For
a few innocent weeks about 10,000 years ago, at the dawn of the
quarantine era of 2020, my Instagram feed and perhaps yours, too, was
suddenly overrun with images of impossibly lovely loaves of homemade
bread. It was one of the first social-media show-off fads of the
pandemic; with everyone stuck at home, cut off from gym mirrors and airplane wings at sunset,
bread-making virtuosity emerged in certain circles as the hottest new
way to show everyone online how much better you were than everyone else.
Naturally, I jumped on the bread wagon. I remember the precise moment my sourdough FOMO
kicked in. I was at the supermarket on one of those blissful last days
of the Before Times, and I’d been amused at the fevered run on toilet
paper (one word, folks: bidets!).
Then I rounded the corner into the baking aisle and I went cold. The
endless rows of empty shelves made the lockdown real to me: If we were
facing a shortage of flour — you know, wheat, the staff of life — should we fear for the rest of civilization, too?
Right
there, in the empty aisle, I pulled out my phone and found a wholesaler
in New York selling flour in 50-pound bags meant for bakeries. I could
get one delivered to my house in California, along with a few smaller
bags of specialized bread flours, for about $100, which seemed both
outrageous and totally reasonable. A couple weeks later, this ludicrous
heave of flour dropped onto my doorstep, and I’ve been baking ever since
— baguettes, challah and burger buns, but mostly, and most
therapeutically, loaves and loaves of sourdough.
It has been revelatory. On Instagram, shots of rustic boules
and rubber-banded Mason jars of fermenting starter have long since
grown passé, but in my kitchen, sourdough has become an unexpected
savior — a hobby, a challenge, an escape, a deceptively complex puzzle,
and the deepest of comforts amid so much misery and stress. Through
political strife and economic uncertainty, wildfires and toxic air,
through Zoom-schooling and every anxiety-provoking cough and sneeze,
sourdough has been the duct tape holding together the fraying last
threads of my sanity.
I flew through the first 50-pound bag in about three months; now I’m elbow-deep into the second.
For
me, the restorative magic of sourdough begins and ends with its
tactility. Unlike work, school, friendships and so much else in
lockdown, the blessing of sourdough is that it lives completely apart
from digital screens.
Sourdough is a
real thing in the real world — some bubbly goop in a jar, a jiggly mass
in a bowl, a fragile loaf to be gently scored and coaxed into the oven,
then sliced and eaten. In the very beginning, one attempts to make
sourdough from a recipe, but that inevitably proves futile; explaining
how to make sourdough is like explaining how to dunk a basketball — you
can describe the process to a T, but you’ll get nowhere without taking a
shot for yourself. Sourdough then becomes a pursuit of feel and touch,
of timing and accumulated intuition, of endless practice approaching
unattainable perfection.
There is much
cliché here, I’ll grant you. The office-bound digital worker who
discovers new purpose in an antiquated pastime is a stock character in
everyone’s social feed. And sourdough is not my first domestic
enthusiasm. I meditate, I pickle, I have even made my own cheese and churned my own butter.
And
yet, banal as this sort of digital-detox hobbyism has become, I still
believe there is much to recommend it — even more so now that the
sourdough craze has passed. In the last decade, as most of us began
carrying the internet along with us wherever we went, it’s become
increasingly difficult to divorce oneself from the online clamor.
Escape
has become especially difficult in the pandemic. The internet is no
longer optional for anyone — in the past, I tried to enforce screen-time
limits for myself and my children, but now that the screen is our sole
portal to everyone else on the planet, limiting it feels cruel and,
anyway, unworkable.
Quarantine has also limited many other nondigital outlets. A few years ago, I began attending a weekly ceramics class,
and I found it thrilling for some of the same reasons I’ve come to
appreciate sourdough — throwing clay on a wheel requires patience, focus
and practice, and if your hands are covered in mud, you can’t touch
your phone.
But pottery required lots
of expensive and impractical equipment found in a specialized studio —
which shut down just as the pandemic began. Sourdough, by contrast, is
eminently accessible. You can do it at home with inexpensive
ingredients, few specialized tools, and now that flour is abundant
again, no big upfront investment.
Best
of all, sourdough fits seamlessly into the work-from-home life. Bread
is made over time, in snippets. You can take breaks between emails to
fold your dough. You can attend a meeting, shape your boules, then
attend another while the dough rests. As your colleague drones on about
this or that office quandary, you can take in the warm aroma of freshly
baking bread, and when you take a bite, you might be transported, for
just a moment, far away from this terrible year, to a happier time in a
more serene place.
Sourdough will not
solve all your problems; the earth is still ailing, the country remains
an ungovernable mess and pessimism still feels more appropriate than
optimism. But we have bread, and that’s not nothing; sometimes, it might
even be enough.
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