One of the most iconic, famous and tasteful breads from your own kitchen
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Baguette, flute, pain –all words for the wonderful, French long bread with a crispy crust and a wonderfully soft, crumbly inside, with large holes and beautiful taste. It gets stale quickly, so bake and eat, and repeat.
How to make a baguette
A proper baguette is made from a lean dough, meaning flour, water, yeast and salt –and nothing more.
For an optimum result, especially when you want to make this piece of bread perfection more often, invest in a baguette baking pan. This will help shape the bread, give it the typical specked bottom because of the holes and keep it in shape. The little holes help in the baking process, and as the dough is pretty wet, the edges of the tray acts as dikes, preventing the dough to run while you bake it. Make sure you invest in a good pan: an under-performing pan will cause the dough to stick during baking.
If you don’t have or don’t want to buy a baguette baking pan, you can use a regular baking sheet and fold baker’s cloth in a long shape. If you don’t have or want that, then you can obviously still bake them, but they may spread a bit.
Shaping is crucial
A baguette is not just a regular white-flour dough, and you don’t just shape it by rolling it. The shaping of a baguette is very specific, as you want tension in the dough, that will help with the curly, bulging split where you cut the dough (see picture). I will post a video shortly on how to properly shape a baguette.
French baguette
Ingredients
- 500 grams all-purpose flour
- 350 milliliter water (filtered)
- 10 grams yeast (instant)
- 10 grams salt
Instructions
Utensils
- Standing Mixer with dough hook
- Large bowl, cling film or lid cover for bowl
- Measuring cup, scale, small bowls
- Dough scraper
- Baguette Baking sheet, or regular baking sheet and baker’s cloth
- Kitchen towel
Preparation and kneading
- This is a particularly wet dough. Don’t be tempted to knead it with your hands, it’s far too sticky and you will not be able to knead it in such a way that the gluten will fully develop.
- Line up your standing mixer and get the dough hook going. Add the flour to a the bowl, and add the salt on the one end, and the yeast on the other end. Try and prevent the salt to come into direct contact with the yeast: the yeast will lose its effectiveness. Add the water and set the machine to ‘knead’.
- After 7-10 minutes, the dough will get silky and smooth. When you can stretch the dough without it tearing right away, you are ready to go.
First or bulk proofing
- Grease up a large bowl and place the dough in the bowl: cover the bowl with a lid, clear film or a moist kitchen towel. Leave to rise for an hour or until the dough has doubled in size.
Shaping and second proofing
- Now comes the tricky bit. You need to form the dough, but you want to preserve as many of the bubbles in the dough as possible. Pour the dough on your kitchen counter. If the dough sticks to the bowl, use the scraper to scrape it off the edges. Using a dough scraper or knife, cut the dough in 3 pieces. Do no tear, as you will tear and break the carefully built up gluten.
- Stretch and fold one of the pieces in a rectangular shape, lay it on the kitchen top and, with the long end facing you, fold 1/3rd of the dough across the middle of the dough. Press the edge with the palm of your hand. Turn the dough 180 degrees and fold the other 3rd across the middle of the dough and press again. Fold it across the middle and pinch with your fingers. Carefully lift it, and stretch the dough in a long shape, and place on the baking sheet. Twist the end of the loaf to get a pointy end. Repeat for loaf 2 and 3.
Baking
- Dust the bread with a little bit of flour. With a very sharp knife, slice the breads with three incisions, diagonally.
- Place the sheet in the oven, and using the plant spray bottle create a mist of steam in the oven, but be careful not to aim at the light or it will pop, not at the bread as it will make the flour on top gummy. Bake for 25 minutes: the breads need to be golden brown on top, and dark yellow on the bottom.
- Take the breads from the tray and place on a cooling rack to cool off. Allow the bread to fully cool before you cut them.
- The breads are best if eaten as quickly as possible. Bon appetit!
Hello and Welcome!
I am Joop, also known as the Orange Baker. Together with my family, I bake, cook, eat and talk food. I hope you enjoy the recipes and tricks, but don't hesitate to reach out to me if you want to know more.