French Bread video

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JoeV

Washing Up
Joined
Mar 30, 2008
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Location
Mentor, OH
I was set back a step or two when I watched this video, and realized I might be spending a bit more time at measuring and kneading than is really necessary. I'm going to give this a try because it's just so darn easy. (I also got all goofy at the sound effects when he cuts and butters the bread.)

YouTube - Bake perfect French Bread in ten minutes

Joe
 
Wow. Like you said the other day, a picture is worth a thousand words.
Thanks for the post.
 
The thing that stuck out to me, every time he did it, was the kneading part.
The times I made crusty bread I only used enough flour to dust the counter with and left it there. This guy kept picking up flour and tossing it into his dough as he was kneading it and I think that helped the doughball firm up quickly, because it looked kinda loose when he first pulled it out of the bowl, like mine does.
 
The thing that stuck out to me, every time he did it, was the kneading part.
The times I made crusty bread I only used enough flour to dust the counter with and left it there. This guy kept picking up flour and tossing it into his dough as he was kneading it and I think that helped the doughball firm up quickly, because it looked kinda loose when he first pulled it out of the bowl, like mine does.

Did you hear that bread when he cut it and then when he chomped down on it? Awesome sound for a bread foodie. When is yours coming out of the oven? I have to work all week remodeling a bathroom, so I won't get to bake until the weekend at the soonest. Get busy and give us some pictures.

JoeV
 
Your dern tootin' I heard that light, flaky crunch!

My father is coming out for a visit today, which means he'll be bringing some mixing bowls my sister doesn't use anymore (I needed some new ones and she has a lot of stuff she's replaced or doesn't use anymore), which means one of them is supposedly a large glass one, which means I should be able to replicate this guy's "technique" pretty closely, which means...... pics to follow :LOL:

Question: If I use instant yeast, does it need proofed?
 
Your dern tootin' I heard that light, flaky crunch!

My father is coming out for a visit today, which means he'll be bringing some mixing bowls my sister doesn't use anymore (I needed some new ones and she has a lot of stuff she's replaced or doesn't use anymore), which means one of them is supposedly a large glass one, which means I should be able to replicate this guy's "technique" pretty closely, which means...... pics to follow :LOL:

Question: If I use instant yeast, does it need proofed?

Just mix Instant Yeast in with your dry ingredients. It does not require proofing.

Hope you get some good stuff from your sister's hand-me-downs. I stopped in a Thrift Store yesterday on the way to a jobsite, and got this 3qt ovensafe baker for $4. Not a bad deal. With the high top lid, the volume is 4 qt, so the dough can rise nicely.

img_685973_0_e1ba96a1fdefe22f0d5f896fe7f4cc90.jpg


Off to work. Be back tonight.

Joe

Joe
 
I was set back a step or two when I watched this video, and realized I might be spending a bit more time at measuring and kneading than is really necessary. I'm going to give this a try because it's just so darn easy. (I also got all goofy at the sound effects when he cuts and butters the bread.)

YouTube - Bake perfect French Bread in ten minutes

Joe

Too bad I can't hear what the guy was saying but I watched it . Did he provide a recipe or measurements for the ingredients?
 
Too bad I can't hear what the guy was saying but I watched it . Did he provide a recipe or measurements for the ingredients?
He said, for two loaves:
-Four cups flour, tablespoon salt, tablespoon of dry yeast, add yeast water and enough additional water to flour in bowl to make a dough that comes away from sides of bowl.
-Two hours for first rise and one to one and one half hours for final rise.
-Preheated 350 to 375 oven for about 35 minutes.

It appears that his second rise may have been too long and that it prevented a good oven spring, as indicated by the flat bottoms of the loaves and slashes that did not fill out very well.
 
He said, for two loaves:
-Four cups flour, tablespoon salt, tablespoon of dry yeast, add yeast water and enough additional water to flour in bowl to make a dough that comes away from sides of bowl.
-Two hours for first rise and one to one and one half hours for final rise.
-Preheated 350 to 375 oven for about 35 minutes.

It appears that his second rise may have been too long and that it prevented a good oven spring, as indicated by the flat bottoms of the loaves and slashes that did not fill out very well.

thank you very much! I'm deaf so can't hear things on youtube and such.
 
Your most welcome LadyCook. He mixes the salt to distribute it throughout the dry flour and says the amount of water added is based on his 35 years of experience. His karate chops, pinching of the dough, the appearance of the dough when it's ready to be turned out of the bowl for kneading and the alternate kneading of each of the two pieces of dough (to allow relaxation of each piece while the other is being kneaded) seem to be the high points of his presentation.

Bottom line still is you gotta get up at 3 AM if you want to be eating homemade handmade bread by 7 AM. Ten minutes is a catchy phrase but doesn't tell the whole story.
 
;)
Your most welcome LadyCook. He mixes the salt to distribute it throughout the dry flour and says the amount of water added is based on his 35 years of experience. His karate chops, pinching of the dough, the appearance of the dough when it's ready to be turned out of the bowl for kneading and the alternate kneading of each of the two pieces of dough (to allow relaxation of each piece while the other is being kneaded) seem to be the high points of his presentation.

Bottom line still is you gotta get up at 3 AM if you want to be eating homemade handmade bread by 7 AM. Ten minutes is a catchy phrase but doesn't tell the whole story.

I'm not about to get up that early ;). Dinner time is good enough to have french bread. ;)
 
Doesn't throwing the water in damage the oven?

:) It can. I put the broiler pan on the bottom shelf let it preheat with the oven after putting bread in I pour a cup of hot water in broiler pan. Be careful doing this and close oven door as quickly as possible.
 
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