Living Like A Baker: The Astonishing Story of Baker Tam, Proprietor of Small Batch SOURDough.

Part two in our mini-series on bakers and microbakers

In February 2020, Tamara Smith flew across the Atlantic to join us for a week in Sparkwell, learning to ‘think like a baker’ and becoming our dear, life-long friend. Here, in her own words, she shares the story of her baking journey, and how she and her husband – The Baker’s Man – are making a baking dream come true in the town of Northport, WA.

[Text and pictures are copyright Tamara Smith and are republished with kind permission. Please follow Small Batch SOURDough on Facebook for further updates to this inspiring story.]

“They say that sourdough is the gateway drug that lures the home baker into back yard chickens, milk goats and spotted small pigs! And it’s true. 

These pictures preserve my blossoming romance with the ancient tradition of sourdough baking. They were taken in 2019.

We were homesteading on 4 acres with 5 kids and a whole lot of critters. Every moment was a learning opportunity and seemingly every flat surface in my home was littered with various versions of “hobby farming how-to’s” and “back to the basics” books. It was lovely. It was hard work. It was worth all of it. Simple. Slow. Intentional. Connected to tradition. Basically good. It was sourdough that caught my attention. What is this thing that has lasted eons? It enticed me and held fast to the desires in my heart. And so it began…

From Spokane to Sparkwell

Saving my small profits from selling these sourdough loaves to neighbors and providing fresh goat milk to mamas with newborn babies, I reached out to Penny and Dragan at The Artisan Bakery School in Sparkwell, England. Our email correspondence resulted in a 6-day crash course on “everything they know” about bread.  I wanted ancient knowledge. Timeless techniques. History. Philosophy. And I wanted heart. I wanted to be in the presence of the master. And that is what I got! Plus so much more!  

I departed Spokane Airport on Valentine’s Day 2020, and returned home February 26th while the world literally shut down behind me (Covid).  I had a ball of sourdough starter (named ‘Sparkwell’) tucked safely in my carry on bag. And my mind was whirling with all the knowledge and resources made available to me. But my heart. Sigh… my heart was aching for having left a small piece of it at the Olde Home Cotttage at the end of the lane.  That ache in my heart has been a constant, quiet reminder that I know things about real bread and I must share this with my community. It also comforts me, because when there is grief, there must have been love. Where there is love, there is belonging. And I belong in Sparkwell. Just as I belong in my little town of Northport. This sourdough thing is much more than a hobby or a job or something I am good at doing. It’s a purpose. A calling. A mission. A song I must sing. A canvas I must paint. A dance I must allow. I simply cannot ignore it.

The following months of 2020 were full of unrest in the world around us but things on the home front were exciting. 

I baked my little heart out, trying all my new recipes from Sparkwell. In the midst of horrifying home haircuts, family-only birthday parties and squirmy little piglets arriving right on time, my kitchen was flooded with sourdough! I situated my fermenting dough in and amongst the family refrigerator at night and I baked 2 loaves at a time in my Dutch ovens. It took me 12 hours of baking to produce 14 loaves! 

The Baker’s Man has replaced my propane kitchen stove 5 times since then. I suppose 500 degrees for extended periods of time is a bit much for the old girls. Those days are gone but not forgotten in the least. The interest around me grew and I was soon providing loaves regularly for a few close friends. It was fun to think about the meals being planned to accompany these fresh loaves each week. I made just enough money to buy more flour after each bake. 

I have yet to see anything but a smile when I share this bread with another person. Big or small. Young or old. You all smile. And then I smile. Smiling is light and soft and open. It lifts up and allows. It is contagious and simple to do. Perhaps you find yourself smiling while you read this? I am smiling as I write it, for sure. How fun it was to bake bread that I could share with others and produce such happiness. Even if it wasn’t perfect. And my ovens were burning up. And my fridge was over crowded. And my kitchen was covered lovingly in a thin layer of white flour dust. Even if it was hard… it prepared me for this time right now.

The Break Up

Like any love story worth telling, there was a break up. It was the old “it’s not you, it’s me” line. And, to be honest, there was another lover. Hog raising, animal husbandry and meat processing caught my attention.  The science of slow cure and dry aging was my particular crush. And I loved it! I scooted my trusty starter further and further back in my refrigerator and barely tended to its basic need for survival. And I mean barely.  I was preoccupied with this intriguing concept of farm to table and my sourdough flame flickered in the dark. The kids were only getting bigger and more involved in the world around us and I simply did not make time for much else. I did coax a rather disgruntled loaf or two  out of my starter once in a while. Even in the midst of neglect and outright rejection.. the life was always there in that starter.  How lucky I am to have had such unwavering gallantry in a jar … in my fridge… just waiting….

Life is Art

My thoughts began untangling during my next phase of life.  I took more time for sunsets or a calm fall afternoon. We hand-cranked sausage links from antique cast iron. I cooked with the kids using ingredients from our own barn yard. My sourdough spoke to me, it whispered and invitation to create art. To slow down and make it pretty. Simply for pretty’s sake. I learned to calm my mind while I mixed the dough. I listened more than I spoke and really, really liked what I began to hear.  I got my first tattoo of the kids playing on the beach of the Columbia River. A river that had washed away so many of my ears and brought with it abundant life! I had the word ‘namaste’ inscribed below the silhouette of my darlings. The light in me was beginning to see the light in you. And my sourdough was responding! Life is art. We are creators of our own destiny. I began dreaming and longing again. What was it that I really, truly wanted… And could I actually have it?

Stepping Out

I began feeling most fulfilled when I was in service to others. It brought deep and lasting satisfaction. We catered weddings, put the kids in sports, attended local events and gatherings and began putting ourselves out there.  I was hired on at Bull Hill Guest Ranch as a cook and my creativity and culinary expressions were not reined in on that mountain. Man, we had fun! Less time pouring over that stack of homesteading books and more time face to face with the world around us. And it felt good. Sourdough was forever near. And I began regularly mixing and shaping and baking and selling again …

Let it Be

I’ve heard it said that what we aren’t changing, we are choosing. So I changed everything. I said goodbye. I let go. I allowed and I wondered about what I really wanted. I made our new place a home. I made my new neighbors my friends and I waited. I fed and nurtured my starter and the first loaves I baked in our new home were beautiful, round sunflower loaves! Then I dreamed up this idea of opening a little bakery in town….

Listening

It was the early morning of my 44th birthday (12-02-22) when my deceased mother visited me in a dream. In the dream, she was excited to see my new building, and old rundown house on Center Avenue in Northport. So I showed her the house and she walked through the front room and turned to look at me from the kitchen. With a twinkle in her eye and a knowing look on her face, she said, “You know just bought your bakery, don’t you?” I woke up that winter morning to a fresh blanket of snow and a house full of sick teenagers. They weren’t really sick, just crabby, lay-around-the-house kind of sick. So I took off to Rossland BC, just across the border. As I strolled the magical wonderland of that darling little town, I was struck by the long line of people I saw. My curious eyes followed the chatting and excited line of folks all bundled up and waiting. Waiting for what? For whom? Then I saw it. The blue and white iconic sign for Hoopers Bakery. It opened at noon and the time was 11.25 am. The dream from earlier that morning came sweeping back through my mind and this time it landed somewhere very deep in my heart.  A bakery. In Northport. A line of happy people waiting for my fresh, sourdough loaves. This was it. This was what I had been looking for. Or had it been looking for me, all along ….?

In Over My Head

Before I could blink, I found my little self in meetings with property owners, business guys, real-estate brokers, loan officers, bank managers and financial advisors. My head was spinning with business plans, projected sales, permits and inspection. Negotiations and offers and price points and bottom lines filled my inbox. Down payments. Collateral. Refinancing. Lease agreements and law offices. Title companies and insurance agents.  I was so far in over my head, I found myself holding my breath. But there is no life without breath.  I needed help. I needed guidance, counsel and expertise. I needed wisdom and encouragement and friendship. I needed someone to remind me of the goal and my “why”. And so, the right people showed up at the exact right time and I learned to breathe. I learned to breathe underwater… and you know, it’s pretty fantastic. I found a measure of peace deep inside as I witnessed this dynamic team of people form around me. Inspections were passed. Agreements were made. Resources were available.  Contracts were signed. All as a result of taking that breath. Staying under water. Trusting the journey and allowing.

Ain’t She Purdy?

Then I knew I had to have an oven. A real bread oven. The Baker’s Man had replaced 5 kitchen ovens for me so far and this madness had to end. During a long day of monotonous tasks at work, I hatched a brilliant plan. It was St Patty’s Day last year that I sent emails to about 60 of my closest friends, family and bread lovers. I opened a membership plan called The BreadWinners 2023. The fee was $100 and the benefit was a year’s worth of reduced bread and purchases once I was baking weekly with my new oven!  I raised $4,800 in 8 days! Just a couple hundred more than I need to order my first Pico Plus Chandley Oven! What a lucky girl I am!   I was elated and we turned the house upside down with new wiring and install. Thanks, men!  My bread production jumped from 2 loaves every 45 minutes to 22 loaves every ½ hour. I cried.  I danced. I laughed. I fell in love with this oven. I name her Purdy,  because ain’t she? Word got out and there was no looking back to the Dutch ovens in my home kitchen. 

SBSD – Small Batch SOURDough- Was Born

It was a comfort to know that I didn’t have to do it all myself. I now had a team and I could start really working on my part. My part was the dough.  Both the kind we like to have in our pockets and the soft, bubbly, bouncy kind that magically turns into bread after applied heat. And holy moley, did I have fun! My logo was designed and I started a notebook of recipes, formulas, notes, ideas, mistakes and questions. If I wasn’t stretching and folding, I was sure thinking about it.  The customer list just kept growing and the joy in my heart did too!  I have likened the entire process to the experience of being pregnant. This part felt like finding out for certain that there was a baby on the way. (I’m quite happy this is a beautiful analogy and NOT my actual reality at this point in my life lol).  It was thrilling. The sheer joy and curiosity and wonder was compelling, like a force of energy charging ahead through the unknown.  Absolute blissful fearlessness…

Every time I saw Small Batch SOURdough in print, my heart fluttered. It still does today. This dream was coming to life. My customer base grew beyond my little town as I was able to organize online orders and deliveries. Some of you picked up in alley ways, parking lots  and off my tailgate on your lunchbreak. Lol fun times! We closed on the property on 06-22-2023 and things got dirty. Literally dirty. So much dirt and rocks and concrete and mud. The loaves kept comin’ as The Baker’s Man broke ground.

My baking days were the most happy I had been in quite some time. My recipes were coming together. I was trying new ideas and creative combinations. I could hardly eat a meal without wondering if, somehow, this could be a loaf. Reuben Sandwich. Ham and Cheese. Olive Oil and Red Pepper. Berries and Cream. Zucchini Bread. Pears and Walnut. Apples and Pepper Jack. Roasted Garlic and Sun-dried Tomato. Huckleberry and White Chocolate. Yellow Raisins and Coconut. Pecans and Apricots. Feta and Dill. Sausage and Black Olives. Cherries and Lavender. Cranberries and Orange. Lemon and Poppyseed. Green Olives and Herbs. The creation was endless. It was as if there were no bottom to that barrel. I worked on collecting the perfect sized bins for the perfect amount of dough. I studied that use of cold temperatures and warm environments and how it challenged my dough. I experimented with an abundant amount of flours. I spent a lot of time with Purdy. It became quite clear that one oven was no longer adequate.

https://www.facebook.com/reel/306497655355001

Let’s go!

Interior walls started going up. Boards were painted and run through a planer. Ceiling tiles were installed. The trim. Oh, dear Lord, the trim. So. Much. Black. Trim. Miles and piles and loads of labor went into the following months. It was all hands on deck only all the hands had lots of other decks they were managing at the same time. Early mornings, late evenings, weekends and a growing belief in our own dream motivated every single effort. Plus, we had good company and cold beers. We made progress every day. Some more than others, but we were on our way…

Purdy Number 2!

As colder weather began approaching, the demand for these loaves of sourdough increased massively. All the soups and the crockpot meals were hitting kitchens around my community and they needed the bread. Every week I’d look around my kitchen after filling all the orders and think  “I really need another oven.” So I opened my membership again. This time, it took about a month, but we raised half the amount of the second oven and Small Batch was able to match it. Purdy Number 2 was on her way… 

Horses & Carts

If  I were to jump into another project like this (which I am sure I will!), I would have been more realistic about the time and skilled labor it was all going to take. The cart got hurried out in front of the horse on several occasions and it slowed down the progress quite a bit. Somehow we managed to stay on task and have a bit of fun along the way.  A large wall was built to divide the space between the coffee shop and the salon. All the plumbing and wiring went into the wall as well. The old walk-in cooler space out back was renovated for an office. And the hallway to the second exit door and the bathroom was in place. My home kitchen was overrun with Pumpkin Swirl Bread and Holiday Dinner Rolls! I hand-shaped and baked 2,880 rolls during the holiday season. Y’all LUV-D them!  I was able to hire on my niece for some part-time help and she was a delightful game-changer to Small Batch! Two ovens, two sets of hands, two thousand pounds of flour and we were killin’ it.

Here Come the Holidays!

We finally signed papers on our loan for the remodel. Every penny invested to that point had been our very own and it was a stretch. We had a flooring party on my 45th birthday and two days later The Baker’s Man and I sent our oldest girl off to basic training for the Air Force. The future was simultaneously foreboding and outrageously bright! We didn’t sleep much that month. The weight of so many things seemed to prop itself up on my chest as I laid down in my warm bed. I fought  some internal battles and let some things truly go… the sun always comes up. Nothing lasts for ever. We all made it through December (and most of January).

The Northport Corner Shoppe

I named the building The Northport Corner Shoppe back in January 2023 when I opened the LLC (Limited Company). The building is on a busy corner in town so the name made sense and  would be easily remembered. I also love the old black and white film “Shoppe Around The Corner”.   So I played on some words and came up with the name. I think it suits the location and the building well. Throughout time the businesses will like change configurations inside, but the name will remain. Colville Sign printed out the logo and The Baker’s Man built a frame. We recruited the help of our boys to hang her up on an icy, snowy day. We just couldn’t wait! Hanging the sign felt important and final.

It’s funny how you can be “all in” on a project and then one small part will stand out with more significance than the rest.

The old sign was carefully removed and disassembled and will be used in new business ventures elsewhere. It stood faithfully and proudly for many years, as did the people in this town that supported the business it represented.   I love hearing the stories and creating a space where the memories can be shared of time spent at Marylou’s Café and The News Café and the Mustang Grill. Some of you can recall walking in as a small child when it was the US Customs and Immigration Office. History is important. Memories are crucial to preserving and carrying on traditions. Your memories and stories of time spent in this old building deepens the meaning and brings richness to our mission of service to the community. So keep coming in. And keep sharing those stories!

Christmas was full of mini loaves and gift boxes. Reels of ribbon and stickers. Gift cards and order forms. Receiving and giving. Dirty bread pas and stack of empty flour sacks. Nice bottles of wine. Holiday treats. Old movies and a brand new vinyl record of Andre Bocelli. I carved out a little time before the ball dropped, to express my deepest gratitude to 2023. It was the most fantastic, unearthing, exhilarating and terrifyingly wonderful year!  2024 is shaping up to go even further.

Now that the salon was open and the coffee shop was well on their way, we turned our focus on the bakery. The commercial kitchen space is a little less than 400 square feet. So we have every inch, nook and cranny accounted for as usable space. We removed the old wall coverings, finished up the plumbing and electrical and started gathering equipment! I’ve witnessed more genius engineering with forklifts, ratchet straps and determined men than I care to admit.  

Bakery equipment is nothing but heavy. Sinks, refrigerators, mixers, slicers, ovens and cooling racks were being bought, loaded, hauled and then laid in waiting with anticipation. The new wall covering parts and pieces were on sight and a small stack of laminate flooring was piled next to it. New light fixtures were picked up and the  swinging saloon doors finally arrived! But we had to put it all hold. We had things to celebrate in Texas as our girl made her way triumphantly past the finish line of Basic Training in the United States Air Force! After filling 300 orders, I closed down all bread baking. After working 80 hours a week, The Baker’s Man set down his tools. And we headed south for 5 days. I am glad we did! Our kids are a part of this life journey and we needed that pause. We needed to remember.

Just gonna build the wall

As southern and charming as The Baker’s Man may seem, his heart has some heavy metal rock n’ roll in it. He knows all the albums. All the dates. All the stats on all the bands. And so does our oldest daughter. This metal wall covering install is daunting on some levels, but it also makes him feel right at home.  Sharp edges. Loud grinders. Drill bits. Rivet guns. Just gonna build the wall….

21st February 2024

Not much on my camera roll to report this morning, but things are moving along for Small Batch SOURdough. Some days we just dig our roots in deeper. We reach further down than ever before. Looking for the tether. Searching for the grounding rod. We get more clear. More settled. We breathe and reimagine the dream.

The strength and support is always there. It’s under all the conventional thinking. The programming. The common sense and the cultural way. The support is in pause. In the stillness. In the compassion and service to others. It’s always in us. It is us.

© Tamara Smith

We will officially open in the early Spring!

Baking Us Proud!

Our baking students around the world continue to impress us.

Two beautiful boules by Dr.John Tankard, based on Dragan’s recipe for white with rye, swapping rye for malthouse.

We have been teaching people how to bake real bread, pastries and pizza ever since the financial crisis in 2008…

Today, as we face an even bigger crisis for the world, now easing our way tentatively out of lockdown, our aim remains unchanged: to help individuals become more resilient and more self-reliant while pursuing a healthier lifestyle – and having fun! More than ever, we are convinced that traditional techniques, organic ingredients and ancient or heritage grains offer keys to a more caring and more sustainable society.

Our students, past and present, are doing us proud.

Amazing first sourdough ever by Tessa from Phillipines. (Artisan Sourdough Made Simple online course)

Those who learned to bake before the lockdown are putting their skills to good use, making bread for their own households, and helping their communities by baking for those in isolation, or baking for small community shops.

Those learning to bake online during lockdown are also highly motivated, sending us messages from all over the world, with questions about baking, and pictures of their beautiful loaves. It is heartwarming to see our interests shared by bakers from such diverse locations and situations!

Most popular online courses for lockdown have been Mastering Sourdough Starters & Leavens (No yeast? No problem!), Deliciously Gluten Free Artisan Bread, Naturally Gluten Free Sourdough Bread, Know Your Dough and Effortless Artisan breads.


I just wanted to say that what you both have given to me over the weekend Helen and I were able to stay last year, has paid off. I am by no means a expert, but now getting consistent results and now supplying the people local to us that are isolating. 

Dr.John Tankard
More sourdough from Dr. John!
John Morgan – proper job! Came on Artisan Sourdough & Rye earlier this year.

It has been 4 months since my induction into bread making. I just thought  would send a few pics of my attempts (above). I noticed in your book that steam was not recommended in domestic ovens so I have been using casserole dishes which seem to work very well. (Great tip, John!)

John Morgan

I made my own buckwheat starter from scratch, and am delighted it has worked! So I now alternate between the brown rice pizza boule recipe, and the buckwheat and chestnut loaf .  I have started adding fennel seeds or cumin seeds, and topping with chia seeds, which has turned out well. I love baking gluten free with your recipes, it is a joy.

Judith Hooper – gluten free baking 2-day course

Online success

Focaccia baked in a domestic oven.

From Daniel Fracalossi, online student on Master the Craft of Artisan Pizza, in Hobart, Tasmania:

Dragan’s Dough:I think this is my favourite pizza recipe so far, the pizza puffs up really nicely and is thick enough to hold plenty of toppings. The flavour is also really nice, even though I only did the quick one (4 hours total fermentation time). I think this might have to be my go to recipe!


Focaccia Dough:This one was delicious too, very quick and a great treat. The added benefit of this one, is you can cook it in a regular domestic oven, even without a pizza stone! I haven’t tried baking it in my appliance yet, but it would probably go well as long as I used some baking paper. This is great for an appetiser 🙂 I made this for my parents and family when we visited them on the weekend and they were very impressed. 


Rocket Pesto:We had lots of leftover rocket leaves in the house, so this was the perfect thing to make! We used it for pesto pasta for lunch during the week, which was delicious. I also put it on some of the pizzas using Dragan’s dough tonight.

Fossil Cove Track:Unrelated to pizza, but this was a walk that my wife and I did today, down to a little rock beach with a rock archway and fossils! We live in Hobart, Tasmania, so a fair way away from you in England!
Hope you both have had a nice week!

And on that note, we wish you all a great week too! Keep safe, keep happy and keep baking!

The Sub-Antarctic Sourdough Team!

Possibly the world’s coolest bakers (including one trained by us)!

The South Georgia Islands lie just off Antarctica, and are home to a British Antarctic Survey base doing research on climate change. Last year, Dr. Katharine Ganly from Derriford Hospital arrived at The Artisan Bakery School having just read the fine print in her new employment contract which stipulated that all BAS team members must take turns baking bread for the base. “I had never baked bread before, and I had already accepted the job,” she joked, “so I thought I had better come and learn!”

“Marcel is a true sub-Antarctic starter made here on South Georgia,” writes Katharine.  “There is myself and another sourdough baker, the rest of the time it is usually bread made with packet yeast which is a bit quicker to make but also good. We eat a LOT of bread here- every day at 10:30 we have a break (called « Smoko » historically) where we manage to get through loaves of toast slices with jams and butter. I’m still here and will be here likely until December or January next year. We still have quite a full complement (27 on base at the moment) but will drop down to 10 next month. I’ll be doing more baking over the austral winter as my « turn » will come around more often. I am looking forward to it. 

From over here life in the « real world » looks very strange. We have managed to remain the only continent free from coronavirus, but only by limiting polar operations. We are quite lucky in a way to be as geographically protected as we are, but we still get all the news and I think it makes people feel anxious here, worrying about others at home.”

“On a more positive note we have a King Penguin chick right outside my surgery here that was hatched only a few days ago. Quite a rare thing as usually they hatch in their colonies at locations remote to where we are- for some reason this pair have decided we are a good spot to raise a chick. I hope they are right and he gets fattened up before winter properly hits us here.”

Dr.Kathrine Ganly bringing fresh bread across to the hungry team.
Happy team bakers with Marcel-the-rye and Sif-the-wheat-starter

“It is strange to think that 8000 miles away we are probably more ‘social’ in our small community than everyone back home is able to be at the moment. I am baking two more loaves today/tomorrow but it is a rather ‘busy’ weekend for here with some boating to pick up colleagues who have been on a field trip to a different peninsula- this involves ‘all hands on deck’ so I prefer to reply now lest I forget to later. The picture (above) shows some bread I made yesterday ( excuse the scalpel in the photo- I use it to slash the dough before putting it in the oven!). “

A good crumb and a proper crust. (“If you can bake it there, you’ll bake it anywhere..!”)

Dr.Katharine (left) and colleague in the kitchen with THE coolest view!

Please do feel free to use any photos on your blog/website for some positivity! I had wanted to take a picture of our penguin chick, but he is too shy at the moment and I don’t want to scare him off, so I have attached some others. I hope they all come through- our internet here is very limited at best.

With good wishes from South Georgia,

Katharine.”

Our thanks to Dr.Katharine Ganly and colleagues for the story, the lovely pictures and permission to share them with you.

Taking care of Bread Astaire.

& Happy New Decade, dear Readers!

I hope you have all had a great start to the new year, and that you are keeping the bugs at bay. Dragan’s sourdough culture, Bread Astaire, whom some of you have already met, needed a bit of ‘intensive care’ this week, so I knitted him a little hat and scarf. I don’t know about him, but it was certainly very therapeutic for me!

We are busy putting the finishing touches to a brand new course on Udemy, ‘Sourdough Starters & Leavens‘, so look out for our announcement on this very soon. (Bread Astaire makes a compelling cameo appearance in the movie, well worth the watch!) The course is 100% focused on making, managing and really understanding the different kinds of sourdough cultures, and how using young, mature or old starters / leavens makes a significant difference to your breads. Watch this space!