Saturday, March 1, 2008

French Bread

French Bread
Did I ever mention that I like to procrastinate? I would be a professional procrastinator if I could but I'm sure the pay is pretty crappy. I figured I would have plenty of opportunities to do the Daring Baker challenge but before I knew it, it’s the last week of February! I'll just blame the fact that February is a super short month. The only day I had time to do the challenge was today, which is technically posting day. Eek! Down to the wire here!


As always, we have lovely hostesses who select our secret recipe and this month, the wonderful duo Mary aka Breadchick, writer of The Sour Dough, and Sara of I Like to Cook chose something that I’ve always wanted to make, French bread! And not just any French bread, Julia Child’s French bread, the bread she devoted 18 pages to in her Mastering the Art of French Cooking Vol 2. If you’ve read her memoir, My Life in France, you will know just how much of Julia loved to bake and how much time and effort she devoted to that one recipe. She made boulangerie style French bread accessible for the home cook!

The day started off beautifully, it was bright and sunny and my kitchen was 68 degrees, perfect dough rising conditions. After a donut and tea for breakfast, I rolled up my sleeves to tackle the dough making. Nothing like feeling the warm morning sun hit your face and hearing the *slap slap slap* of bread dough hitting the side of the KitchenAid bowl. After the machine did most of the work, I kneaded for a few minutes by hand to feel the dough, making sure to give it a good poke to test its springiness. Then back into the bowl, covered with a towel, for a long 5 hour rise. Who wouldn’t like a warm 5 hour long nap?

Then after the dough tripled in size, I gently shaped it for the second rise of 2 hours. It was beautiful after the second rise. The top was smooth and domed and it was absolutely gorgeous. After reading the instruction on how to form a batard, I was afraid I would mess up because it sounded pretty complicated so I decide to just make one large loaf. Then I gently coaxed the dough out of the bowl again and shaped it into a large loaf. It made some funny hissing noises as some of the gas bubbles popped, which made me giggle. Then after shaping the dough into the loaf, I gently placed it on a parchment paper lined cookie sheet for the final nap. It was like my little bread baby, so cute! Then under covers again for the final 2 hour rise.

Finally, I preheated my stone, slashed the loaf with a razor blade, brushed water on the outside, and slid it into the oven.

French Bread
The Results:
After 25 minutes, I checked the internal temperature of the bread with my Thermapen and it was only 160 degrees F. Weird! Either my brand new Thermapen is off or my oven is off. I kept the loaf in the oven for another 5 minutes and took it out because I was afraid of overbaking.

The crust was a beautiful golden brown and shatteringly crisp, it was just gorgeous. Unfortunately, my slashes didn’t serve their purpose, I thought they were deep enough but on the finished loaf, they looked very superficial and they didn’t allow the steam to escape, instead the bread split open near the bottom. Am I suppose to slash a little deeper or should I not have brushed water over them? After cooling for 2 hours, I sliced into it and I was a little disappointed. The crumb was too dense and a little chewy/gummy. Where did I go wrong? I was really careful when I handled the dough but maybe I didn’t let it rise enough the third time. Maybe I should have baked it longer since the crumb was a little gummy, is that because the bread is underbaked and the interior is still too moist? It tasted really good but it was a little yeasty. Did I do something wrong? What should I do differently next time?

All in all, I still give myself a pat on the back for making a pretty decent loaf of French bread. I wish the interior could have been a little airier and fluffier but I’m still happy with how it turned out. I’m really proud of the crust because I’ve never been able to get bread to look that good. The crust was my favorite part, it was so thin and crispy. Yum! Now I can cross French bread off my list but I know this is a recipe I will repeat over and over until I can get it just right.

As for the recipe? Head on over to Mary’s blog for the whole shebang, all 18 pages. Thank you so much Mary and Sara for choosing this wonderful recipe and for taking the time to type up the whole thing! The side notes you gals added were especially helpful!

Recipe here

The recipe is long and the process takes almost all day. I started at around 10 in the morning and finished at 6 or so?

I already ate half my loaf and I bet I’ll finish the other half tomorrow. Here are some idea’s for any leftover bread you may have.

Cover the inside with roasted garlic and butter for roasted garlic bread.

Make sandwiches:
Ham and Butter
Salami, Baby Spinach, and Cream Cheese
Pate and Cornichon

Stale French bread is wonderful on top of French Onion Soup


Make sure to see all the beautiful breads everyone made by heading over to the Daring Baker Blogroll



20 comments:

Meeta K. Wolff said...

Your bread look incredible. Beautiful color. Great going!

Lydia (The Perfect Pantry) said...

Even when your bread doesn't come out perfect, it is still a hundred times better than anything you bring home from the market. Nothing beats the taste of oven-fresh bread slathered with sweet butter. And the dense crumb will make it perfect for sandwiches.

Karen Baking Soda said...

Such a great looking loaf, I'm sorry the interior disappointed you.

Gretchen Noelle said...

It is absolutely beautiful! Too bad the inside did not impress you. The outside of yours certainly impresses me!! Great job. And February was a short month!

Andrea said...

The outside of your loaf looks wonderful!! I bet after a second try you'll have a perfect crumb.

furiousBall said...

if you were a real procrastinator you wouldn't have gotten around to telling us you are a procrastinator. step up your procrastination game. or get around to that whenever.

test it comm said...

Great looking bread! This was the first DB challenge that I did not wait for the last minute to do. :)

Anonymous said...

Maybe it's because we have an extra day this February that you managed to get it done! I've had the same problem with the interior when baking bread but I don't know the answer either I'm afraid. I bet it was still delicious though!

Unknown said...

Another major procrastinator here, but no way was I going to miss making this recipe. I read My Life in France too! Beautiful looking loaf!

Helene said...

That is one gorgeous baby you got there! I love how perfect it is! Great job!

breadchick said...

Hmmmm... Not sure what happened there with your bread inside.

Anyways, glad to see you are enjoying it just the same. Great job on the bread.

thanks for baking with Sara and I!

David T. Macknet said...

It sure looks wonderful!

As to the slashing - it's not meant to let steam out, but to allow for a bit of extra rise. The gluten has formed a solid sheet in the shaping process, so you slash that sheet & end up with bigger bubbles under where the slashes are.

The break on the bottom ... I've had that as well, and I suspect that it had to do with there being a bit of a weak seal when I formed the loaf.

You've done a great job!

Deborah said...

Sorry you didn't love the finished result, but good for you for trying!

Sara said...

Your bread looks gorgeous!!! I hope you try again, you've certainly got the shaping and slashing down pat.

Cookie baker Lynn said...

Your loaf looks picture perfect! Way to go, Daring Baker!

Amy said...

Thanks everyone! This was one of my favorite challenges and I think I will make it again this week and try to get the interior right. :) Thank you Mary and Sara for picking this awesome recipe!

Bettina said...

yayyyyyyy!! heheh. i can eat sooooo much bread...especially french bread...YUM

MyKitchenInHalfCups said...

Yes your crust looks wonderful and your description sounds like it was perfect. I would suspect that you under baked this from how you describe the inside. It might be your thermometer is off but I think it's more likely your oven temp could be off. I'd suggest trying an oven thermometer next time and go for at least 195°F for an internal temp on the bread. I think Davimack has your answer on the bottom split.
Beautiful loaf.

Rosa's Yummy Yums said...

Your bread looks fabulous! Very well done!

Cheers,

Rosa

Anonymous said...

Good Job! ;)

LinkWithin

Blog Widget by LinkWithin