On one uncomfortably hot day at the end of June, I baked bread and made two batches of cheese. No, I don't know why I must do these things, but do them I must. If you want to read about the cheesemaking part of it, take a look over here. If you want to read about the bread-baking part, stay right where you are.
This is another recipe from Bernard Clayton's book. I wanted to make some baguettes to go along with the cheeses I would be making and decided to try out this recipe.
According to the book, the recipe makes four baguettes, boules, or couronnes. I made 3 slightly smaller baguettes, and two different couronnes.
Here's what Mr. Clayton has to say about this recipe:
The great eighteenth-century French cook and founder of la grande cuisine, Antonin Careme, wrote of grand dishes for princes and kings, yet he created an ordinary loaf of bread that has been passed down from one generation of bakers to the next for more than 175 years.
Careme, who has been called the cook of kings and the king of cooks, wrote: "Cooks who travel with their gastronomically minded masters can, from now on, by following this method, procure fresh bread each day."
This excellent bread is made with hard-wheat bread flour to give the dough the ability to withstand the expansion it undergoes when it rises more than three times its original volume. Baking at high heat provides the oven-spring that makes possible the formation of a large cellular structure, the distinguishing characteristic of pain ordinaire.
Shall we begin? (My own notes are in italics.)
Ingredients:
6 cups bread or unbleached flour, approximately
2 packages dry yeast
2 1/2 cups hot water 120-130 degrees F)
2 teaspoons each salt and water
Baking Sheet or Pans: 1 baking sheet, teflon or greased and sprinkled with cornmeal, or 4 baguette pans, greased. (I used a 3-loaf baguette pan lightly greased and dusted with cornmeal, and one baking sheet lined with parchment and sprinkled with cornmeal.)
By Hand or Mixer: (10 mins)
The early part of this preparation, beating a batter, can be done by an electric mixer. However, don't overload a light mixer with this thick batter. If by hand, stir vigorously for an equal length of time.
Measure 3 or 4 cups of flour into the mixing bowl and add the yeast and hot water. The mixer flat beater or whisk should run without undue strain. The batter will be smooth and pull away from the sides as the gluten develops. It may also try to climb up the beaters and into the motor. If it does, push it down with a rubber scraper. Mix for 10 minutes. When about finished, dissolve the salt in the water and add to the batter. Blend for 30 seconds or more. (I was a bit leery about the higher temp for the yeast, (usually it's 105-115) so I reverted to my usual method of dissolving the yeast in very warm water and then adding some of the flour to it.)
Kneading (10 mins.):
If the machine has a dough hook, continue with it and add additional flour, 1/4 cup at a time, until the dough has formed under the hook and cleans the sides of the bowl. If it is sticky and clings, add sprinkles of flour. Knead for 10 minutes.
If by hand, add additional flour to the beaten batter, 1/2 cup at a time, stirring first with a utensil and then working by hand. When the dough is shaggy but a solid mass, turn onto a work surface and begin kneading with an aggressive push-turn-fold motion. If the odugh is sticky, toss down sprinkles of flour. Break the kneading rhythm occasionally by throwing the dough down hard against the countertop - an excellent way to encourage the development of the dough.
(I did a bit of both - I used the machine until the dough had reached the shaggy mass point, and then I kneaded it by hand the rest of the way.)
Here, for your entertainment, is my "aggressive push-turn-fold" routine:
(I've skipped food processor instructions - if you want them, shoot me an email and I'll send them.)
First Rising (2 hours):
Place the dough in a large greased bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and leave at room temperature for 2 hours. The dough will more than treble in volume - and may even be pushing against the plastic covering.
(If prepared with a new fast-rising yeast and at the recommended higher temperatures, reduce the rising times by about half.)
Second Rising (1 1/2 hours):
Turn back the plastic wrap and turn the dough onto the work surface to knead briefly, about 3 minutes.
Return the dough to the bowl and re-cover with wax paper. Allow to rise to more than triple its volume, about 1 1/2 hours.
Shaping (10 mins)
The dough will be light and puffy. Turn it onto the floured work surface and punch it down. Don't be surprised if it pushes back, for it is quite resilient.
Divide the dough into as many pieces as you wish loaves. One-quarter (10 oz) of this recipe will make a baguette 22" long and 3" to 4" in diameter.
(Since my baguette pans are shorter than 22", I reduced the amount of dough per baguette to 8 ounces. I shaped 3 baguettes and divided the remaining dough into two balls approximately 13 oz each.)
Allow pieces of dough to rest for 5 minutes before shaping.
For boules or round loaves, shape the pieces into balls. Place in cloth-lined baskets (bannetons) or position directly on the baking sheet. For baguettes, roll and lengthen each dough piece under your palms to 16" to 20" , and 3" to 4" in diameter. Place in a pan or on a baking sheet or in the folds of a long cloth (couche).
(The way I learned to make baguettes is slightly different. I rolled the dough out to about a foot in length, then flattened slightly, then rolled from the side nearest me to the other side, pinching the seam and then rolling out to just under the length of my baguette pan.)
This loaf's characteristic couronne or "crown" can be made in several ways. One is to flatten the piece of dough, press a hole through the center with your thumb, and enlarge the hole with your fingers. Another is to roll a long strand 18" to 24" and curl into a circle, overlapping and pushing together the ends. Yet a third way is to take 2 or 3 shorter lengths of dough and join them together in a circle, not overlapping top and bottom but pressing the ends together side by side into a univorm pattern - this one will be irregular but attractive.
(I made one couronne in the first manner suggested above. To me it looks like an enormous bagel.)
(For the other one, I felt rather creative, so I divided that piece of dough into thirds, rolled them out and then braided them together and shaped the braid into a circle. I should have planned a little better - the portion where the two ends of the braid are joined looks a little sloppy. Sorry about that!)
Third rising (1 hour)
Cover the loaves with a cloth, preferably of wool, to allow air to reach the loaves and to form a light crust. Leave at room temperature until the dough has risen to more than double its size, about 1 hour.
Preheat:
Before preheating the oven to 450 degrees F (very hot) 20 minutes before baking, place a broiler pan on the floor of the oven or bottom rack so it will be there later. Five minutes before baking, pour 1 cup hot water into the hot pan. Be careful of the burst of steam - it can burn. I use a long-handled cup to reach into the oven when I pour.
Baking/450 degrees F/25-30 mins.
Carefully move the loaves in baskets and in couches to the baking sheet. Make diagonal cuts down the lengths of the long loaves and tic-tac-toe designs on the boules.
Place on the middle shelf of the oven.
The loaves are done when a golden brown, 25 to 30 minutes. Turn one loaf over and if the bottom crust sounds hard and hollow when tapped, the loaf is done.
(If using a convection oven, reduce heat 50 degrees.)
Final step:
Place on a rack to cool.
One of the exciting sounds in the kitchen is the crackle of French bread as it cools. Crackle away!
Spread with butter and enjoy with any dish.
(Or you can serve it with some freshly made ricotta...)
Wow woman! That bread looks uber awesome!
Although I've only been reading food blogs for a little over a month, I have to say that yours is by far my favorite. I check your blog first thing everyday to see what fantastic tasty thing you've cooked up and since reading your blog, I have 1)planted a small herb garden 2)made homemade ricotta & 3)prepared my very first batch of fresh pasta - something I was more afraid of than making the cheese! Ms Jayne, you are certainly an inspiration. Thanks for showing me that I can in fact do anything in the kitchen.
Posted by: Shannon | July 10, 2008 at 09:35 AM
This is a great, great post. Love all of the pictures. I am saving this and am definitely going to give it a try!
Posted by: Chelle | July 10, 2008 at 09:41 AM
Shannon - Yay! Good for you! And you've kind of summed up how I feel about cooking - you (or anyone) CAN do anything in the kitchen. I don't think food should be intimidating to anyone. It's fun!
Chelle - let me know how you make out when you bake the baguettes - I'd love to hear!
Posted by: Jayne | July 10, 2008 at 10:01 AM
my friend just shared your blog with me because i didn't know what "coulis" was, and you have a link to it on here. so then i started poking around some more, and WOW! how i would love to try pretty much anything you have on here, but especially this homemade bread. i especially love the braided circle design. i also LOVE LOVE the header on your blog--that icing seems so real that i could just take my finger and scoop off a piece. do you have a link on here to the recipe for it? :) thanks also for sharing such detailed instructions about the process. it is really helpful.
Posted by: kristi | July 10, 2008 at 10:37 AM
Great looking breads! I love bread baking, even on hot days ;-)
Posted by: Ulrike | July 10, 2008 at 11:08 AM
I am so impressed! Would you consider moving in with us? And I do exactly the same thing - bake on horribly hot days, even when I've told myself that I will do no such thing. This was a fantastic post!
Posted by: Madam Chow | July 10, 2008 at 11:11 AM
I am so impressed! Would you consider moving in with us? And I do exactly the same thing - bake on horribly hot days, even when I've told myself that I will do no such thing. This was a fantastic post!
Posted by: Madam Chow | July 10, 2008 at 11:11 AM
It all looks absolutely fantastic!
Posted by: Holly @ PheMOMenon | July 10, 2008 at 01:10 PM
kristi - hi! and welcome! and thanks for the kind words. I hate to tell you this, but there's no icing recipe for the picture in my header - it's actually a photo of some homemade mozzarella cheese in the process of being stretched. You can find recipes and photos for that under the "Say Cheese" heading over on the right, where all the recipes are. And then you should make some, because it's fun!
Posted by: Jayne | July 10, 2008 at 01:48 PM
I love a good day of bread baking myself. I have to say your pictures are fantastic.
Posted by: S for Kitchen Confit | July 10, 2008 at 08:25 PM
I'm starting my own bread making adventure this weekend. Your instructions are wonderful. Thank you!
Posted by: Dragon | July 10, 2008 at 10:12 PM
Fantastic kneading photographs.
Posted by: rainbowbrown | July 11, 2008 at 12:25 AM
That is beautiful dough! You are very adept at shaping, as well.
Posted by: Anna at Mediocre Chocolate | August 05, 2008 at 01:24 PM
That is beautiful dough! You are very adept at shaping, as well.
Posted by: Anna at Mediocre Chocolate | August 05, 2008 at 01:24 PM
WOW!! Wish I could bake like this. Those loaves are truly beautiful . I must learn how to make more than just plain machine bread. You are an inspiration.
Posted by: Margaret | August 12, 2008 at 11:55 AM
WOW!! Wish I could bake like this. Those loaves are truly beautiful . I must learn how to make more than just plain machine bread. You are an inspiration.
Posted by: Margaret | August 12, 2008 at 11:55 AM
This was great! My best friend and I tried this over the weekend with great results! I blogged about it here ---> http://creativexmuses.blogspot.com/2009/11/pain-ordinaire-careme-daily-bread.html
Posted by: Maria | November 16, 2009 at 11:28 AM
These look great! Could I get the food processor instructions?
Posted by: Ali | March 14, 2012 at 03:02 PM
Thank you so much for this!!! Just made some and wow are they mad good! Now I don't have to buy any!
Posted by: kirihara | December 01, 2013 at 06:27 AM