In our house, twenty eleven started off with a bang. That morning I baked, for the first time ever in my whole entire life, a real baguette.
Actually, I baked six of them.
I had to keep pinching myself to make sure it was for real. I jumped up and down. I ate a whole one (and then some) for breakfast. I broke off hunks of bread for the kids. I called Mr. Handsome in from the barn to show him the loaves. Then I ran out to the barn with some fresh, buttered bread and made him get out from under his truck where he was changing the oil (or something) to eat it. He didn’t complain. All six loaves were gone in less than 12 hours.
What is a real baguette, you ask? I’ve never been to France and I’ve never trained in any cooking school, but even so, I know this is the real thing. I just know! The loaves are long and skinny, caramel-brown on the outside, crackle-y, crispy. The insides are chewy and riddled with holes of all shapes and sizes. Finally I can understand those pictures of French people riding home with skinny wands of bread strapped to the backs of their bikes. These baguettes are solid and indestructible (wait a couple days and you have a homemade baseball bat), yet, they’re still ethereally delicious. (There’s analogy there—the most earthy things take you the highest, perhaps?—just waiting to be expounded upon. Go for it.)
I learned about this bread at our church’s Christmas breakfast. I noticed the huge basket filled with little slices of French bread, but thinking they were some store-purchased offering, I passed them by. But then my friend MAC came bounding up to my table, took one look at my plate and exclaimed indignantly, “What? You didn’t get any of my bread?” In no time at all she had enlightened me on the wonders of her real French bread and we were weaving through the tables on our way back to the buffet line so I could amend the errors of my ways. One bite of her bread and my eyes rolled back in my head. “What—? How—?”
MAC didn’t need any prompting. She launched directly into The Tale of The Bread and then left me alone to fill my plate and return to my seat. I made several trips back for more, and I even got kind of evangelical about it, putting little slices on other people’s plates and proclaiming, “Eat!”
MAC promptly sent me the recipe via email, and after a flurry of questions, a couple phone calls, and a trip to the grocery store, I got down to business. And what a profitable business it has been!
Here’s the gist. Before going to bed at night, mix up flour, water, salt, and rapid rise instant yeast (what I had to go to the store for). It can even be no-knead if you have a Kitchen Aid—just six minutes in the machine and you’re done. Let the dough ferment in the fridge over night. In the ayem, move it to the kitchen counter and let it rest for a couple hours.
Then, crank up the oven to 500 degrees, and shape the baguettes and promptly bake them—there is no need for a second rising.
So basically, if you get up by six, you can have fresh baguettes and coffee for a late breakfast or mid-morning snack. Be still my beating heart!
Bread is my food. Some people like meat. Some people like potatoes. Some people like chocolate. For me, though, if I had to chose one comfort food, it would be bread. And not just any bread, either. It must be substantial, like a tangy sourdough or a chewy baguette. Served with lots of butter and cup of steaming coffee. Oh my.
Who’s with me on this one? Anyone? Or do I have to stand alone atop my yeasty mountain of bliss?
If bread isn’t your first choice, then tell me this: if you could choose the one food that soothes your spirit and comforts your soul, what would it be?
Baguettes
Adapted from my girlfriend’s recipe which she, in turn, got from Peter Reinhart’s The Bread Baker’s Apprentice
The original recipe called for 2 1/4 teaspoons salt, but I found it a bit bland. Three teaspoons did the trick—adjust to suit your tastes.
I used the little packs of Fleischmann’s rapid rise instant yeast. The amount called for is less than 1 packet—tape the pouch closed and save the extra for the next time. (To understand the difference between active dry yeast and rapid rise instant yeast, read this.)
They say this dough can be shaped into all sorts of delectables—large artisan loaves, bâtards (bastardized baguettes, short and fat), pizza crust, rolls, etc. As for me, though, I’m sticking with baguettes for now. Can’t get enough of ’em.
1 pound 11 ounces (5 ½ cups plus 2 tablespoons) unbleached bread flour
1 3/4 teaspoons rapid rise instant yeast
3 teaspoons salt
2 1/4 cups cold water
Dump all the ingredients into the bowl of your Kitchen Aid mixer and mix it (with the bread attachment, of course) for six minutes. Or, if bulky machines aren’t your thing, stir it up with a spoon and then knead by hand. (Clue: in the mixer, the dough should be dry enough that it pulls away from the sides of the bowl, but yet wet enough that it sticks to the bottom.)
Transfer the dough to a lightly greased bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and pop it in the fridge.
The next morning, move the bowl from fridge to counter and let it to sit for another 2-3 hours.
Oven Prep
Before you shape your bread, get your oven ready.
Put one of the racks on the very highest level. This rack will hold a pan of boiling water. Set the water to boiling on the stove top and then, a couple minutes before putting the bread in the oven, pour the water into the pan and slip it in to the oven. Replenish the steam pan with more boiling water as necessary.
As for baking the bread, there are a variety of ways to do this. Here are two:
a) Put the shaped loaves on an upside down cookie sheet and bake it on the next to bottom rack.
b) Put a baking stone on the next to bottom rack and allow it to heat up with the oven—get it really good and hot. Put the shaped loaves on a parchment-lined, side-less tray. When ready to bake, pull the hot stone from the oven, slide the loaves and paper onto it, and return the stone to the oven.
Shaping the baguettes
Using a rubber spatula that you dipped in water (to keep it from sticking to the dough), gently scrape the dough out onto a well-floured surface. Using your fingers, gently lift and adjust the dough so it makes a small rectangle, about 8 x 6 inches. Now, using a knife, cut the dough in half and then each half in three rods. You’re making baguettes so cut accordingly. There’s no point in cutting the dough into triangles or squares when you’re going for long skinny rectangles. Be lazy!
Now, very gently, lift and stretch the dough to make a long baguette—make it as long as your baking stone or cookie sheet. Use flour to keep the dough from sticking to your fingers, but do not knead or roll the dough. You want to keep as many air bubbles in it as necessary. Lift the shaped baguette onto the cookie sheets. Repeat with two more pieces of dough. (Cover the other dough and wait to shape it till it till the first three loaves are in the oven.) Dust the loaves with flour and then score with a sharp knife. Cover the baguettes with plastic wrap and let them rest for 5 or 10 minutes. Or not. As soon as the oven is ready, the baguettes can be baked.
Baking
Put the bread into the preheated, 500 degree, steaming hot oven. Immediately, spritz the sides of the oven with a water bottle. Two and a half minutes later, do it again. Another two and a half minutes, spray again. Close the oven door and do not disturb for 8 minutes, at which point, turn the oven down to 475, rotate the bread, and bake for another 10-15 minutes. Aim for a total of 23-25 minutes and a burnished crust that verges on black in some places. Of course, the exact time and temperature will depend on your oven, pans, size of loaves, etc. Experiment.
Transfer the baguettes to a cooling rack, crank up the oven, and repeat the process for the remaining three baguettes.
Store the baguettes at room temperature. Partially eaten baguettes can be stored in a towel to prevent them from getting stale too fast. But the truth is, after one day, baguettes fade tremendously. They can be stored in a plastic bag, but their crusts turn soft (which might be a plus for some people). They can be frozen and reheated in the oven (but I have yet to try it). Dry bread can always be used as French toast, croutons, etc.
I have submitted this post to yeastspottings.
This same time, years previous: sweet and spicy popcorn, lentil-sausage soup, hitting the jackpot
27 Comments
Marie M.
OMG. Your bread looks amazing. And I live in San Francisco where we have wonderful sour dough bread. Have your read The Ivory Hut's blog post on "Bread made Easy". She does make it look so easy-peasy. Now your post temps me as well. Looks like I need to stop reading and start baking bread.
Oh dear. It's 2:00 am. I've been reading and enjoying every word of yours. You write so beautifully. But I'm blaming you for my not getting enough sleep when I over-sleep tomorrow morning. O.K.?
Jeannie
Hi! Absolutely love the holes in your baguettes…I could eat the whole stick too!Can understand your excitement:D
Sunshinemom (Harini)
Looks delicious!!
Www.Crustum.lt
Baguette?looks more like long ciabatta. But thanks, for few advice what I read.
Debbie
These look absolutely gorgeous. I've never made a baguette (yet) either, but I'm definitely inspired to try now. The insides of these look delicious. And, I'm with you: I'm a bread girl too!
Anonymous
While you were enjoying your delicious baguettes I was sitting at the Lancaster Co. courthouse for 2 entire days. They never did need a jury. I did meet lots of interesting people and there are all kinds of cool shops my newly made friends and I visited over lunch break. Including mouthwatering bakeries. Bread is such a delight. Even to merely look at fresh homemade loaves of bread brings a certain level of comfort.
Do the chickens get the leftovers?
Aunt V.
Mr. H.
We had these with dinner last night…thanks for the great recipe!:)
Camille
Well…now I have no excuse…these are going to have to be tackled!! Thank you so much for taking the time to measure…have a great day!
Blessings,
Camille
Jennifer Jo
Camille, for you, dear, I'll do anything! (Or at least measure the flour. It came out to 5 1/2 cups, plus 2 tablespoons.)
Camille
Question ~ Would you mind telling me how many cups you figure 1 lb 11 oz of flour is??? Only if you have time…I'd greatly appreciate it. Thanks! 🙂
Blessings,
Camille
elizabeth
I make the Jim Lahey bread several times a week. I cover the top with lots of sesame seed. I've made Peter Reinhart baguettes, but they didn't turn out as well for me. I was wondering if you made baguettes with your sourdough starter? I was thinking the sourdough would be superior in taste to this recipe? My next project is to try making your sourdough sandwich loaves.
current typist
You mean we got to devour a third of them??? Well, almost. There's one modest-sized piece left…which sounds like my mid-morning snack. I'm with you. Bread's my comfort food, too.-ME
Sara
Oh, bread is definitely my favorite, too. Though add some chocolate and cheese and then I'm really happy!
Peter's (I'm on first-name terms… in my mind) The Bread Baker's Apprentice is the best bread baking book I own, and I own several.
dr perfection
had to look it up
http://ask.reference.com/related/Batard+Bread?qsrc=2892&l=dir&o=10601
Jennifer Jo
Margo and Natasha, I had some five-minute bread dough in the fridge, so I did a comparison test. A loaf of that against these baguettes. The baguettes won, hands down. The batard of five-minute bread was tacky-chewy-yuck. I like the five-minute bread for pizza dough, but not for straight eating (anymore).
Mr. H.
Bread and coffee sounds good to me…those really do look scrumptious.
meemsnyc
OMG -> I have to try this. You are the best for posting this!
Anonymous
Bread is my weakness. It's 10:30 pm, but I am contemplating going downstairs and mixing a batch of this dough right now. It looks amazing!
Thank you for sharing your new recipe.
-FringeGirl
Margo
well cool. I might just try this. They look fantastic. Reminds me of the NYTimes no-knead bread that I have messed around with.
My continuous craving is bread and cheese – good bread, strong cheese. I do adore chocolate too though. . .
Camille
Oh yes, definitely bread and butter…fresh bread, from the oven! You've got me…I'll have to give this recipe a try…thank you once again for helping me NOT lose weight in 2011! LOL! I supppose you have nothing to do with the weight I gained in 2010 (or maybe you do, seems to me I've made a few of your yummy recipes)…nonetheless……….
Blessings to you!
Camille
The Apple Pie Gal
Oh-My-Gosh…you just wrote a love story! An amazing love story! With the most beautiful pictures! Pardon me, I now need an adult bib!
I have that book too! Now I will have to be brave and try it! When in Europe, everything was on this bread! The most amazing sandwiches ever!
I too could live on bread and butter (and coffee) :0)
Mama Pea
I want one of those baguettes . . . NOW! I'm with you. Give me bread and butter, especially when I'm really hungry. Ooooh, to die for. My mouth is actually watering as we speak. Your posts are great tutorials. Much appreciated.
Michelle @ Give a Girl a Fig
WOW! They're gorgeous…and I KNOW they tasted even better than they looked. Making bread is one of my goals for this winter…I've been wanting to learn for some time…now I'm inspired. My family will love you for it…
And…I made the Pasta Carbonara the other night…delish. It was a hit! Thank you for sharing your recipes…!
Zoë
Have you tried this with any whole wheat flour yet? You know how I have an aversion for all-white things….
But they do look so good. Much better than my pale french bread I posted a few days ago 🙂
You Can Call Me Jane
I am a carb and chocolate girl. Combine the carbs and chocolate and I swoon. I guess I'm a pretty predictable female, but I want what I want. Your first choice is bread? I wouldn't have noticed ;-).
Kris
Soup. Far and away first choice. Bread is nowhere in sight compared to the incomparable bowl of Soup.
Natasha
oh. my. gosh. your pictures… the bread… I'm drooling. And my belly's grumbling at me. Seriously!
Have you ever seen the book Artisan Bread in 5 min a Day? My husband went on a bread baking kick and that was his book of choice.