The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Le Pain par Poilane

kylelindstrom's picture
kylelindstrom

Le Pain par Poilane

Hi,

 

My high school French is a little weak, but I'm intrigued by what I've seen online of Le Pain par Poilane.  Anyone here use it and if so, do you have any thoughts, reccommendations or suggestions, maybe even about other French books on bread.

 

Thanks

LindyD's picture
LindyD

According to the Amazon review, it is a history of Lionel Poilane and his bakery.  There are no recipes.  Do a TFL search on Poilane and you'll come up with lots of info - and in English.  ;-)

There are many excellent books on bread - check out the recommended books to the left - you should find something of interest.

Edited to add correction: the reviewer states it is not a recipe book but noted there are a few within the text.

 

breadforfun's picture
breadforfun

I first came across a reference to Pain Poilâne in Reinhart's BBA where he presents a version of this bread; he calls it a miche, which I believe is a name for the large (2 kg)  rustic loaf.  It inspired me to make a natural starter and I've been feeding it now for a few months.  Amazingly, my wife found a small gourmet shop in the area that imports Poilâne's loaf and we bought one to try.  I've been trying my hand at making this for the past month, and after about 10 tries, I got something that I liked.

I believe that Poilâne uses a mixture of grains based on the package that the bread comes in, but there is no ingredient list.  Reinhart uses 100% whole wheat, which I found to be a bit bland.  I have modified the recipe to use several different grains, and I also increased the hydration to around 70% from Reinhart's original (I think around 65-66%).  Here are some photos of the loaves, which weigh around 4 lbs. 4 oz. and last a week without getting stale.

dmsnyder's picture
dmsnyder

I've baked the miche from BBA many times. Of the various miche formulas I've tried, Reinhart's is not my favorite, but it does produce a bread closer to Poilâne's than any of the other's.

From various reviews I've read, I understand that Pain Poilâne (Lionel's version, anyway) is made with a custom-milled flour that is high-extraction and similar to French T-65. Nicky Giusto says that the Central Milling "Organic Type-85 malted" flour is close to that used by Poilâne. I've also read that Poilâne uses some Spelt flour, but I don't really know.

The miche that has been closest in flavor to what I remember from the one time I tasted Poilâne's miche many years ago was made with KAF First Clear. 

Here' a link to my blog on my last BBA miche: Miche from BBA

David

breadforfun's picture
breadforfun

Can you give a few more details about the steaming apparatus that you use?

dmsnyder's picture
dmsnyder

I pre-heat a 7" cast iron skillet filled with lava rocks on the bottom oven shelf. My backing stone is pre-heated on a middle shelf.

Just after loading the bread on the stone, I place a 9" perforated pie pan filled with ice cubes on top of the lava rocks. The ice melts, and the water drips onto the lava rocks, creating steam. If the bake is short, I use fewer ice cubes.

I usually remove the skillet from the oven 1/3 to 1/2 way into the bake.

Also, I start the bake on conventional setting but switch to convection and turn the oven down 25ºF when I remove the skillet. This is to dry the crust more completely.

Alternatively, I bake with the loaf covered in a cast iron dutch oven, removing the cover when the crust has started to form. 

David

 

Gadjowheaty's picture
Gadjowheaty

This is very old and I apologize but afraid my current rabbit-hole seems to be pain au levain - miche - poilane - desem? - miche - poilane - poilane - levain.....

-and I already know, I'll never get out.  In case it might be of more general interest or usefulness, some time ago I ordered the Winter, 2009 (No. 83) back issue of The Art of Eating, which included a wonderful article by James Maguire: "Pain Au Levain:  The best Flavor, Acidity, Texture, and Where They Come From (with a Recipe and How to Buy Pain Au Levain)", pp. 16-29. 

Wonderful, highly recommend the issue.  (Mentioned to mariana on another thread, always hungry to pick up culinary lore and history, and I wasn't disappointed here:  Parmentier, it seems, had a handle on certain things Raymond Calvel would champion for our era, among them managing fermentations empirically, pâte fermentée, builds - see Parmentier, Le Parfait Boulanger, 1778).  Poilane and his precursors, Apollonia too. Nice photo series from Pain Virgule (never been.  Want to go.  Want that fork mixer). The article concludes with a recipe by Maguire, after Calvel. It indicates two and not three builds.

I was piqued when I read David's comment above on T65 as being similar to what Lionel used on a custom blend basis.  I'd always presumed T65 was a sort of baseline "white" for rustic loaves, but, with respect to pain au levain, I previously thought T65 was used in blending with other more highly extracted flours (or that farine bise, T80 or thereabouts, was the sole flour typically). (Fwiw, Maguire calls for T80 or T110, parsed if needs be by blending AP with WW.  It's on this basis, in fact, I've done my best to parse a T85 with Central Millings's Baker's Craft and Hi-Pro WW).

Do I recall correctly, Daniel Leader in one of his books also calls for T65 or approximation, for pain au levain?

More to learn.  I learn so much from this site.  Just wanted to offer a good read, in my opinion, for anyone interested.

Wild-Yeast's picture
Wild-Yeast

I also use Cental Millings Organic Flour to produce a Poilane style bread.  Use of an inverted steam tray pan sprayed with water on an oven stone produces a steam environment for the rising dough in the first 15 minutes.

This is our house bread and has been for the last several years...,

Bien Cordialement, Wild-Yeast

Gadjowheaty's picture
Gadjowheaty

I'm not seeing an image on my end, wild-yeast.  I do see a kind of image symbol at upper left.  Can others see something?  Would love to see...