Having many decades experience with temperature control, a big problem with regulating temperatures very close to room temp is that the control loop doesn’t work well unless there is also cooling. A simple very cheap fix in this case: get rid of the insulated box! Let the system leak heat! It will regulate better, and cause much less fuss to use a simpler enclosure. I used a transparent plastic tub. I also used my sous vide stick to regulate temperature and filled the bottom of the large tub with water. Voila! High humidity and good temp control using materials I had on hand. Placing the dough inside a transparent container immersed in the water means I can see it directly, no camera needed. Sorry to eliminate all that code, but simpler is usually better.
@nachoborello30473 жыл бұрын
Man, I came for the sour dough and stayed for the engineering, as a programmer and amateur baker I'm loving it!!
@KaiBuskirk11 ай бұрын
So rad!!
@fum00A3 жыл бұрын
Definitely high tech! I made my own low tech proofing box some time ago. I simply used an Igloo cooler which had a built-in drain plug to run my wires through. I also bought a temperature controlled plug similar to what you used. The advantage of using a proofing box is that it allows you to control the dough fermentation rather than letting the dough fermentation control you. Since using my proofing box, my results have improved tremendously!
@rationit3 жыл бұрын
I've under engineered mine got a hot plate in oven with temperature 🌡️ thermometer you poke In the bread and switch it of at the main if it get to hot. Works👍
@_J.F_3 жыл бұрын
I made one in a biggish Ikea plastic box just using a temperature controller unit (Inkbird ITC-308 Digital Temperature Controller) and an incandescent lightbulb for heat. I didn't put a camera in the box though and while the setup works really well, and cost very little to make, I usually end up using my airing cupboard which is always between 26-28 C because my hot water tank sits in the bottom of the cupboard. If I were to make a new one I would make it big enough to hold an entire oven tray as it would be cool to have that option. If I were to go the full hog I would probably also introduce a hygrometer controller and a small humidifier/dehumidifier so humidity could be controlled. Very fancy, but then the box would end up having to be VERY big too.
@misterdubity30733 жыл бұрын
Great job!! I love that you showed some of the coding and VI editor bits. For a camera I was thinking you were going to use a fiberoptic camera snake with a USB attachment. Glad to see the wire rack elevating the dough container off of the heating mat a little.
@mariapopek7798 Жыл бұрын
Love your videos - I have a love hate relationship with baking bread and your videos are helping to understand my failures as well as my successes
@etiennelabeille3 жыл бұрын
I had a similar box with a warming mat that I use to liquify tubs of honey that have gone solid. Then I realised that it was the perfect bread maker! A 17w mat gets the temperature to 29c in the box. And thanks to your autolise tips, I now make much better sourdough. Toasted, with butter and honey (of course) it’s the perfect breakfast.
@mobilfone22343 жыл бұрын
I've got a 5 Watt heating mat, put it under bowl, cover with a towel, adjust temperature and that's it, 2 for 15 Euro.PS: Well done!!!
@chrisokeefe68923 жыл бұрын
If you added a scale / ruler to the sample tube, you could use the time-stamped photos to plot a chart of the volume increase against time. If the results were consistent every time you made the same dough, then you'd be able to use this experiment to work out your exact fermentation time required. On the sample jar too - I've been collecting the dough and keeping it in the fridge. After a few bakes, I tried using this collected sample lump to ferment a new dough (without adding any yeast or starter). It took about 18 hours, but the loaf turned out amazing!
@apocalypse4873 жыл бұрын
Typical German over-engineering lol. I like it. Thanks for sharing.
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Yep. Usability we are not so good at haha.
@khawlahpeace1222 Жыл бұрын
Could you hear me in america screaming? This was so genius of you I couldn’t believe my eyes. I will be making this, maybe a little simpler because I’m not electronically smart at all. But all I need is my dough to be snuggy warm. Winter approaches and where I am is so cold as well. Thank you, and thanks for the laughs you gave to me also.
@paolopasquale3 жыл бұрын
Add an AI that can detect when the dough sample has risen to the desired percentage rise and sends you a message that your dough is ready for shaping
@mobilfone22343 жыл бұрын
Add automatic shaping, heat the stove via WiFI and then send a message ;-)
@mobilfone22343 жыл бұрын
@Anders Svensson GC with back light quite easy, you could even use a light barrier sensor...... I'm an old engineer, analog thinking :-)
3 жыл бұрын
You’ll laugh, but my box actually does that :) Dough growth is detected with a SciKit-Image/Python script, sent to Grafana and that will send me a Telegram message when the starter peaks.
@mobilfone22343 жыл бұрын
@Anders Svensson GC I would start with something like this.... amzn.to/3uzKjmN
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
@ Your box is amazing!
@isabelab68513 жыл бұрын
This altogether very amusing to me. I live with a mechanical engineer 😉🤣🤣🤣 However I have a Breville Smart Oven air fryer that has a proofing setting (26C) ...I never thought about it...then i decided to try it. My kitchen is around 24-25 C but it can fluctuate some...this way I know the temperature. It has worked great for me! Cannot wait to see your contraption in action!🤓
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Haha 🤣. Oh well, with 24/25 - no need to this tech 🤣
@johnnywright1592 Жыл бұрын
Good idea smiler to egg incubator i built, you should move the sensor down even with your dough are it will be higher temperature at the dough before it gets to temp to reach sensor unless you add a fan, but then you will make humidity to drop in the box
@inmamcleish18723 жыл бұрын
For a moment I thought you were talking German ... or Chinese. I din't understand a thing of the technical stuff. Thank goodness I understand you when you talk about bread. But well done for ingenuity and perseverance.
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Haha, sorry and thanks!
@auntiejune48002 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this! After watching your video I made a simpler one out of a foldable insulated food holder and a seeding warming mat.
@jackiebeidler45923 жыл бұрын
I bought at used "mini fridge" (in the US) with a clear door. And bought a amphibian/reptile heating pad with thermostat. It's a bit big, but my boyfriend deals with the space that it takes up. If it needs added humidity in the box, I add a cup of boiling water. Probably about $70 US all-in, but it was a great find getting a clean. clear-door refrigerator. the size of this fridge is probably the size as a typical one in an apartment in europe lol
@JoseLausuch3 жыл бұрын
Amazing work! I normally use my oven with light on, but I have to be careful, it sometimes reaches 28-30ºC ... From 7:38 to 12:10 you just described my daily work among terminals and scripts :D
@timtyndall40253 жыл бұрын
I made a simpler one out of a plastic storage container, a heating pad( for a pulled back), and a few towels. It’s not temperature controlled, but it helps when really cold. I may add a temp control, or redesign to be like this one.
@lshwadchuck5643 Жыл бұрын
My house is cool even on mild summer days and cold in winter. I put cold water in my slow-cooker and turn the glass lid upside-down. I but a triple-folded fluffy towel on it and then a china bowl on top. Then a metal cooling rack over that. I turn the crock pot on 'keep warm'. This is about the third iteration and doesn't result in any excess heat near the bottom of the proofing bowl or the starter jar. It just creates a warmer area than the rest of the room.
@gangalo683 жыл бұрын
Got a good chuckle when I realized I’ve never seen SO’s front page either 😄
@francesrdl3 жыл бұрын
Stackoverflow saves all of us software people :D I even found their "bread overflow" kind of sibling when I needed some troubleshooting on my sourdough starter!
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Oh yes. It saves us every day.
@jamf-r87193 жыл бұрын
Ingenious especially with the camera set-up! I think you better patent this idea, Hendrik! It may have cost almost as much as a B&T but it must be so satisfying to make your own.
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Thanks! Maybe one day we can enter mass production. I definitely want to add a pH meter to it as well.
@GavM3 жыл бұрын
Not sure if it’s been mentioned but the temp will more than likely be hotter than what the probe is detecting as it’s so far away from the heat mat. I’d put the probe in that box along with the dough.
@beatesetzer24413 жыл бұрын
I use a cooler box. Put in hot water glasses. Works well
@geurthakfoort8 ай бұрын
Maybe it is time for your next book: the sourdough proofing box.. about how to create a smart box to check temperature, ph, computer vision to check volume changes, api calls to a slack channel when the dough is ready etc etc! The worlds of sourdough and programming unite!
@Adam-ox6zy2 жыл бұрын
Sune (Food geek) recommended this video. Thanks for the DIY ideas.
@the_bread_code2 жыл бұрын
Awesome! Thank you!
@josegomezgil19243 жыл бұрын
Enter Summer time: you may want to add a Peltier Cell to cool down your proofer. Nice-useful toy you built , kudos!
@DigiLab36022 күн бұрын
If you used a hole saw you can have cut a slot for the cable in the hole saw plug and simply reglued it back in place. Hindsight is 20/20.
@MrTigerooo13 жыл бұрын
I use a mini fridge with ink bird controller with heating mat and the fridge plugged in also to the ink bird controller works perfect.
@Mindy567433 жыл бұрын
I have the brod and Taylor proofing box it is wonderful and I use it for a slow cooker also.
@joeees77903 жыл бұрын
I think a custom test cylinder with a sensor (arm connected to a switch) that triggers a email/sms notification when the sample has doubled in size would be an interesting addition.
@otchpotch3 жыл бұрын
I wonder if an incubator (like the ones for eggs) can make the job too ? My dad used to have a big one with temp and humidity control, can be interesting for bread.
@GeisenyarderАй бұрын
Since you are using the pi could you also add temperature controlling function to the code and a relay so your cable management would be easier?
@mieke2803 жыл бұрын
O! this is so good! Iwas also looking for something like this, i used a coolbox with a warmwaterjar, but it is just slowly cooling down. A reptile mat was also what i found *LOL*
@ToastedSynapseGaming3 жыл бұрын
Hmm, I've been eyeing an Active Cooler Box (that can be used in your car at 12V but also has a 220V input). It's around 50 Euros and uses Peltier elements that can be used in reverse (if you flick a switch/dial on the box) to either Cool or Warm the contents. I'm also very frugal when it comes to purchasing stuff, that's why I figured I will buy this box and I'll have 3 independent benefits from it. 1. It's intended purpose of having it in the car for long trips in the summer to keep your stuff cool (soda, sandwiches etc.) 2. Keeping my drinks (juice, beer or wine) cool in my room where I work, since I'm lazy and the fridge is downstairs, lol. (Or when it's hot outside and I want a cool sip of water in the middle of the night, it will be right there near my bed - and because it's Peltier technology and not compressors, it's silent). 3. Whenever I am making dough, bringing it downstairs to the kitchen and trying the warming option and seeing if I can ferment in it.
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Good point on the Peltier elements.
@ToastedSynapseGaming3 жыл бұрын
@@the_bread_code I saw you wrote about fans. This cooling box also has fans, although I don't know if they are intended for cooling and maybe don't turn on while heating. In any case, my fridge is at 2-4 degrees C, the kitchen can get as warm as 20-25 degrees C in summer, I would very much love to have an option to slow ferment like I do now in the winter. So the box goes to about 10 degrees C, meaning it's still in your chart so it works well and I don't have to destabilize my entire fridge to get slow fermentation. I've become a fan of fermenting over night. Maybe this cooler will also help me do that in the summer. EDIT: I also find it useful to place a digital thermometer next to my dough wherever it sits. In your case, because you have a camera inside, it wouldn't hurt to place one right next to the sample jar so you can read the display from far away :)
@MarcusRayGonzalez Жыл бұрын
I have thought about using the hot air exhaust from my gaming computer and funneling it into a proofing box
@annielivingstone76133 жыл бұрын
Hello, did you make part 2 on how to use a proofing box? Thank you
@gurra79803 жыл бұрын
Great to see a video combining both engineering and sour dough baking! I would like to see some sort of computer vision in your version too with an alarm going off when the proofing is done 😃
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Down the rabbit hole 🤣
@gurra79803 жыл бұрын
@@the_bread_code You know what, while you´re at it, why not throw some machine learning at this problem? 😂
@patrickfireice0983 жыл бұрын
OH wow, I love this so much. What a great idea!
@voidremoved3 жыл бұрын
What about airflow? Can't you control air exchange to make sure it is ideal? You need some valves or fans. You should paint a stripe on it too. If you put a little speaker in there and play smooth jazz you will enhance the flavor
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Hahaha. Great idea on the speaker 🤣. Fan is a good idea too.
@grzegorzsiwek72093 жыл бұрын
I was waiting for this😍😍
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Hope you enjoy!
@OLIVERMOCDMX2 жыл бұрын
I have an idea: May be the top of the box could be a doble layer thin transparent acrylic in order you can look into. Double acrylic to make an insulation like winter windows.
@lysdexic91293 жыл бұрын
HIya, I got this idea from the youtube channel Chillichump, he calls it the ferminator. I bought a half-size fridge, a 1 foot ceramic tube heater (low wattage, people in england etc have them permanently in their linen closets keeping away mildew etc) and the inkbird temperature controller. I drilled a hole in the side of the fridge the size of the cable, removed the plug of the heater and inserted the cable reattaching the plug and siliconed around the hole. Drilled another hole of the temperature sensor and inserted that, again siliconing around the hole, the temperature sensor is ~5mm. Turned on the heater which has a thermostat which I adjusted to 26 degrees C going by the sensor. In the inkbird I set the temperature of the inkbird to 26 degreesC with a +/- 3 degree offset and a 3 minute time period to allow either the fridge or heater to kick in depending on what the temperature was doing. The settings of the inkbird can be changed using an app on my phone, it also has a nice graph displaying the temperature variations all the time. Anyway, I start my bread process at 5 am, mix 20 g of starter, (50/50 white and wholemeal, which is a 50 g water, 50 g flour, and , 50 g starter> 100 g water and 100 g of white flour for a levain, I also mix 1kg of flour, 700 ml water and 20g of salt in a separate bowl, place both in the 'fridge' and go to my day job :( ~10 hours later I combine the two into a plastic bulk container. Put it back in the 'ferminator for ~6 hours, in that time I do 2x stretch and folds, each one until the dough doesn't want to stretch anymore. About 10pm that same night I flour the bench divide the dough, do some rudimentary shaping and place in bannetons. This time I put them into my main fridge. Go to work the next day :( come home and bake. The doughs are in the main fridge for ~20 hours, uncovered. I bake using the lodge dutch oven. It's good but not big enough, I hope to get this new dutch oven you plugged at some stage, looks great, is bigger and has awesome handles. I score and bake the dough covered in the dutch oven on the ovens highest setting for 25 mins, I think 230C with the fan, thats' what my thermometer in the oven shows, can't go any higher, then remove the lid and bake for 20 mins at a reduced temperature ~30 degrees lower. Gets a great ear, crust and crumb are amazing, and loads of decent size holes, really attractive. If I don't wnat the larger holes I don't do the stretch and folds. Bread is chewy, soft, great for sandwiches and truly amazing toasted. I slice one up completely, place it in a plastic bag and put it in the freezer, a frozen slice toasts in 3.5 mins and is great. So with the ferminator I keep my starter there all the time (feed twice a week. It develops a skin over the top, just remove this and its good to go for feeding. I only keep 130-150g starter at any one time), there is enough room for the starter, levain, autolysed flour, I could also store 2kg flour and 2 litres of water in there if I wanted, just to keep everything at that temperature. I need to the fridge side of things because temperatues here in Adelaide Australia can get to 40+C, the cooling side of the fridge kicked in heaps of times over the summer. I've been doing this now for a few months and it's clear I need to bake around 4 loaves a week. It's pretty cool, the process fits in so well with everything else, it's very minimal. I really don't think people need to stretch and fold 6 times over 3 hours, or pre-shape etc. The bread I make looks and tastes amazing it springs to ~13.5 cms. The things i've noticed is my starter is quite runny, and even though I use battards the breads kinda turn out like boules, no biggie though, I suspect this has something to do with the flour and water absorption. There you go, sorry for the novel. I enjoy your channel. I really want to expand into adding olives etc to bread, pizza bases and focaccias from sourdough. Cheers man, gluten tag :)
@vashxux3 жыл бұрын
Thats awesome! i will definitely have to upgrade from the cardboard box to the styro cooler! Have you considered using a narrower straight walled container to bulk/fold in? I find it lets me skip the sample and achieve the same results, and because my batch is the same size the markings never change. no fussing with flattening a tiny piece of dough in a narrow jar.
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Yep. Great idea! I have one of those as well. I will be using it soon. I plan to make a small series on opening up a micro bakery hehe. For that one I will use it.
@gwenntastic7143 Жыл бұрын
Cooles Video wie immer! Ich habe auch hin und her überlegt wie ich eine solche Box bauen kann. Mittlerweile gibts zum Glück auf Amazon solche Boxen für rund 20 € fix und fertig. Über 200 € ist ja der Wahnsinn.
@dominikbessler25073 жыл бұрын
Wyze Camera is $20 and has Night Vision. Or $40 and you have pan and tilt with the pro.
@leonardomendel72813 жыл бұрын
Oh you did a proofing box that emulates the minimum temp of my kitchen :P lol Greetings from Brazil
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Hahaha. LOL
@sandycheeks67483 жыл бұрын
Sehr sehr geil! Sowas muss ich auch bauen! Yes to Vim and stackoverflow :-) :-D
@smelby933 жыл бұрын
Your sourdough videos are always so great. Have you considered a non-baking coding tutorial series? I would love to take any course you could come up with for pretty much anything ever
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Haha, thank you! Maybe one day 🤣
@Wingsofscarlet3 жыл бұрын
I'd really like to see a video where you use the proofer with your overnight no-knead bread recipe. I've had success with that method, but since it's the colder months where I live (Dallas) I've been using a smaller seedling stip under my dough during bulk fermentation. I had been using it for my starter with great results, however, when I've been using it for the bulk fermentation I've been unable to get the right timing down for this stage of the recipe. I end up with frisbees when I bake the next day since I've started doing this, even with just a two-hour bulk fermentation. I'm thinking of making my own proofer with a temperature controller to possibly alleviate the problem but I'm worried that it'll just end up being the same.
@DANVIIL3 жыл бұрын
This reminds me of the German design Lugar pistol, completely over engineered. The Aliquot is unreliable in this box because the dough mass is so much larger than the little piece in the jar. If you had a clear container you could monitor the dough rise directly. This is how I use my homemade proofing box. This video will help your viewers to make a simple or a complex proofing box, so thanks.
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Thanks! Will need to check out the clear container.
@smokingjoking3 жыл бұрын
I crack the door on my micro wave and put a dish towel over the opening the light keeps it just right.
@Foodgeek3 жыл бұрын
You need to add racoon detection 😂
@rationit3 жыл бұрын
Where can I get a raccoon?
@pauljames72593 жыл бұрын
@@rationit Wuhan China. I'm pretty sure they sell racoons as well as bats.
@B-S-K3 жыл бұрын
Da Wärme immer nach oben steigt und somit der obere Teil der Box wärmer wird, würde ich den Temperaturfühler tiefer setzen. Nach unten, dort, wo sich auch der Teig befindet ... oder?
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Hatte ich auch überlegt. Eventuell wäre besser mehr in der Mitte. Allerdings muss ja die gesamte Hitze auch durch den Teig nach oben gehen, oder?
@martinvo73693 жыл бұрын
This gets breadporn to another level!😂
@lightclawshadowmarsch8167 Жыл бұрын
Al u need is 1 large roasting pan lid. 1 jar of water from the microwave for 5 minutes. And a towel Take dough place under. Roasting pan Lid. Place. Hot jar of water next to dough place towel over it to trap. Heat. 10 minutes. Done proofing
@jbkhan11353 жыл бұрын
Lol you crack me up, but I'm incredibly impressed. Gute Arbeit! :-D
@paradiisli60793 жыл бұрын
Ich habe mir eine Gärbox aus einer alten Weinkiste mit zwei kleinen Glühlampen gebastelt. Funktioniert tadellos und sieht super stylisch aus. Würde dir gerne ein Foto schicken!
@KzLollapalooza3 жыл бұрын
Well done! This kind of diy looks very fun! Thank you
@honeyswartzfager1458Ай бұрын
Absolutely fabulous!
@TheBrewersDroop2 жыл бұрын
I know I'm a bit late to the party, but you could cut a plug sized hole with a sharp knife, then cut a cable sized notch and replace the piece you cut out. You could use a styrofoam safe glue or just tape it in place.
@leeedwards37833 жыл бұрын
Hi. Great idea and easy build. What dimensions are the Styrofoam box and size of the matt? Thanks
@fahminaifar40733 жыл бұрын
Waiting for the proofer test video. Coming soon?
@andreadimichele28073 жыл бұрын
A cooling element is missing. Instead of using a box, with a strong heat dispersion, you could use a fridge (I bought a used fridge for 30 euros), so that the box itself is the box and the cooling element (directly connected to the thermocontroller). Cheaper, more room for space and better temperature control.
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Great idea!
@chkhaidzegoga9950 Жыл бұрын
quick question: If your temperature inside the box is higher than the initial temperature because of the room temperature, does heating mat has a possibility to lower the temperature inside the box? For example you want to keep your dough or whatever at 20C but it is summer time and it is 30 degrees outside, what is the solution in that case?
@89ranc10 ай бұрын
How do I get to this awesome Google Sheet you created? I
@jonasdaverio93693 жыл бұрын
Ahaha, I'm a neovim user too, I'm so much into vim that I put vim binding on my terminal (zsh) and even on Firefox (vimium). I don't know if you're going in that rabbithole too, but if you do one day, you won't find any exit.
@bunhelsingslegacy35493 жыл бұрын
As adorable as they are, you do NOT want a raccoon in your garden. Or your attic.
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
😱
@Andinel3 жыл бұрын
What size vial do you use for your sample? I like the idea of using a skinny, tall vessel instead of a jar
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
It's around 10cm high :-)
@d2911733 жыл бұрын
God bless you, you beautiful nerd. “This is what the front page of Stack Overflow looks like”. Hee!
@hopemiele1549 Жыл бұрын
Can one just use a crock pot warm setting???
@Brrunoc13 жыл бұрын
I haven't made mine yet, but I would put a fan in to help the heat circulate. A lot of you use Styrofoam boxes. Does it have to be so well insulated? I plan to use a regular plastic container. What power does the mat need to run at (assuming your Styrofoam box).
@Weehapaa3 жыл бұрын
And a script so that it automatically messages you when it's reached the desired rise amount
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Great idea!
@angelikaradominska55123 жыл бұрын
Soooo satisfied 👍 like always 😘
@lukas.oppermann Жыл бұрын
Hey, I currently have a big box and use bottles with warm water to regulate the heat. This is not very precise and work intense, so I am thinking about using a warming mat as well. However, browsing amazon there is no mat without bad reviews were people state that it broke after a few weeks or month. So I was wondering how your box is doing so far? Are you still using it? Would you still recommend it or is it not precise either? Or just not worth it? Thanks for all the great content btw.
@DenisParchenko3 жыл бұрын
Oh, come on man, after seeing Brod & Taylor Proofer price myself the geek in me also said: you can make this yourself, and yes, with computer vision and notification when the proofing is done. So this is also on my list now =)
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Haha 100%. Overall I must have spent more now on the DIY version that the Brod & Taylor 🤣
@DenisParchenko3 жыл бұрын
@@the_bread_code Well, it's still nice to learn and do something with your hands especially when your daily work is software development. I got into sourdough baking thanks to you and can't be more excited about my first good results!
@capyboppy3 жыл бұрын
@@the_bread_code I was going to ask that ha ha. Looked to me with the cost of the raspberry pi it would be the same.
@esalenchik3 жыл бұрын
I’m wondering if the Pi could be programmed to manage the temperature control?
@esalenchik3 жыл бұрын
PS. I don’t see the link for the warming mat in the description...
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Oh I just added it, sorry my bad. Great idea to use the raspberry PI for that as well.
@stuartholmes91053 жыл бұрын
should have taken the plug apart so the hole in the polystyrene could just be the size of the cable 🤦♂️
@debbybrady12463 жыл бұрын
Won't the heating pad melt the Styrofoam box??
@Oho1593 жыл бұрын
This is amazing 😉👌
@KaiBuskirk11 ай бұрын
Greetings from California!
@bullshark11522 жыл бұрын
Nice vid. How long does it takes to get the temperature in the box around the 27c with only 16 watt ? I can imagine this will take some time to generate the needed heat.
@nicecakeandfood-48603 жыл бұрын
Amazing my dear friend 👍👏🔝
@tristanrl19403 жыл бұрын
I do admire your problem-solving abilities and thrifty approach and also the presumed satisfaction of accomplishment(s) one might get through repeated trial and error! However, had you found this approach actually less costly in the monetary sense? Of course, just purchasing a professionally designed proofing box mightn’t have made the vid terribly interesting. I think it’s the ambition found in your German DNA which has enabled you to succeed time and time again despite the occasional set-back or two. I would have without much hesitation, hoisted the white flag on this experiment - BRAVO and plaudits - apologies for appearing effusive; now go make us some lovely bread - off you go 😆
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
🤣you have a point there!
@Foodgeek3 жыл бұрын
I'm a vi(m) guy too ;)
@jonasdaverio93693 жыл бұрын
Ahaha, me too, I'm so much into vim that I put vim binding on my terminal (zsh) and even on Firefox (vimium)
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
It's the best editor 🤓
@jonasdaverio93693 жыл бұрын
@@the_bread_code I would go further and say that it's by definition the best editor since it's the only one. (some are talking about emacs, but is it really an editor..?)
@balaclark91433 жыл бұрын
@@the_bread_code yes!!!!!
@DaveK3853 жыл бұрын
I just went with a Brod and Taylor proofing box because it folds up small and fits under the cabinet. Not as satisfying as a DIY but pretty convenient. FYI: I'll send you a box of raccoons if you want, they poop all over my deck and tear down my bird feeders. I'm sure they would love Deutschland.
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣
@pizdamatii50013 жыл бұрын
turning the heater off when you hit the target temperature is a very primitive way of doing this. i suggest you add a PID controller :)
@karolstopa3 жыл бұрын
What temperature would you say is ideal for this? My oven has proofing program and that will keep it at 30C would that work for sourdough?
@cfazio3 жыл бұрын
Yes
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
That should work, you have to be careful though. I find that fermentation is too quick at > 30°C. 25°C is a good balance I think.
@etiennelabeille3 жыл бұрын
Transparent top for the box? Would have saved you a Pi. But maybe that’s not the point.
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
🤓 great idea as well.
@tl_883 жыл бұрын
This was very cool to watch - but I feel like there is a major design flaw. Won't the metal rack transfer heat to the glass container faster than it will get to the sample jar? And, won't it create a pretty significant temperature gradient from the bottom of the dough to the top? Even with evening this out, I am very worried about the dough! I wonder if you could suspend the dough over the heating element, maybe by pressing a rack into the sides of the styrofoam like you did with the toothpicks, or maybe you could create a horizontal cut all the way around the box, place a rack, and then seal the cut. I hope it works out though! It was fun to watch.
@tl_883 жыл бұрын
*evening this out with stretch and folds, for example
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Great point. I now installed a fan 😅
@AmmerSlammer Жыл бұрын
Seedling heating mat by Vivosun for $20 US dollars with thermostat. Since you don’t use you oven at night, put it in there and proof your dough in the oven overnight!
@amylee58083 жыл бұрын
Huge Python geek here...vi not so much :\ How much RAM/CPU are you using for the camera because I think you *should* be able to run multiple programs on the RPI? In any case, I greatly admire how industrious you are. In comparison, I feel like a slacker - I just bought the Brod & Taylor. ;-)
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Thanks! Around 1 GB RAM on the raspberry. Yep - multiple programs work, but not 2 which connect to the camera at the same time :-)
@LegalAlien803 жыл бұрын
Uhmmm I'll just be passing vid on to hubby the engineer to figure out how to make me a proofing box. He'll be watching the vid 😆
@MickyELee3 жыл бұрын
My oven with its light on stays at about 84 F / 29 C. Is that too hot?
@JT-913 жыл бұрын
Yeah. I tried that before didnt work well
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
I made a similar experience. I like 24-26°C something in that area.
@philipkarlssongisslow99553 жыл бұрын
Super cool, do you still use it? :)
@jackievonb3 жыл бұрын
It’s 10€ shipping on the Italian flours?
@the_bread_code3 жыл бұрын
Yep - that could be.
@rkaid5773 жыл бұрын
Great video, but yeah, like many have already commented, everything here could be done WAY cheaper. A RPi4 is overkill for this purpose.