The flavor comes from poolish, an analog to a sourdough starter, and if you skimp of the required 15 hours, the baguette won't have the expected flavor. Fear not -- you need to remember to start the poolish so many hours ahead, but otherwise, it's nothing special, other than to not poke at it or keep looking at it. Forget it for 15 hours, seriously.
The other thing that is important is the forming and slashing of the dough. In bread competitions, the crumb of the bread is important, as well as the lack of any evidence that the dough has been overworked or "abused." So, despite what we may have learned about kneading bread dough, you really do need to pay attention to the dough.
Slashing the cuts is a bit like creating a stretchmark -- you are creating a weak spot so the bread can "bloom" out and form into a uniform shape without ripping or cracking in an unattractive or destructional manner. it's a little counterintuitive, so the first ones should be about following and replicating the masters till you "get it." like gru.
right out of the oven -- two baguettes with nice slashmarks and one row of rolls called the dragon tail |
the dragon tail rolls are cut like epi rolls, but the tails are folded back onto the roll. the resulting row of rolls resembles the spine of some mythical reptile ;) |
to eat, pull the dragon tail "vertebrae" apart |
nice creamy looking crumb! |
I like to call it my latest "poolish endeavor". :)
ReplyDeleteYummy. Definitely need the recipe!
ReplyDeleteThese look wonderful! And I'm cracking up over here because now whenever I see slashes on bread, I'm going to think of stretchmarks! HA!!
ReplyDelete