Sourdough Saga
Today is bread day. While Gollum, my sourdough starter, is ready for action, I’m still not completely confident the bread will rise as it’s supposed to.
If you missed my last post, I named my starter Gollum, because when it comes to sourdough adventures, I find myself thinking about Gandalf, who said, “My heart tells me that Gollum has some part to play in it, for good or evil, before this is over.”
Now would be the time to mention Monday was also bread day, but my attempt was aborted by Gollum. The Tartine book said to discard all but a tablespoon of starter and then feed it again with the flour/water mixture. I’m not sure what happened, but Gollum failed to yield his precious bubbles after I fed him again, so I gave him more time to gather strength.
While Tartine is a great resource, it gets complicated fast, and I find Elaine at Foodbod Sourdough to be more approachable. Although I made the starter from Tartine, I’m following Elaine’s recipe for my first loaf of bread.
The dough is now experiencing the joys of “bulk fermentation” in the refrigerator. I will bake the bread later this afternoon. You may expect a full report in the coming days.
Happy in the middle
I’ve always wanted to be great at something, but greatness has eluded me, and the reality is that I’m adequate and sometimes pretty good at lots of things. This used to make me sad and envious as I read accounts of gifted and accomplished people with tremendous passion for their crafts.
As I’ve gotten older and experienced the simple pleasures of retirement, it turns out I’m quite happy in the middle. I don’t have a singular focus that drives me and see myself as a dabbler of sorts.
Dale is the same, and we were discussing it over drinks one evening. What is the name for people like us? He thought Renaissance man might fit the bill – a person of broad talents or expertise. But then I would hardly put us in the same league as Leonardo da Vinci.
Then whilst Googling around, I read this description of the modern Renaissance man or woman:
In the simplest terms, a Renaissance man is a person with genuine competence in and understanding of multiple different fields, all of which complement one another to make him a more talented and productive person.
I also discovered fellow blogger Patricia Doyle at Retirement Transition addressed this very same topic in 2019. She wrote:
Modern day Renaissance woman (or man) loves learning (has a mindset of continual learning) and enjoys discovering more. She/he is not “meandering” but delving just deep enough to gain knowledge; she/he recognizes that not everything has to be “mastered.”
Sounds good to me!
cloudspotting for beginners
As if I don’t already have enough to amuse me, I have become a fledgling cloudspotter! This is a great pandemic hobby, much like bird watching, and you don’t even have to leave your house.
I’ve always loved clouds. I vividly remember taking swimming lessons as a child. Floating on my back between sessions and trying to give name to shapes I saw in the sky. Was it a dog? A horse? But I never made much of an effort to learn more about them. Until last week.
I was playing golf and distance-chatting with one of my partners, when she mentioned a podcast that talked about the Cloud Appreciation Society. It’s a cool website with lots of amazing cloud pictures. I haven’t joined yet, but I definitely want that Cloud Selector Identification Wheel.
In the meantime, I purchased The Cloudspotter’s Guide by Gavin Pretor-Pinney, founder of the Cloud Appreciation Society. He’s a very entertaining writer with lots of good stories about clouds, but it is quite techy. Dale can’t wait for me to finish so he can get started. His brain absorbs details better than mine.
Me? I’m looking for quick results, so I downloaded three free Android apps on Google Play to help with cloud identification.
- Cloudspotting
- Cloud-a-Day
- Cloud Guide
My favorite so far is Cloud-a-Day, which has an Artificial Intelligence feature. I photograph a cloud formation, and it returns with a message:
Out of the 10 main cloud types, the Cloudspotter AI thinks it is this one.
Although there are 10 main cloud types, there are tons of sub-types and amazing rare cloud formations that even have special names. I’m just scratching the surface, but I’m seriously enjoying this new pleasure.
No aspirations involving greatness, but I’d like to get good enough to look up at the sky, and casually confirm, “Ah, cumulonimbus, thunderstorms likely.”
I keep running across this word, “Polymath”. A polymath is an individual whose knowledge spans a substantial number of subjects, known to draw on complex bodies of knowledge to solve specific problems. The earliest recorded use of the term in English is from 1624.
I saw polymath in my readings, but that seems lofty for my humble skills and interests. I also saw dilettante, which is usually considered derogatory, but I’m not so sure it doesn’t fit. “An amateur, someone who dabbles in a field out of casual interest rather than as a profession or serious interest.”
Like you, Donna, I am happy in the middle with relative self-reliance and independence. A number of years ago, my son experienced a serious head injury in a sporting event. One of his team mates visited him in hospital and said: I heard he’d died and I heard he’d walked out of hospital. What I see is that he’s somewhere in the middle. The middle’s not such a bad place to be.
Yes, it took me a long time to understand the middle’s not a bad place to be.
Oooh boy! This one is close to my heart…I have written more than once on my blog about being a dabbler vs. being a digger. I had a very wise prof who told me to embrace my “dabbler-ness” because diggers get the Nobel prizes but dabblers have all the fun! I also identify/aspire as a Renaissance woman!
The world is such an interesting place and there is so much to know; it’s a shame to spend too much time drilling down on any one topic.
Dabblers unite!
Thanks, Donna
Deb
I like the dabbler versus digger. Maybe we need a dabbler appreciation society.