Façonnage (shaping) is the act of transforming a fermented dough mass into its final form before baking, and it is arguably the most tactile, skill-dependent operation in all of boulangerie. The shaping process accomplishes several critical functions simultaneously: it establishes the bread’s final form, creates surface tension (la peau, ‘the skin’) that supports oven spring and scoring, and organises the internal gas structure that determines crumb character. Before façonnage, the divided dough pieces undergo pré-façonnage (pre-shaping): for round loaves, the dough is pulled and tucked underneath itself on a lightly floured surface to create a rough ball with moderate tension; for long loaves, it is folded into a rough cylinder. The pre-shaped pieces then rest during détente (bench rest) for 15-20 minutes, covered, allowing the gluten to relax from the tension of dividing and pre-shaping. Without this rest, the dough resists final shaping and springs back frustratingly. Final shaping for a boule: the relaxed round is flipped seam-side up, the edges are pulled to the centre and pinched to seal, then the ball is turned over and dragged toward you on an unfloured surface — the friction between dough and bench creates surface tension. For a bâtard (short oval): the round is flattened gently, the top edge folded to the centre and sealed with the heel of the hand, then rolled to the midpoint and sealed again, creating a taut oval with a seam along the bottom. For a baguette: the pre-shaped cylinder is flattened, folded in thirds (as for a bâtard but more elongated), then the seam is sealed and the dough rolled under the hands (not the palms pressing down, but the outer edges of the hands providing light, even pressure) from centre outward to achieve the target length, tapering both ends. Throughout façonnage, the baker’s touch must be firm enough to create tension but gentle enough not to degas the dough aggressively — heavy-handedness destroys the gas cells painstakingly cultivated during fermentation. The shaped dough is transferred seam-side up into a banneton (proofing basket) or seam-side down onto a couche for the apprêt.
Pre-shape, rest 15-20 minutes, then final shape. Surface tension (la peau) is the goal. Friction on unfloured surface creates tension for boules. Bâtard and baguette built through systematic folding and sealing. Firm but gentle touch — don’t degas aggressively. Seam-side up in banneton, seam-side down on couche.
For boule shaping, keep a small area of your bench completely flour-free — the stickiness is what creates the surface tension as you drag the dough. If the seam won’t seal, dampen it slightly with water rather than pressing harder. For baguettes, let the dough do the work: light pressure and slow rolling produces better results than forcing the length.
Skipping the bench rest, causing dough to fight back during shaping. Using too much flour, preventing surface tension from developing. Over-handling the dough, degassing excessively. Failing to seal the seam, causing the loaf to split during baking. Inconsistent pressure during baguette rolling, creating uneven thickness.
Le Goût du Pain (Raymond Calvel)