X
-
Tags: None
-
Baguette Videos
James,
The dough shown here will be described in the upcoming bread baking section, but I thought to anticipate a few questions here. This is a lean French bread dough made with pate fermentee, so it shapes easily and well. It's important to use the dough cutter like a pincer, not a saw, so the dough is not deflated. The cut pieces are turned over and a sort of valley made down the center, so that when the two edges are pinched together the tops of the loaves have sufficient surface tension for a proper rise. The floured cloth is called a couche, and the folds form walls so the dough rises upwards, rather than spreads outwards. The finished baguette are shown, among other breads, in the Bake Day picture in the Gallery.
Working on the sound issue, guys, honest.
Jim"Made are tools, and born are hands"--William Blake, 1757-1827
-
Nick, you can send them to me (james@fornobravo.com). Thanks!
I think Jim and I have a digital camcorder (with mic) on our Xmas list, which will get us back into the talkies.
James
Comment
-
One more thing
Voiceover aside, don't you think Jim's videos are just great? I am learning just as I publish them. Excellent.
Thanks Jim!
James
Comment
-
Videos
All,
Thanks for the comments. I'm touched, and I mean that. I'll keep them coming if they're helpful, and it seems they are. Just want to get the quality up, but, for me, a still camera guy, the learning curve is somewhat steep. I'd be more than pleased to field questions about these silent versions. Next up will be forming rolls, though the surface tension mantra remains the same.
Perhaps there might be some requests for specific and problematic techniques? I could try to address those if the need arises.
Actually, this is fun for me. I really like the hands on part, mortar to dough.
Jim"Made are tools, and born are hands"--William Blake, 1757-1827
Comment
-
Mixing wet dough by hand
How about something on mixing wet dough by hand. What's the best way to keep it from sticking, without adding too much flour back into the dough -- where it gets too stiff?
James
Comment
-
Re: Baguette videos
James,
Missed this post from you. I'll add a mixing wet dough video to the list. Have you seen the general intro piece Wendy and I made? Not sure about the sound quality, but maybe it can be bumped or cleaned or something by somebody like Nick.
Jim"Made are tools, and born are hands"--William Blake, 1757-1827
Comment
-
Re: Baguette videos
LOL,
After editing the cookbook, I can't see anything.My eyes are swimming around.
The last video I rec'd from you was peels.zip on 2/18. Is there a new video I have missed?
btw -- your technique on mixing wet dough in the bowl before kneading was perfect.
James
Comment
-
Re: Baguette videos
James,
Yep, there's one gone astray. Title: "Wendy's Work." Ahem, Wendy was the camerapersonhoodon it, hence the title. It's a short intro, welcome piece for the bread book. I sent it via Pando. The program says it was sent but not downloaded on your end. I'll send it again if there's a glitch.
Jim"Made are tools, and born are hands"--William Blake, 1757-1827
Comment
-
Re: Baguette videos
Don't you hate the way computers keep track of everything, so everyone knows who sent it, and who forgot to download it?
James
Comment
Comment