The baguette tradition is France’s most iconic bread and the legal standard against which all French breadmaking is measured. The Décret Pain of 1993 legally defines the baguette de tradition française as containing only four ingredients: wheat flour (type 55 or 65), water, salt, and yeast or levain, with no additives, improvers, or ascorbic acid permitted. This legal protection distinguishes the baguette tradition from the baguette ordinaire, which may contain additives. The dough hydration runs 68-72%, higher than many bread doughs, yielding the characteristic open, irregular crumb (mie) with large and small alveoli distributed asymmetrically. Mixing follows the méthode sur autolyse: flour and water are combined and rested 20-30 minutes before salt and yeast are added, allowing gluten to develop passively through hydration before mechanical working. The dough receives an intensive short mix (pétrissage intensifié) of 4-5 minutes at first speed followed by 6-8 minutes at second speed, or a longer slow mix (pétrissage lent) favoured by artisan bakers for superior flavour development. Bulk fermentation (pointage) lasts 1-2 hours at 24-26°C with one or two folds (rabats), or 12-18 hours retarded at 4°C for cold-fermented versions. Division targets 350g for a standard baguette (65cm finished length). Shaping (façonnage) begins with pré-façonnage into a rough cylinder, 15-20 minutes bench rest, then the definitive shaping: the dough is folded in thirds, sealed with the heel of the hand, then rolled under the palms to achieve the tapered ends (bouts) characteristic of the form. Final proof (à l’apprêt) takes 60-90 minutes in a linen couche dusted with flour. Scoring (grigne) consists of 5-7 overlapping diagonal cuts at 30° angle, each overlapping the previous by one-third, made with a lame held nearly parallel to the dough surface. Baking occurs at 240-250°C with steam injection for the first 12-15 minutes (to gelatinise the surface starch and create the shattering crust), then dry heat for the remaining 10-12 minutes. The finished baguette should sing — crackling audibly as it cools — with an ear (l’oreille) of caramelised crust lifting along each score line.
Only four ingredients by law (flour, water, salt, yeast/levain). Autolyse before salt addition. 68-72% hydration for open crumb. Shaping produces tapered ends. 5-7 overlapping scores at 30° angle. Steam injection for first 12-15 minutes of baking. 240-250°C oven temperature.
The lame angle is everything: hold the blade at 30-40° to the surface, nearly flat, to create the characteristic ear that lifts and caramelises. Use a couche of heavy unbleached linen, never a towel, which grips the dough. After scoring, load into the oven within 10 seconds — delay allows the cuts to seal.
Hydration too low, producing tight crumb. Skipping autolyse, overdeveloping the dough mechanically. Scoring too deep or too vertical, preventing ear formation. Insufficient steam, yielding pale, thick crust. Underbaking — a properly baked baguette should feel hollow and light when tapped.
Le Goût du Pain (Raymond Calvel)