Sunday, June 24, 2012

Practice makes Perfect?



I haven’t had much luck in bread making; only Asian style bread using the Tangzhong recipes using recipes found online. 
However, after hearing my cousin’s success with bread, I decided to give bread making another shot.  Initially, I planned to enroll in Art of Bread, but due to procrastination on my part, the class was full when I got around to signing up. 


I read good things about Dan Lepard’s recipes and decided to them a try.  It wasn’t perfect but much better than my previous attempts.   I have been making my own bread the last month or so  and have noticed some improvements.  Unfortunately, I have not mastered it yet but hoping practice makes perfect!

1 comment:

Roberthussy said...

Practice is the act of rehearsing a behavior over and over, or engaging in an activity again and again, for the purpose of improving or mastering it, as in the phrase "practice makes perfect". Sports teams practice to prepare for actual games. Playing a musical instrument well takes a lot of practice. It is a method of learning and of acquiring experience. The word derives from the Greek "πρακτική" (praktike), feminine of "πρακτικός" (praktikos), "fit for or concerned with action, practical"[1] and that from the verb "πράσσω" (prasso),"to achieve, bring about, effect, accomplish".[2] In American English practice is used as both a noun and a verb, but in British English there is a distinction between practice, used as a noun, and practise, used as a verb (see spelling differences.




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