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My baguette adventures

A few weeks ago, challenged by a Slowtalk message board conversation where a few people didn't think it could be done, I decided to see if I could make a good French baguette. I'd tried before, with very mediocre results (pale, dense loaves that tasted OK but resembled baguettes only by being long and narrow).

I did some reading, online and from my books on breadmaking, watched a video demonstration of technique, bought organic King Arthur bread flour, then made my first batch using this recipe. I followed the recipe instructions closely, changing only the oven temperature, which I started at 500 and reduced to 450 after a few minutes of baking. My oven seems to run a little cool.

This is how it looked when it was first shaped and ready for the final proofing. The dough started sticky but was very easy to handle by the time it was ready for shaping. I placed the loaves on parchment paper on top of my baguette pan, then covered and refrigerated overnight before baking.

bread1.jpg

This is how they appeared fresh out of the oven. They smelled wonderful and crackled as the crust cooled.

bread2.jpg

And finally, here's the crumb.

bread3.jpg

I was thrilled! It looked good, but it tasted even better. The crust was crisp and full of flavor, the crumb was light and airy.

I declared it a success, but could I repeat it?

Two days ago I started the sponge for another batch and baked it this morning. The only difference was that I was interrupted by visitors while shaping the loaves, so two did some initial rising before refrigeration, and the third was deflated again and shaped an hour or so later. The third one was much easier to shape and turned out longer than the first two.

Success again! Here's the bread whole. I don't really like the little peaks along the slash lines. The single-edge razor I used this time (just a serrated knife the first time) made deeper slashes, but caught and dragged leaving these little peaks. (My official King Arthur lame has been ordered and should be here any day. Surely it will solve that problem!)

secondbreadwhole.jpg

The second batch has an even airier crumb.

secondbread.jpg

Ahh, but how does it compare to an Acme baguette (the best commercially available baguette in this area)?

Here they are, side by side, Acme still in the bag. The color is about the same, but Acme has that nice dusting of flour, and the slashes are much cleaner. Obviously, it's longer, but my oven wouldn't handle that.

acme1.jpg

Here they are, cut. Acme is on the right. The crumb texture is very similar, but the Acme is whiter, I have no idea why.

acme2.jpg

Now for the taste test. The taste is so close that I literally couldn't detect a difference. The crumb texture is the same. The Acme crust is just a tiny bit crisper, and it's evenly browned and crisp all the way around. There's a slight difference in the appearance of the crust that I suspect may have something to do with my spritzing the dough too enthusiastically just before it went into the oven.

My two loaves that had extra rising time and became fatter are not as browned on the sides, probably because they're too close together in that three-loaf baguette pan. You can see it in this photo.

acme3.jpg

I hate to give up the use of that pan, because it's so easy to just place the loaves there when they're shaped and never have to handle them again. Without the pan, I worry about deflating the unbaked baguettes or worse trying to roll them onto a peel and then off again onto my baking stone (worse would be a big lump of dough splattered on the floor or oven door).

Maybe next time, I'll experiment by just using the two outside grooves on the pan and see what happens if I freeze the third loaf unbaked and bake it later. Three baguettes is about two baguettes too many at one time for the two of us anyway.

Is it worth it?

Yes, it's worth it to me to do this at home, because it's really very easy, and it's a 10- or 15-minute drive to the only store in the area that sells Acme. And because I would still like to get it exactly right. However, if that lovely little French bakery I've always wanted moves in within a 10-minute walk, my baguette-baking days will be over!

Comments (6)

Auralie:

Wow, Chris. Great photos. Ummm! Your baguettes look and sound delicious! Thank you for posting the recipe. Will have to try it. Wonder what I have to do at high altitude? (7000 ft.) Usually I add a little more flour to pies, cakes, brownies. I will have to play with it.

You have inspired me! Now I am ready to venture into baquette baking.

Having grown up in New Orleans, where french bread is/was a staple, I can imagine tasting softening butter on the warm loaf. I live in Santa Fe where we just had our first cool weather weekend. The oven was on all day Sunday with finds from the Farmer's Market: blue hubbard squash, roasted red onions and garlic, blue fingerling potatoes that took hours to cook. (Is there such a thing as an unripe potato even if it looks ripe?) If this is too long, please delete. I am just so inspired. Sitting in the kitchen yesterday, lost in cookbook reading, planned next week to try a bread recipe. If I can perfect the recipe like you did, so much for going to Whole Foods for my own. I love baquettes and bring one home, slice and place in the freezer to pace myself. Soups on. Thanks! again.

Donna:

WOW Chris, I am really impressed! Your loaves look absolutely wonderful. I could almost smell/taste them as I was reading.

Donna

Kim:

Chris, are you going to Paso? If so, I nominate you to bring the bread! :D

Hope your enjoying your current travels.

Kango Suz:

Chris-
Excellent job! Baguettes are hard, amazing that you got such a good crumb from watching the online kneading demo, I had to work forever on my technique and that was with my Grandmother standing there teaching me. Just a note, you mentioned that you didn't know why your bread wasn't as white as the store-bought bread. Since you used organic flour (which almost all bakeries don't use, I'm not sure of your local one) it has not been bleached and had all of it's germ removed like standard flour does. This will make your bread not as 'bright white' as the bakery variety, but it will be healthier for you. *grin* Congratulations, your love for the baguette is so inspiring I might just go out and bake some bagels (my fav. bread type).

That bread looks fabulous!!

Chris:

Thanks, everyone! It's such a thrill to get all these comments.

I've been traveling the past couple of weeks so I haven't made bread, but I'm mixing up the starter tonight for another batch of baguettes to bake Friday morning.

I have my new lame to try out in hopes of improving my slashes, and a new small cast iron pan for creating steam in the oven instead of spritzing the loaves with a spray bottle.

It's all about the tools! :-)

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