The journey to making sourdough baguettes

I hope you had a great Christmas. Christmas here – when it comes to the food- has been all about green lush salads, light seafood, glazed ham and the traditional queugneux of North and North Eastern France (ou cougnoux in Belgium) with think hot chocolate on Christmas morning (recipes to come ahead of next Christmas)!

This post is about the journey of trials and errors in getting to make sourdough baguettes.  Now, they are all you expect from a baguette: crusty, tasty, bubbly. They keep well if not eaten on day one or two and can then be toasted for breakfast.  I even got an order of baguettes for Christmas!

If you want to see the recipe directly, go HERE.

baguettes

 

 

A sticky dough, but how wet?

My first trials was to try making sourdough baguettes out of the same  dough as bread dough. While the baguette taste all right, it does not have any of the quality of the real baguette and its biggest failure is the lack of those big bubbles that make for a lighter bread.  Having played a few times with very wet dough (when you put the same weight of flour and water), I knew that those dough were lighter and allowed for much bigger bubbles.  The drawback, those breads cannot held their weight and tend to be rather flat.

So, in a game of trials and error, I did end up finding the suitable proportions.  Looking at a few recipes after that, it is similar to those.  I could have saved myself a fair bit of trialing.

In need of flexibility in the dough

Next, I was not getting a very flexible dough (yes, we – and some neighbours- ate a number of trial breads!). As a consequence, the shaping was a little difficult.  In a book that I bought nine years ago called “The bread bible” by  Rose Levy Beranbaum, the author has a recipe for baguettes, but for the classic french baguette.  That recipe has a number of prefermented doughs. Prefermented dough have the benefits to add flavour to the bread and as I found by trialing make the dough a lot more flexible.

The two technics that I now use:

  • I mix the water and flour from the main part of the recipe at the same time I feed the starter, that is 24 hours before actually making the bread. I cover it and place it in the fridge. It takes 3 minutes max.
  • When I make the dough, I use my mixer.  I am sure to obtain the right consistency and it is rather quick (7 minutes and voila!).

The last rising is critical

The above practices have not prevented me ending up with some pretty poor breads because I sped up the last rising, or rather did not let it happen properly. Lesson learnt, the last rising is critical for the baguette.

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A camping holidays experience

And I could not let you go without speaking of my bread test trials while camping…

At the end of the school break, we joined a few families for a week camping  along the NSW coastline.   I had taken a little of my sourdough starter to experiment cooking bread while camping.   Our family does the camping thing very lightly, we have none of the camping bulky equipment, so our camp remains basic. The camp ground was walk access only, which is great!! In other words, I had no camp oven (even so, it was total fire ban!).

I realised I had nothing to measure proportions to make the bread.  In the end,  I made a big batch of bread dough and got the children to make little bread rolls, I kept enough for a large bread.  Until then, all went as it should.  The only option for the baking was the large cooking pots with lids. I placed the rolls on baking baker, some water at the bottom bellow the baking paper. The rolls were basically cooked by steaming.  Cooking time is really quick that way.   The result was a little strange: there was no crust!  The taste was fine, the inside as well, it was just missing its natural aesthetic. Next morning I had avo on toast and it was delicious!

 

Simple recipes for outdoors afternoons

Going to the beach or to a park? Going for a little bush wonder?  These  pages point you out to simple recipes for outdoors afternoons.  Add this to fruits and/or crudity and you are ready to go!  Great little snack for kids always on the move!

To go straight to the new recipe of the week, go to “le cake” or simply HERE.  I did it today for the local children music performance and manage to get a good photo before going (the cake was still hot when e arrived there).  Use those at other time for lunch box or get-together, garanteed to go!

The madeleines

This one if probably my favourite for  excursion: no cutting required, easy to handle, small size and quite popular.  The recipe for the basic version is HERE, you can vary and incorporate variations, one of them is with strawberries and rosemary (recipe HERE).

 

The log cake called “le cake”

I promised this recipe a while ago.  For me, it is childhood memories of delicious afternoon snacks. Le cake (sic in French) is a log cake , a simple butter cake flavoured with lemon or sultanas or candied fruits.  This is the new recipe of the week! Check the recipe HERE.

easy log cake

The palets bretons

Palets bretons are a type of french biscuits.  You need to start the recipe the day before,  even better, as they keep for a couple weeks, make them in batch dring the holidays season and use as required!  Again, pretty simple to make! Recipe HERE.

palet breton

Chocolate chip cookies

Another favourite in our family, no need to look at another recipe.  I have posted on them recently.  Look HERE.

cookies au chocolat gourmants
Chocolate chip cookies, here in giant version

 

 

 

 

 

 

No cooking today!

No cooking today. A bit of play with Mother Nature!

Hanging plants or kokedama

boule suspendue

These hanging plants or moss balls are also known as kokedama in Japan.  I do not pretend here to know the best way of making them.  We more of less made it up.  We also watched a few video on you tube, that said, everybody seem to have their own method. The moss balls are relatively easy to do.  You need some sphagnum moss, some good dirt (we mixed some recent compost with some ashes here), some sisal string and a few plants.  The choice of the plant needs to match the area you propose to place them in as for heat, exposure to light and humidity level.

Dream catcher

dream catcher
Our dreamcatcher using local found vines

We used local vines to make the round structure, a few shells found on the beach and some feathers of cockatoos found at the top of the island below some tall white gums!

Try and have fun!