Pain de campagne (‘country bread’) is the archetypal rustic French loaf: a large, round or oval sourdough with a thick, dark, crackling crust and a moist, slightly tangy crumb that keeps for a week — the bread that sustained rural France for centuries before the baguette’s 20th-century ascendancy. French law (Décret Pain de 1993) does not strictly define pain de campagne but specifies it must not contain any additive and should reflect ‘traditional rural breadmaking character’ in appearance, flour blend, and fermentation method. The flour is typically a blend: 70-80% Type 65 wheat flour with 20-30% Type 80 or Type 110 (semi-wholemeal or wholemeal), sometimes with 5-10% rye flour added for depth and moisture retention. This darker flour blend gives the crumb its characteristic creamy-grey colour and nutty, wheaty flavour that white-flour breads cannot achieve. Leavening is traditionally by levain naturel, though a levain-yeast combination (levain de campagne) is common in boulangeries managing production schedules. Hydration runs 68-72%. The dough receives a long bulk fermentation (2-4 hours at room temperature, or 12-16 hours retarded) with 2-3 folds, developing the complex, slightly sour flavour profile. The loaf is shaped as a large boule (1-2kg) or bâtard, often proofed in a cloth-lined wicker banneton that imprints its spiral pattern onto the flour-dusted surface. Scoring is bold: a deep cross, a square, or a series of curved slashes that echo the banneton’s spiral. Baking on the oven sole at 230-240°C with heavy steam for the first 15 minutes, then dry heat for 30-40 minutes for a 1.5kg loaf, producing the thick, caramelised crust that insulates the crumb and enables the bread’s extraordinary keeping quality. A properly baked pain de campagne should be heavy for its size (indicating full hydration), produce a deep, resonant sound when tapped on the base, and slice to reveal an open, irregular crumb flecked with bran particles. It improves for the first 24 hours after baking as flavours meld, and remains excellent for 5-7 days stored in linen.
Blended flours (Type 65 + Type 80/110, sometimes rye). Levain fermentation for flavour and keeping quality. Long bulk fermentation. Large format (1-2kg) for superior crust-to-crumb balance. Bold scoring. Heavy steam then dry heat. Keeps 5-7 days.
Toast the bran component in a dry pan before adding to the dough for extra nuttiness. For the deepest flavour, use a stiff levain (60% hydration) refreshed with rye flour. The banneton pattern is not merely decorative: the compressed flour in the ridges creates varying crust thickness that adds textural interest.
Using only white flour, producing a pale bread lacking the rustic character. Insufficient fermentation, missing the tangy complexity. Under-baking — a large campagne needs 45-55 minutes total for a 1.5kg loaf. Storing in plastic, which softens the crust. Slicing too soon before flavours meld (wait 2-4 hours minimum).
Le Goût du Pain (Raymond Calvel)