s the smell of a paid-off modern-rustic dream farmhouse. That’s the smell of success.

Your time has come! All the months of dreaming, the hours of research and shopping, the hundreds of dollars you’ve (appropriately) invested in this life-changing venture is about to bear fruit…or rather, bread.

Wipe those counters and crack those knuckles because it’s dough time.

With your carefully measured flour, salt, starter, and water (spring or filtered only, of course), it’s time to form the dough. Shape it into a ball and start on those stretch and folds to strengthen the gluten. Really put your abs into it—but not too much. And not too little either.

For visual instructions, follow this link for a step-by-step video on how to stretch and fold like a bread boss →

Once you’ve completed your first round of stretch and folds, cover your sweet sleeping yeast child and let him rest in a warm, quiet place.

Now don’t go anywhere. Did you think you were done? Oh no, you might as well call your friends and cancel your plans, because you’ll need to go back and do that part again every thirty minutes…like four more times. Maybe more.

Then, he’ll need to rest.

As he takes his long, pre-baking nap, you’ll have a few hours to yourself to ready the kitchen for the final step. Preheat the oven. Wipe the floury counters. Line your Dutch oven with parchment paper.

Oo, what’s this? Is your dough boy risen and smooth? Looking all smug and bubbly? IT’S TIME. Unwrap your lame from its original packaging; you’ll need to score the top of your dough—the all-important slice to vent steam as he bakes. A ceremonial circumcision, if you will.

No need to get fancy. A simple cut on each side will suffice. Just because @sourdoughizmypassion1975 scored Van Gogh’s “Starry Night” into the crust of her sourdough doesn’t mean you have to…yet.

Your time will come.

The kitchen is toasty, and your dough looks so cozy, all snuggled in his enameled bed. Slide him gently into the oven and sing him a lullaby. Close the door.

Now, he bakes.

Step 10. The reveal

As your family lingers at the edges of the kitchen, afraid to approach but hungry for the fresh, homemade bread you’ve spent all day working on to the neglect of feeding them a real meal, open the oven door and behold your creation.

Sheath your hands in your crisp new silicon-coated oven mitts and retrieve your child from the oven. He is no longer a dough boy; he is a full-grown loaf now.

His crust should be a beautiful golden brown with powdery flour coating his belly. Lay him down gently to cool. Fend off your feral offspring for at least an hour. Then, only then, when he is acclimated to the temperature of the room, will you slice.

Wield the beautiful hand-hammered serrated bread knife you ordered from Scandinavian forgers on Etsy and slice. Slice! SLICE!

Is he marvelous? Is he lacy and porous—a cave of glutinous caverns? Does he smell like Autumn in a hidden forest cottage? Will he crackle with that first, sacred bite?

Your glorious, beloved dough child looks like…

A tortilla…

Whatever you do, do not cry. He’s not underbaked, he’s just…rustic.

It is important to point out that this is your very first sourdough loaf. Do not be too hard on yourself. So, maybe he is lacking a bit of that brawn you were hoping for. Maybe he’s a little bit of a runt. That doesn’t mean you’ve failed.

Well, technically, yes, you’ve failed to make an artisanal loaf of crunchy, spongy, Instagram-worthy sourdough bread, but it’s still edible! Get out the butter and jam and slather away. Jam covers a multitude of imperfections! Feed it to your spouse! Feed it to the kids. Feed some to the dog. This was simply a practice round! Now you know better how to make sourdough for the next round.

(If you’re feeling frustrated, check out this article “10 Reasons Your Bread Was Flop” →)

You’re probably ready to throw in the 100% Egyptian Cotton towel and pout on the sofa with a pint of Chunky Monkey ice cream, but that won’t get you anywhere. Don’t give up yet!

The next step is simple:

Return to Step 1.

Posted Jun 13, 2025
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32 likes 49 comments

08:53 Jun 15, 2025

Lovely work ! "He’s not underbaked, he’s just…rustic." Lol. Welcome back!

Reply

Aeris Walker
13:45 Jun 17, 2025

Thanks for reading, Derrick :)

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Alexis Araneta
16:58 Jun 14, 2025

So lovely to have you back! A delightfully detailed, funny read.

Of course, mine is just two steps:
1. Buy from bakery.
2. Enjoy

Hahaha ! Great job!

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Aeris Walker
13:24 Jun 17, 2025

Thank you, Alexis!
As a failed bread-baking barbie, I too purchase mine from the grocery store ;)

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Riel Rosehill
14:07 Jun 20, 2025

Hiii!

It's been a long time (sorry!), but what a fun story to read on my return :D I've not (yet) gone down the sourdough pipeline, BUT this story is still VERY relatable. The apron is indeed the most important!

I adore the humour and the specificity of the story starting with “your washing machine smells vaguely of cheese curds” in the opening, and also with the scroll until your eyeballs feel like they're blasted with hairdryer (paraphrasing...) You do funny stories so well, and I swear they're the most difficult thing to write! Also I'm just happy to have read another story from you - I should be checking in here more often! (Did you know, my uni course references a Reedsy article on POVs which mentions one of your stories as a great example of the use of 2nd person? So technically, your work is being taught!)

PS: Dare I ask how your sourdough adventure is going?

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Aeris Walker
16:35 Jun 20, 2025

Hello, friend!
It’s been a long time for me too, but what a pleasant surprise to see you jumping back in here again! I had to take a step back from contests and discord (which I just can’t keep up with) to focus on *finally* finishing school.
And no—I had no idea about being mentioned in a course!! Thanks for telling me! That literally made my week. Do you remember the story were they referring to?
My sourdough adventure was a flop and waste of flour haha. I named my starter Abraham and he was so needy and temperamental. I went on vacation and he deflated and never recovered 😂 so I jumped the hobby “ship” to soap making, and so far, no one’s skin has burned off, so I guess it’s going fine.
Are you still active on discord/WB/GS/all the cool kid contests?
I look forward to reading your Reedsy story this week!!

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Riel Rosehill
21:58 Jun 20, 2025

Glad to have made your week! The story they were referring to was "Pants are Optional" (here's the page: https://blog.reedsy.com/guide/point-of-view/) - it's one of the stories I remember from my more active Reedsy days.
And congrats on finishing (or about to finish?) school! And on your artisan soaps of course - that's a sourdough-worthy wholesome hobby :D
I can relate to not being able to keep up - I'm definitely not in the "cool kids" club! I've only done two contests this year, Writers' Playground (they like me!) and GS (they don't). As for the discord I'm still in it, but rarely active nowadays. A handful of us do meet up seasonally in person though, and keep a critique circle going, which is great. I'd like to say I'm focusing on my freshly started studies and my novel, but I'm ALWAYS derailed by some project like over-ambitious decoration, or, today, by adopting a couple of axolotls.
PS: I had no idea people named their sourdough starters - love it!

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Aeris Walker
20:17 Jun 21, 2025

Thanks for sharing the link!
Yes I finally graduated with my Bachelor’s in English—Creative Writing. Only took me 10 years 🤪
That’s awesome that you guys get to meet up in person occasionally! There’s some quality people in this/the discord community.

I know what you mean. I keep thinking oh when things slow down, I’ll write a novel. Well what do you know, the things just aren’t slowing…

How cool that your new pets could be the inspiration for a reedsy story!!

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Riel Rosehill
21:14 Jun 21, 2025

10 years..! If anything I'm more impressed because that is some endurance and dedication (especially while raising kids, I imagine!)

And yes, I'm very lucky to be geographically close enough to a few awesome writers to make it work! It's always good to just...vent about writing 😆

We both need to figure out this novel writing thing - it's what I was supposed to be working on when this week's story called my name 😅

Pet inspiration indeed - aka research rabbit hole 🤪

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Riel Rosehill
07:57 Jun 21, 2025

Round of applause for the shortlist 👏👏👏

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Aeris Walker
20:17 Jun 21, 2025

😊😊 THANKS!!

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Liz Mente-Bishop
06:00 Jun 19, 2025

Excellent story. Made me giggle and also empathise, I too make bread and feel your pain. Great work, very entertaining.

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Aeris Walker
23:18 Jun 20, 2025

I gladly hand you the breadmaking crown. I will be sticking to pancakes and box-mix brownies.
Thanks for reading ;)

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S. W.
05:39 Jun 19, 2025

I'm a former baker and I have no patience for daily sourdough antics 😂
Good to see your work again, Aeris it's been a minute!

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Aeris Walker
13:28 Jun 19, 2025

Hey girl, thanks for the read!
It has been a minute. I finally finished school and am now just trying to get back in the habit of writing. Hoping Reedsy can help me get those wheels turning again :)

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S. W.
13:47 Jun 19, 2025

Congrats on finishing school🎊🎊

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Aeris Walker
20:19 Jun 21, 2025

☺️ thank you!

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Nicole Moir
02:45 Jun 18, 2025

I will never look at my sourdough starter the same way again, lol. Great read!

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Aeris Walker
13:15 Jun 19, 2025

Thanks for reading, Nicole!

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David Sweet
14:11 Jun 17, 2025

I understand that this is an odyssey. My daughter makes wonderful sourdough, and I have heard similar heart-breaks from her. Her starter: "Yeast Witherspoon." Thanks for another entertaining story, Aeris.

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Aeris Walker
13:05 Jun 19, 2025

Yeast Witherspoon! Love it! Your daughter is super woman. My bread never made it past the starter phase.
Thanks for reading :)

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Graham Kinross
00:28 Jun 16, 2025

This feels like something from the script of Crazy Ex Girlfriend during lockdown. Reaching mental breaking point and finding something to soothe the pain.

https://youtu.be/8wxBLq_C2KQ?si=s0JBho_E_ToKtC1I

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Aeris Walker
22:59 Jun 20, 2025

I feel like lockdown was the catalyst for so many people starting new hobbies and activities: gardening, writing, fitness/running.
For us, it was backyard chickens haha.

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Graham Kinross
23:57 Jun 20, 2025

How many chickens? My mum and dad used to have chickens and my mum says they were really violent towards each other.

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Aeris Walker
19:39 Jun 21, 2025

The most we’ve ever had is 10. Only 3 now. They are all hens and actually very sweet. My children pick them up tote them around like stuffed animals.

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Mary Bendickson
12:30 Jun 14, 2025

Or just get a starter from mom...

Congrats on shortlist. Knew it was delightful.🎉

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Aeris Walker
13:25 Jun 17, 2025

Much easier!

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Aeris Walker
22:57 Jun 20, 2025

Thanks, Mary!!

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AnneMarie Miles
00:02 Jul 10, 2025

Aeris. I laughed. I gaped at your beautiful sentences. I remembered why I never attempted the sourdough trend but welcomed all the trial loafs from friends. You didn't skimp anywhere in this piece (I mean there's a link in here for everything!). It's great to read your words again. Thanks for this, and congratulations on the well-deserved shortlist 🎉

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Philip Ebuluofor
20:15 Jun 25, 2025

Fine work.

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Polly Bochkariov
20:27 Jun 23, 2025

I am actually a sourdough baker, and this somewhat resembles my Mom's journey... *Muffled laughter*
Excellent job!

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Aeris Walker
15:56 Jul 16, 2025

Thanks for reading, Polly! You go on with your bad sourdough-baking self! ;)

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Polly Bochkariov
00:29 Jul 17, 2025

I dunno about bad... but I wish I had half of the recipe's tool recommendations haha

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Marilyn Flower
04:07 Jun 22, 2025

Anything worth doing is worth doing over the top, right? I loved this line: Whatever heats your yeast. quite the fun piece to sink my teeth into, I really got a rise out of your homegrown humor. Bravo and congratuations, Aeris!

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Aeris Walker
21:44 Jul 07, 2025

Hahaha yes! Why *sample* a new hobby when you can obsess over it to the point of emotional burnout and financial ruin?? Isn't this the only way?

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Bradon L
23:20 Jun 20, 2025

I tried sourdough once, I got some starter named “SourDoug” from a friend and promptly forgot about it. Doug died! After this gem of a story though, I might try again. Well maybe not, I hate baking. Nonetheless, this was so well done!

“Whatever heats your yeast.” - Love this line😂

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Aeris Walker
23:31 Jun 20, 2025

Bradon, it's so good to see your teeny-profile-bubble face again! My few weeks' break from Reedsy somehow turned into a year and a half, but it's good to see familiar faces and names still here :)

Oh no, rest in peace SourDoug!! If I try bread again, I'm definitely bumming someone else's starter.

It's time for another Bradon story!

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Avery Sparks
21:14 Jun 20, 2025

As a millennial, it has been suggested that I might like to make my own sourdough approximately 737363 times, so I feel very much in on this joke - or should I say jokes, as there's an impressive variety of them here!

"Sleep when the starter sleeps." - pithy, pitch perfect.

Congratulations!

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Story Time
18:14 Jun 20, 2025

Aeris, I was so excited to see one of your stories featured here!!! Congratulations. This was such a treat to read.

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Aeris Walker
20:38 Jun 21, 2025

We hey there Mr. B! Good to see some familiar faces(?) still around here. Thanks for reading ☺️

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David Sweet
18:09 Jun 20, 2025

Congrats on the shortlisting! It was a great story.

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Aeris Walker
15:57 Jul 16, 2025

Thank you very much, David!

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Victor Amoroso
17:19 Jun 20, 2025

I'm hungry now...

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Nicole Moir
15:40 Jun 20, 2025

Congrats! So happy and excited, a great read and message!

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Aeris Walker
20:38 Jun 21, 2025

Thank you very much!!

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Marty B
19:45 Jun 18, 2025

As a baker myself I appreciate the nonfiction tag! I recognize myself in this line
'Your glorious, beloved dough child looks like… A tortilla' ;)

All too true! 'Well, technically, yes, you’ve failed to make an artisanal loaf of crunchy, spongy, Instagram-worthy sourdough bread, but it’s still edible!'

Even the most dense flat bread is great when warm with butter!

There's a great novel with a similar theme: 'Sourdough: or, Lois and Her Adventures in the Underground Market'
Thanks!

Keep baking (and writing!)

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Aeris Walker
17:46 Jun 19, 2025

Anything is good enough with enough butter!
Thanks for reading, Marty ;)

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Marty B
17:27 Jun 20, 2025

Congratulations on shortlist!

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Aeris Walker
23:07 Jun 20, 2025

Thanks so much!

Reply

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