Submitted by dmsnyder on December 2, 2008 - 10:56pm



- Flour 500 gms Giusto's Baker's Choice
- Water 375 gms
- Yeast 1/4 tsp Instant
- Salt 10 gms
- Mix flour and water and autolyse for 20 minutes.
- Add yeast and mix by folding dough in the bowl.
- Add salt and mix by folding dough in the bowl.
- Mix dough by folding and stretching in the bowl for 20 strokes. Repeat this 3 more times at 20 minute intervals.
- Refrigerate dough, covered tightly, for 21 hours.
- Divide into 4 equal parts and preshape gently for baguettes.
- Allow preshaped pieces to rest, covered with plastic, for 1 hour.
- Shape into ficelles (short, thin baguettes).
- Proof en couche or on parchment paper dusted with semolina for 45 minutes.
- Pre-heat oven to 500F with baking stone in middle rack and a cast iron skillet and a metal loaf pan on the lowest rack. Preheat 45 minutes or longer before baking.
- 3-5 minutes before baking, place a handful of ice cubes in the loaf pan. Shut the oven door. Bring water to a boil.
- Transfer the ficelles to a peel and load them onto the baking stone. Pour one cup of boiling water into the skillet. Close the oven door.
- Turn the oven down to 480F.
- After 10 minutes, remove the loaf pan and the skillet from the oven.
- Continue baking for another 10-15 minutes until the loaves are nicely colored, the crust is hard all around and the bottom gives a hollow sound when tapped. Internal temperature should be at least 205F.
- Cool on a rack completely before slicing.
Anis Bouabsa is a young Parisian boulanger who won the prize for the best baguettes in Paris in 2008. He gave Janedo, a French home baker extraordinaire and a member of TFL, his formula, and Jane shared it with us. He uses a technique of a long, cold fermentation which has been used, with variations, by a number of contemporary French bakers.
In addition to producing wonderfully flavored bread, it also permits the home baker to make bread using two blocks of about 2-3 hours rather than requiring longer time blocks. For example, I mixed the dough yesterday evening after dinner. I took it out of the refrigerator at about 4:30 pm this afternoon, and we ate it with dinner at 7:30 pm.
These ficelles sang loudly coming out of the oven. I cooled them for only 20-30 minutes. The crust was very crunchy, and the crumb had a sweetness that would make one think there was sugar in the dough. Very yummy.
Variations on Bouabsa's formula, adding 100 gms of sourdough starter and substituting 10% rye or whole wheat flour for an equal amount of white flour, make a delicious pain de campagne, which has become a favorite bread of several of us.
This is described in my blog entries under "Pain de Campagne" and "San Joaquin Sourdough."
Enjoy!
David
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