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Bread Making 101 – The Baguette

Fresh baguette loaves, baked on a pizza stone.

UPDATE

I’ve updated my bread making method slightly and wrote a new recipe/post for making a great baguette.  I now suggest using the recipe found on my Baguette Bread Making post instead of this recipe.

 

Since I acquired a KitchenAid stand mixer, I’ve been experimenting with bread making. Not so much loaf bread, rather more artisan breads. It’s amazing how a food with so few ingredients can be so good.  Yet, the process of making it has so many little nuances and variations… To date all of my breads have turned out as edible, but some closer to the mark of “restaurant quality” than others.

There are countless recipes on the internet and cook books and yet each is slightly different in how to best put it together. So why am I adding yet another one? Well to be honest, my main motivation is to simply document what works for me so that I can repeat it. But if others want to use my recipe as well I’m happy to have helped.

Recipe

 

Some other notes


Oven

My early bread making was with a gas oven. Then I moved and I now have an electric oven that tops out at 500 F. To be honest, I don’t know that one does the job differently than another aside from my gas oven had some warmer slots and thus you’d have to place the loaves just right to not burn a portion of the bread.

Baking Surface

I’ve made some loaves on cookie sheets, but since my lovely wife gave me a pizza stone as a present, I won’t bake bread on anything else! The pizza stone is such a perfect cooking surface for breads. I’ve seen varying rules for how long to preheat the stone and I’ve tested all of them. To be honest, I found that preheating the oven with the stone in it. the wait maybe 10 more minutes and you are all set. I have. Seen a difference if I were to do the 1 hour preheating that some suggest. I should note though that my pizza stone isn’t as thick as some of the larger baking stones I’ve seen pictures of. I’m sure a thicker stone would require more pre-heat time so use your best judgment and test it out.

Steam

I’ve seen some recipes say that if you put a pan of water under your bread while baking, it’ll create a steam effect in the oven and that will accomplish two things:

  1. Add a glossier sheen to your breads crust
  2. Make the crust harder while the insider is softer

The idea is the blast of steam will cook the outer crust quicker.  I’ve tired this method once and didn’t find any difference.  In fairness, I did leave out one step – using a mist bottle to spray water on the walls of your oven every 30 seconds for the first 2 minutes of baking.

 

References


Recipes

Make ahead dough

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