Olive Magazine

Kitchen therapy

Fill your home with the irresistib­le aroma of freshly baked bread making these light and beautifull­y crusty baguettes

- Recipe ADAM BUSH Photograph MIKE ENGLISH

Fill your home with the irresistib­le aroma of freshly baked bread with these crusty baguettes

1 HOUR 15 MINUTES + OVERNIGHT FERMENTING + PROVING MAKES 6 BAGUETTES | A LITTLE EFFORT

POOLISH

strong white bread flour 150g

fast-action dried yeast 1/8 tsp or a large pinch DOUGH

strong white bread flour 500g, plus extra for dusting

extra-virgin olive oil 2 tbsp, plus extra for the bowl

fast-action dried yeast ½ tsp

1 The night before making the baguettes, make the poolish. Mix together the flour and yeast with 175ml of lukewarm water. Cover with a clean tea towel and leave overnight – the mixture should be very bubbly by the morning.

2 The next day, make the dough. Tip the poolish, flour, olive oil, yeast, 2 tsp of fine sea salt and 225ml of lukewarm water into a stand mixer with the dough hook attached. Mix on low for 8-10 minutes or until the dough is smooth and combined. Alternativ­ely, use clean, wet hands to stretch, pull and knead the dough for 10 minutes on a floured worksurfac­e until you have a single stretchy piece.

3 Tip the dough into a lightly oiled bowl, cover with a clean tea towel and leave to prove for 3-4 hours, stretching and folding it every 30 minutes for the first 2 hours – gently pull up one side of the dough using wet hands and fold it over the rest. Turn the bowl 90 degrees and repeat three times. It’s ready when it is really bubbly and has nearly doubled in size.

4 Tip the dough out onto a worksurfac­e and cut into six even pieces. Lightly flour the top of each piece and shape into tight rounds. Generously flour the top of each round and leave to rest for 15 minutes.

5 Generously flour one or two large clean tea towels (you may need to use two if your baguettes are large) and lay on a baking sheet. Use a dough scraper or knife to flip the rounds of dough so the floured side is on the worksurfac­e. Fold the bottom third of the dough up to the middle, then the top third down so you have a rough oval/rectangle shape. Use your hands to gently roll the oval into a baguette shape, roughly 15-18cm long. Crimp the edge of the tea towel and sit the baguette next to it, seam-side up. Crimp the tea towel again on the other side of the baguette so it’s supported on either side. This will help the baguette keep its shape. Continue with the remaining dough along the length of the towel. Leave to prove for 2 hours until puffy.

6 Heat the oven to 240C/fan 220C/gas 9 for 45 minutes with a pizza or baking stone or large, heavy baking sheet on the middle shelf and a baking tray on the bottom shelf.

7 Carefully lay the baguettes on the stone or baking sheet, seam-side down, leaving plenty of space around them. Use a lame, sharp knife or scissors to make two or three diagonal slashes down each baguette. Slide the stone or sheet back into the oven, then pour 500ml of warm water into the tray on the bottom shelf. Immediatel­y shut the door. Bake for 20-25 minutes or until the baguettes are deep golden. Cool on wire racks.

PER BAGUETTE 433 kcals | fat 5G saturates 0.8G | carbs 81.8G | sugars 0.5G fibre 3.6G | protein 13.7G | salt 1.6G

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• Make a start on your sourdough, whip up some soda bread or spruce up your brioche technique with our expert bread guides on Omagazine.com

 ??  ?? April 2021
April 2021

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