Rising confidence

Inspired by a brother who insists baking bread by weight beats volume, I freestyled this recipe. It’s about as simple as bread gets (and, often, as complex as it needs to be).

Two baguettes, one with rosemary

Two baguettes, one with rosemary

Ingredients

600 g flour
450 g water
1 T. yeast
1 T. salt

Mix dry ingredients. Add water and blend until combined. Turn out onto counter and knead roughly to aerate. (Here, I used an abusive no-flour kneading technique from a video sent by the same brother. Hard to describe.) Form into ball, dust with flour and put in bowl to rise. When doubled — about 90 minutes — turn out on to lightly floured counter. Divide in two and lightly knead each. Form into baguettes. (During the forming, I added chopped fresh rosemary to one.) Set on baking sheet dusted with cornmeal. Preheat oven to 425. Bake until golden, about 25 minutes. Cool on a wire rack.

Notes

I haven’t baked bread in a while, mostly because the sourdough starter I used beginning last January quit cooperating. As I consistently baked barely edible bricks, I lost mojo. Not a good thing for a baker.

This batch helped restore some of that confidence. The crust was crunchy and golden and the insides were light, airy and fully done. I used about 3 T. of rosemary in one, and could have used a pinch more to give a more pronounced taste. My biggest criticism: The loaves were a tad salty. Overall, though, these turned out pretty damn good for making it up as I went along, and went a long way toward boosting that mojo.

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