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I often try to explain what wood fired oven baking is all about, but it always leads to more questions. "How large is your oven?" "How do you fire it?" Do you bake with a fire in the oven? "How do you mix the dough?" "How do you load the oven" The crew at National Public Television's Tennessee Crossroads did a tremendous job of answering these questions in a way I could never do with words. They came out over two days to film a short segment on the process of baking whole grain sourdough bread with a traditional wood fired oven. My thanks go to producers Tressa Bush and Ken Simington.
Here is a link to the video.
Reporter Laura Hill and photographer Jeff Adkins teamed up for this article in Tennessee Home and Farm Magazine. Here is a link to the post or read it below in its entirety. The video may be found here.
Tennessee Living
Hearth and Soul ![]()
Published Jul 27, 2009
It’s six in the morning, a time when most people are turning over and snuggling down for that last blessed half hour of sleep. For David Tannen, however, the day is well under way – elbow deep, in fact – in flour, water and yeast.
For most bakers, this pre-dawn drill is familiar stuff. But Tannen’s routine is a little different, an echo of a millenniums-old tradition that has more in common with a medieval farm wife’s ritual than that of a modern-day bread baker.
“People have been baking bread in just this way forever,” Tannen says as he dashes from the cooler, where today’s dough waits to be patted into loaves, into the room where, through its open mouth, you can see impressive orange flames scouring the roof of his hand-made brick oven.
“My bread is good for you,” he says, “bread that really is the staff of life.”
Tannen is one of a growing group of artisan bakers who make their bread from additive- and preservative-free ingredients and then bake it the time-honored way in brick ovens fired with wood. Dense, chewy and flavorful, his bread bears little resemblance to commercially produced bread, even from high-end specialty bakeries.
Tannen’s Twin Forks Farm bread comes in four varieties: Bohemian Three-Seed, Expedition, Country and Raisin. The recipes are gleaned from friends and colleagues, as well as from his own imagination. Tannen’s whole-wheat flour comes from an employee-owned mill in Vermont. The flour is supplemented with other natural ingredients such as rye, millet, buckwheat, barley, oats, flax and sesame seed. While his breads have a very nominal amount of salt, they have no added sugar, eggs, fats or dairy, and Tannen uses no commercial yeast, preferring his own natural starter.
Tannen’s bakery is a two-room metal building that adjoins the home on his 60-acre Twin Forks Farm in Primm Springs, Tenn., located in rural Hickman County about 45 miles southwest of Nashville. Pulling up to the farm, you’re greeted by a couple of lackadaisical farm dogs and through the open screen door comes a reassuring call, “They’re friendly – don’t worry.”
Tannen greets you with a floury hand. Tall, lanky, in his early 50s with close-cropped hair and glasses, he looks more like a college professor than a baker. He came to his new career, his passion, in 2007, though, he says, “I have always been interested in providing people with nutritious food.”
He began cooking as a child in Memphis but got serious in the kitchen in his late 20s. Over time, his interest in healthy food broadened, and he turned from being a successful jewelry salesman to a successful salesman of nutritional products.
Tannen and his wife, Laura, who works in commercial real estate banking, left a home in suburban Nashville several years ago to try their hand at farming, a longstanding dream of his. Within a couple of years, though, he found out, “It was just too much work for one person.”
In the meantime, Tannen rediscovered a book about brick ovens he had bought years before, after hearing the author, Kiko Denzer, interviewed on public radio. He decided to build an oven himself, a mound of clay, rocks and brick.
“These ovens are the same all over the world,” says Tannen, who dug the clay for his first oven, now a landmark in his farmyard, from a hillside 20 feet away. “You’ll find that the height is 62 percent of the width when they function well, and no one really knows why. All these different cultures have discovered this same ratio.”
His first brick oven built, Tannen began baking bread – four loaves at a time, which was all that the oven could hold.
“It tended to get a little burned, but people loved it,” he says. And so did Tannen, who had discovered a new vocation.
He built his second brick oven in 2007, following plans from Ovencrafters, the creation of Alan Scott, co-author of the brick-oven lover’s bible, The Bread Builders. A vast improvement over his first effort, his current indoor oven can hold 42 loaves of bread at a time. It takes two days to prepare the oven for baking in order to adequately heat the 10 inches of concrete that surround the oven. Fueled by hickory heartwood sticks, at times temperatures near 1,000 degrees, though baking temperature is far less.
“Time and temperature are absolutely critical in making bread. If you are not precise with them, you’re really just taking a shot in the dark,” says Tannen, explaining a lesson learned through painful trial and error.
After mixing precisely weighed flour, water and his homemade starter with his hands, Tannen lets the resulting dough rest in a cooler for several hours, an 18- to 22-hour fermentation that results in more intense flavor, enhanced nutritional value and easier digestibility, he says. After the dough rises, and is kneaded and risen again, it is made into rough loaves, then reformed and baked directly on the brick floor of the oven, which Tannen scrubs after he has raked off the hot coals.
He bakes twice a week, which he describes as “really a four-day deal.” In the winter he bakes about 120 loaves a week, triple that in the spring, and hopes to grow to a maximum of 500 loaves a week – “the most I could do and keep my sanity.”
It’s hard work, this bread business, but Tannen considers himself fortunate to do it. “It’s a mystical thing, making bread, especially when you do it the way I do over several days,” he says thoughtfully. “It touches a deep place in my soul.”
Story by Laura Hill
Photo by Jeff Adkins
Tannen sells his Twin Forks Farm bread at the Franklin Farmers’ Market during its open season. It’s also available year round at the Whole Foods locations in Cool Springs and Green Hills, The Produce Place on Murphy Road in Nashville. For more info, call (931) 729-9745.
Carrington Fox, the restaurant reviewer and food writer for the Nashville Scene, wrote this post for the Nashville Scene's Food Blog, Bites. Here is the link to the entire post or read it below.
Greatest Thing Since Twin Forks Farm Bread
I first met David Tannen, self-proclaimed chief cook and bottle-washer of Twin Forks Farm Artisan Breads, a couple of years ago when I was picking up my weekly CSA veggie haul from Fresh Harvest Coop. Tannen doesn't remember meeting me, but I'll never forget the heft of the loaf I purchased from him. He had recently constructed a small beehive oven in his backyard in Primm Springs, Tenn., and he was firing up loaves of old-world bread--four at a time--like little whole-grain cannon balls.
I recently had occasion to try Tannen's bread again, and what a difference two years makes. While Twin Forks loaves still weigh in at a pound-and-a-half, the texture has migrated from dry and leaden to moist and meaty, and the flavor is a hearty harmony of sweet, sour and faintly bitter.
Tannen, a former traveling salesman of whole-food products, says he learned a lot about time and temperature in the last couple of years. He learned to keep his sourdough starter at a constant 80 degrees, and he developed a feel for when rising dough is just right for baking. ("That's where all the artisan stuff comes in," he says.)
Along the way, he also developed a following for his bread out Primm Springs way, so he built a bigger oven and can now bake up to 175 loaves a day.
Of course, it's hard to finish a phone conversation with the affable and enthusiastic Tannen, because every few minutes he has to mix in some more flour or move some dough into the cooler or out of the oven. When he can break for a minute, Tannen overflows with facts about yeast, bacteria, fermentation--not to mention the laborious description of building a fire to 1,000 degrees, letting it cool over night, cleaning out the coals and mopping the inside of the oven to sterilize it before setting in the first batch of dough. The first bake of the day cooks for about half-an-hour, but as the day goes on and the oven temperature drops, the cooking time extends to 75 minutes.
It sounds like an exhausting process, and if you had asked me two years ago if it was worth it, I wouldn't have been so sure. But the bread Tannen is churning out now is remarkable. I sliced the raisin loaf as thin as possible, warmed it in the toaster and slathered butter across it. Riddled with plump sweet raisins, the dense bread soaked up the melted butter like a sponge, and each chewy bite was a balanced blend of sweet and sour, sharing nothing in common with mass-produced raisin loaf beyond a quiet empathy.
When I told Tannen I smeared Jif across the Bohemian Three Seed, I think I heard him gasp in horror. It may be blasphemy to thusly pollute artisan bread, but the whole wheat slice--pocked with sunflower, flax and sesame seeds--made one of the best open-face PB&Js I have ever had.
Starting next week, Tannen's bread will be available at Lazzaroli Pasta in Germantown and at The Produce Place on Murphy Road. On Wednesday, March 11, Tannen will be at The Produce Place offering samples and coupons for $1 off the $4.99 loaves. Twin Forks Farm Artisan Breads will also be available this spring at the farmers' markets downtown and in Franklin and through Fresh Harvest Coop.
Tasted this outside of Savarino's, when Tannen pulled up with a truckload of his wares. I don't even like raisin bread, and his was great: the plump, moist raisins were like bits of candy. Good luck trying to sell bread to Corrado, though.
Posted On: Friday, Mar. 6 2009 @ 6:55AMHi, this is David Tannen, chief cook and bottle washer, at Twin Forks Farm. Just wanted to let everyone know that my breads are also available at Whole Foods Market on Galleria Blvd in Franklin, TN. I deliver fresh baked bread on Wednesday and Saturday to this location.
I just removed the ashes and cleaned the hearth of my oven. The Bohemian 3 Seeded, the one with the sesame, sunflower and flax will soon be loaded in the oven. The neighborhood will soon be filled with the aroma of wholesome fresh baked bread.
Carrington, you are welcome to a slice, but you will not find any Jiff here. Only freshly ground peanut butter which also goes great on a thick slice of the Raisin Bread.
David Tannen
Twin Forks Farm
Artisan Breads
www.twinforksfarm.com
we ate this bread all last summer, picking it up from the franklin farmers market. it was good enough to make me get up early every saturday...
Posted On: Friday, Mar. 6 2009 @ 8:07AMWe picked up Twin Forks bread practically every week last summer @ the East Nashville farmer's market. It helped convert me from liking only white bread to liking only whole grain breads. Incredibly delicious bread!
Posted On: Friday, Mar. 6 2009 @ 9:31AMDavid, I delivered those loaves to Carrington like you asked, and that shrew didn't even let me have a taste! Why, I oughtta....
I guess it's either a testament to your bread, or to Carrington's cold-hearted indifference to her co-workers.
Posted On: Friday, Mar. 6 2009 @ 11:31AMJack -- That hurts. You will not be invited to my (increasingly hypothetical) Mad Men party. Now, Joe P. on the other hand just skyrocketed to the top of the list.
Posted On: Friday, Mar. 6 2009 @ 11:56AMJack, perhaps we should have a meet with the consigliere for lunch over at Savarino's and discuss retribution for this insult!
I'll be sure to bring some bread.
Posted On: Friday, Mar. 6 2009 @ 12:11PMCongratulations David,
Here at Whole Foods Market in Franklin every time David samples his bread on Wednesdays and Saturdays he sells out. We have a hard time keeping it on the shelves! I can attest to the quality and flavor, simply amazing. Keep up the good work David and see you tomorrow.
Micahel
Day 5 of Twin Forks Bread Watch: I had raisin bread today for both breakfast and dinner. It is still just as fresh and chewy as it was when it arrived. I've been keeping it in a big freezer bag. I'm thinking of conducting of endurance contest between TF bread and a loaf of my favorite challah, just for kicks.
Posted On: Monday, Mar. 9 2009 @ 8:54PMThis Bread really rocks. I had been looking for some old world style bread since moving to the United States several years ago. So when I found David at the Franklin farmers market I knew I had arrived. Try the Raisin bread with double cream brie and some fig jam or the hearty Bohemian 3 seed lightly butter with authentic salami. Heaven! David, thank you for baking this wonderful bread.
Posted On: Wednesday, Mar. 11 2009 @ 12:40PMMy husband and I have been enjoying David's breads since we discovered him last year at the Nashville Farmer's Market! We live in Hendersonville and now have to travel all the way to Franklin Whole Foods every few weeks to pick up 4-5 loaves of the Bohemian 3-seed (with an occasional loaf of Expedition thrown in). I spent much of my life in Europe (living and traveling) and had been searching for a bread that meets that dense, chewy European flavor! And David has mastered that.
We can't WAIT until Whole Foods in Green Hills starts carrying the bread and hope it's soon (sure would help with our gas bill, and then my 85-year old mother could also get the bread more easily!) :)
Thanks for your bread, David!
Posted On: Thursday, Mar. 12 2009 @ 9:37AMDavid's bread has become a weekly favorite in our home.
It is difficult, indeed, to find TRULY GOOD BREAD. David's careful crafting of this wonderful product, from the ingredients to the preparation to the specially-built oven, make their mark with every bite.
We're hooked. We fight for the last piece.
I've actually been known to hide the bread tin from my children.
Yes, it's that good.
And David's warm and winning personality makes it a delight to meet up with him on Saturdays at Whole Foods. A good man with good bread!
It's especially yummy toasted and slathered with butter.
There is nothing else on the shelves that rivals this healthful, quality bread. Now if only David would come to my house and bake it for me a few times a week. ;)
Posted On: Thursday, Mar. 12 2009 @ 1:48PMDavid, this raisin bread sounds incredible. Where'd you find such a great recipe? :)
Well done sir.
Posted On: Friday, Mar. 13 2009 @ 7:55AMRoben Mounger, also known as Ms. Cook, wrote this article for the Columbia Daily Herald, Columbia, TN. Roben and I had a great time baking, eating and talking! Here is a link to the entire story or read it below. Visit Roben's blog for wonderful stories on locally grown and crafted foods.

Sean York will one day recall bread making with his Grandfather and Bread Artisan, David Tannen.
Man Can Live on Quality Bread Alone
