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P au L redux, but as Baguettes (updated 15 Aug.)

alfanso's picture
alfanso

P au L redux, but as Baguettes (updated 15 Aug.)

As this August has unofficially turned into the Hamelman Pain au Levain batard month, I thought that I'd submit one more entry to the mix.  I did a TFL search for hamelman pain au levain baguette after baking my version as a batard.  And in the vast compendium of our website here I could not find a single reference to anyone ever having done his batard as a baguette .  A sinful omission which I have gladly undertaken to correct as part of my quest to "do something different to make it my own" mantra.

Scaled down from the original formula for 4 300g baguettes each, again mixing in a few more grams of water to increase hydration just a tad.  Employing my standard way of long retards of dough already shaped and couched.  From retard to score to bake, in 5 minutes' time.  I bumped the oven temp up from the prior bake's 440dF to 460dF for this bake as I wasn't content with the prior coloration or crumb structure.  I may still have to nudge to oven dial to 475dF or 480dF next time.  As stubby as they may look, they are all between 11" and 12" in length.  

Still would like another shade of dark to these, but that is, sadly, another of my mantras.

steam released and rotated

And, just as I was about to slather on the mustard in prep for my mini salami & pecorino sandwich (yep, that is the size of my sandwich!), I decided to take a crumb shot.  The taste is "wheaty" but not too much so.  "Cereal-like" says my better half.  

The crumb is still a little moist inside, so indeed I will look to bake these at a higher temp. next time.

UPDATED on 8/15/15

I decided to make the same Pain au Levain baguettes, but this time with my own levain instead of that which Mr. Hamelman uses for this bread.  A little less stiff at 75% hydration.  I went against my personal grain here and changed two parameters at the same time.  One is the levain and the second is that I again bumped the temp. up by another 20 degrees to 480dF, rather than the previous bump to 460dF.

The value to using my own always stocked-up-on levain is that it saves me the first step in making this bread.  As I always have it ready to go, I can either scoop out what I need straight from the refrigerator, or just do a quick refresh of a small batch, which takes only ~21/2 hours instead of the formula's 10-12 hour build. 

I wonder if the baguettes set too quickly due to the higher temp or if the different levain played the role in these opening nicely, but not quite as nicely as the earlier version at the top of this entry.  I suppose that more testing (and tasting) is going to be in the works.  Just for the fun of it all, I also threw some raw flour on top of these just before scoring for that rustic look that I don't often do.

Of the four baguettes, one is displaying a really goofy bloom.  At first I thought that it was a pair of scores that had overlapped too closely, but on closer inspection, it doesn't seem to be the culprit.  Maybe I'll just refer to it as a tree burl and leave it at that.

alan

Comments

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

really fantastic and some beautiful scoring too - love those blisters.  Can't wait to see the inside and hear how they taste.

Well done and Happy baking 

alfanso's picture
alfanso

In the past 24 hours you had mentioned on someone else's post about a specific PiPs mostly white bread that you adored.  Now that I've got 3 PiPs breads under my belt (figuratively as well as literally!), I'd like to give that one a go.  But don't know which one.  Any thoughts?

And yes, shaping and scoring has steadily improved over the past year.  Thanks.

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

both Phil's and Josh's blog.

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

It isn't the one i am looking for but similar in that it is a high extraction flour. not his own home milled,  at 75% hydration.  Not white but beautiful  http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/34515/tasmania-winters-journey with light sifted flour from

 Callington Mill 

H e had this to say about it.

I mixed a dough at roughly 75% hydration with 25% of the flour pre-fermented in a stiff starter. The dough had a little more strength than I anticipated and after a few minutes of slap-and-folds I left it for two hours in bulk with one fold half way through. The shaped batards were retarded overnight before being baked off in a hot oven. The stoneground flour produced a loaf with a little less volume than with roller milled flour ... but the flavour and crumb texture is to die for. YUM!

 

here is another high extraction (80%) Miche that has a bit of plain white, rye and spelt

 http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/30635/tartine%E2%80%99s-sesame-bread-tempered-high-extraction-miche

Here is the one i was thinking about

http://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/28835/high-extraction-milling-tarlee-miche-biscuits-and-jam

i pay attention to Phil's blog because his blog is killer and his baking environment is like mine in AZ - just opposite times of the year:-)

 

KathyF's picture
KathyF

Those look fantastic!

alfanso's picture
alfanso

I'd spent my first year on TFL doing baguettes and more baguettes.  And then a few months ago decided to give batards a whirl.  So I am re-familiarizing myself with these little devils again, and now I can ping-pong back and forth with the same formulae for each shape.  Fun!

Colin_Sutton's picture
Colin_Sutton

Hi Alan, these look superb and bet they taste great.  Thanks for your posts, they give us newbies something to aspire to. Happy baking. Colin.

makebreadnet's picture
makebreadnet

There you have it, beautiful baguettes can be made at home!

You've inspired me to try again!