Sourdough Baguettes via @theperfectloaf

Sourdough Baguette Recipe

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I’ve fallen hard for these pointy sticks. Their beautifully exaggerated shape starts with a thick center and transitions into dangerously sharp ends. Crust color ranges from the periphery of black to almost-too-light, a contrast that elicits stares. A creamy and tender interior that’s so porous it soaks the butter inevitably spread thick during moments of eager anticipation. A sourdough baguette recipe is a tricky thing, but when everything lines up just right, all your past shortcomings discovered in testing vanish in an instant.

As with many things with baking, they simply require practice.

These sourdough baguettes do take concerted effort and practice, but the results are absolutely worth the work. Ok, technically, these are demi-baguettes, given their shorter stature and reduced dough weight, but the nature of this bread holds to the ideal. The slender shape, thin crust, and delicate interior simply exude baguette, even if their specs are a little skewed.

I’ve been working on this recipe relentlessly, and if you follow me on Instagram, you know this, but all the work put into these revolves around the simple fact baguettes are just plain challenging.

Sourdough Baguettes via @theperfectloaf
One cannot deny the beautiful crumb on these sourdough baguettes. It, too, can be yours.

I find that beyond the required attention to fermentation, flour selection, hydration adjustments, cold versus warm bulk decisions, and seeking that correct proof point, there’s the matter of coercing the dough delicately into the correct shape.

As with many things with baking, they simply require practice.

Their challenge stems from the fact that even small shaping mishaps will show themselves quite clearly in the end result. There’s a reason why many bakers consider baguettes to be one of the hardest breads to make. A benchmark of sorts. But even if the shape or the interior isn’t exactly perfect, they’re always delicious. Plus, the more you make them, the more the process slows down internally, and the more all the small adjustments add up to large improvements.

Because shaping these sourdough baguettes can be frustrating at times, I’ve written an entire guide to shaping baguettes—complete with a video (which is also included below) to help illustrate things in real time. Be sure to give that a read—and even a bookmark—for when you’re in the kitchen and need a helping (virtual) hand.

Let’s talk about flour.

Sourdough Baguette Recipe Crust and Crumb

Sourdough Baguette Flour Selection

Sourdough baguette baking schedule diagram

In my early iterations of this formula, I worked in 10% spelt flour. My intention was to introduce more extensibility in the dough along with the classic and wonderful flavor of spelt. After many trials, I decided to drop the spelt mostly because, with medium-protein white flour and hydration at around 70%, coupled with a length autolyse, this dough had plenty of extensibility.

Baking Schedule

The entire process is split up over the course of two days. This affords you the option to bake the baguettes the next day when you want them—for breakfast, lunch, or even dinner.

Similar to my Kamut demi-baguette recipe, I utilized a short warm bulk fermentation followed by a longer, cold bulk fermentation. When I tested cold-proofing these baguettes in shape, the results always yielded a slightly thicker crust compared to a warm final proof. Further, a cold bulk also adds to the flexibility and convenience of this dough.

Sourdough Baguettes via @theperfectloaf

Sourdough Baguette Recipe

Update: I recently updated this sourdough baguette. It is now the same recipe that’s in my sourdough cookbook—and believe me, the results are significantly better than the previous version!

Vitals

Total Dough Weight2,000 grams
Pre-fermented Flour6.5%
Hydration70.0%
Levain in the final dough17.4%
Yield6 x 325g sourdough baguettes (appx 14″ long)

Total Formula

Note that this is the Total Formula which lets you know all the ingredients, in baker’s percentages, that you need for this recipe. Scroll down to the Method section for what you need in each step.

Desired dough temperature: 78°F (25°C) (see my post on the importance of dough temperature).

WeightIngredientBaker’s Percentage
1143gWhite flour (about 11.5% protein; Central Milling Artisan Baker’s Craft Plus)100.0%
743gWater 1 (Levain and autolyse)65.0%
57gWater 2 (Mix)5.0%
21gSalt1.8%
37gRipe sourdough starter, 100% hydration3.3%
All of the ingredients you’ll need for this baguette recipe.

Method

1. Prepare the levain – 9:00 a.m

WeightIngredientBaker’s Percentage
74gWhite flour (about 11.5% protein; Central Milling Artisan Baker’s Craft Plus)100.0%
74gWater 1100.0%
37gRipe sourdough starter, 100% hydration50.0%

Use your sourdough starter when ripe, mix the above ingredients in a jar, and leave them covered at a warm temperature, 74-76°F (23-24°C), to ripen for 5 hours.

Sourdough Baguettes via @theperfectloaf

2. Autolyse – 1:00 p.m.

WeightIngredient
1068gWhite flour (about 11.5% protein; Central Milling Artisan Baker’s Craft Plus)
668gWater 1

Warm or cool the autolyse water so that the temperature of the mixed dough meets the FDT (final dough temperature) of 78°F (25°C) for this recipe. Place the flour and water 1 in a large bowl. Use wet hands to mix until no dry bits remain; the dough will be shaggy and loose. Use a bowl scraper to scrape down the sides of the bowl to keep all the dough in one area at the bottom. Cover the bowl and place it near your levain for 1 hour.

When making sourdough baguettes, I like to use the autolyse technique to help gain extensibility in the dough and also reduce the total mixing time.

3. Mix – 2:00 p.m.

WeightIngredient
57gWater 2
21gFine sea salt
186gRipe levain

Add the salt and levain to the top of the dough that was just in autolyse and use a splash of water 2 to moisten. With wet hands, mix thoroughly. Add the remaining water if the dough feels like it can handle it. Next, knead the dough for a few minutes using either the slap and fold technique or folds in the bowl. For this dough, I kneaded for about 5 minutes until the dough smoothed and became elastic.

With sourdough baguettes, I find spending a few more minutes developing the dough upfront helpful in achieving a more open crumb. A spiral mixer can help mix this dough quicker and more effectively.

Transfer the dough to a bulk fermentation container and cover.

4. Warm Bulk Fermentation – 2:15 p.m. to 4:45 p.m.

This warm bulk fermentation will last a total of 2 hours and 30 minutes. During this phase (of the two-step bulk fermentation phase), give the dough three sets of stretch and folds, starting 30 minutes after the beginning of bulk. After the last set, let the dough rest untouched until the full two and a half hours.

5. Cold Bulk Fermentation – 4:45 p.m. to 9:00 a.m. (next day)

After the warm bulk fermentation, place the covered bulk fermentation container in the refrigerator overnight.

6. Divide and Preshape – 9:00 a.m. (next day)

My baguette dough, when removed from the fridge, had plenty of activity but was not exceedingly gassy or risen. The dough was active yet relaxed.

Sourdough Baguettes via @theperfectloaf

Gently scrape the dough from the bulk container to an un-floured work surface. The dough will feel cold, slightly damp, and firm. Divide into 325g pieces and preshape the pieces of dough into rounds (my preference) or rough tubes. Because the dough is cold and firm, very little bench flour is needed to pre-shape. 

Let the preshaped dough rest for 35 minutes, uncovered.

7. Shape – 9:50 a.m.

Prepare a board with a couche (aka baker’s linen) or a large kitchen towel and place this next to your work surface.

Sourdough Baguette Recipe dough resting on couche.
Couche laid out on top of a thin shaping board to hold shaped baguette dough.

At one side, where you will start laying down shaped baguettes, roll a section so that it stands up by itself, creating a strong edge (see above). Then thoroughly and evenly dust flour on a 3- to 4-inch-wide strip down the couche, from farthest from you to nearest, where the first piece of shaped dough will sit.

After the preshaped rounds have rested for 35 minutes, shape each piece into a long baguette, approximately 14″ long for the home oven (or as wide as your baking surface).

Watch the quick video below for my step-by-step approach to shaping.

Once you’ve shaped a piece, place it in the flour-dusted channel on the couche, seam side up. Then, using both hands at the edges, pick up and drag a little of the couche toward the dough (like making a pleat in the couche) to form a matching wall of the channel to hold the dough while it’s proofing. Once the new wall is formed, it will look like the dough is nestled between two straight walls.

Flour a new strip down the couche on the other side of the newly formed wall in preparation for another piece of dough. Repeat this process for all the preshaped rounds.

Shaping baguettes requires practice through repetition (see my baguette shaping guide page for more instructions). Try not to get discouraged when shaping; take it slow and focus on one motion at a time.

8. Proof – 10:15 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

Keep your proofing board away from drafts, as the dough can quickly develop a crust on the outside. It may help to drape the edges of your linen over the shaped baguettes or cover them loosely with plastic. If you cover it with plastic, be aware the dough may stick.

Proof the pieces until they pass the poke test, about 1 hour and 45 minutes at room temperature.

Sourdough Baguettes via @theperfectloaf
Covering the shaped pieces of baguette dough with the end of the couche to prevent drying.

9. Bake – 12:00 p.m.

Preheat your oven to 450°F (230°C) for an hour with baking stone/steel inside.

If you only have one baking surface, divide the baking into two sessions. Bake three baguettes first, and chill the rest in the fridge for the second session.

Prepare a pizza peel with parchment paper matching the width of your baking surface.

Grab the end of the couche and pull it out, moving the piece of dough away from the rest. Then, using a dough transfer board (a smaller pizza peel or a small cutting board could also work), place the board inside the baguette (the side closest to the rest of the dough pieces). With the hand holding the couche, quickly flip the dough onto the peel by tugging up and slightly over the transfer board. The baguette should now be seam-side down on the transfer board.

Repeat until you have three pieces on the peel.

Score each baguette with three overlapping slashes (see below).

How to score a baguette
Scoring a sourdough baguette with three cuts.

Transfer the dough onto the baking surface in the oven using the parchment paper. Next, steam the oven and bake for 20 minutes. Remove the steaming pans and bake for another 20-25 minutes until done.

Cool on a rack. Repeat the process for the remaining baguettes in the fridge.

I steamed my oven in my usual way, described here in my post on how to steam your home oven for baking.

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Sourdough Baguettes via @theperfectloaf

Sourdough Baguette Recipe

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  • Author: Maurizio Leo
  • Prep Time: 24 hours
  • Cook Time: 45 minutes
  • Total Time: 24 hours 45 minutes
  • Yield: 6 baguettes
  • Category: Lunch, dinner, snack
  • Cuisine: French
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Description

These exquisite sourdough baguettes have a delicate wheaty flavor with malty notes from the caramelized crust. They’re perfect for breakfast (pan con tomate anyone?), lunch, or even just a snack with a spread of butter on top.


Ingredients

Levain

  • 74g white flour (about 11.5% protein)
  • 74g water
  • 37g ripe sourdough starter, 100% hydration

Autolyse

  • 1068g white flour (about 11.5% protein)
  • 668g Water

Main Dough

  • 57g water
  • 21g fine sea salt
  • 186g ripe levain

Instructions

  1. Levain (9:00 a.m.)
    In a small bowl mix the Levain ingredients. Cover the jar and keep it at a warm temperature for 5 hours.
  2. Autolyse (1:00 p.m)
    In a mixing bowl, add the Autolyse ingredients until no dry bits remain. Cover the bowl and let rest for 1-hour.
  3. Mix (2:00 p.m.)
    Add the salt and levain to the top of the dough in autolyse and use a splash of the remaining water to moisten. With wet hands, mix thoroughly. Add the remaining water if the dough feels like it can handle it. Knead the dough for a few minutes using either the slap and fold technique or folds in the bowl until the dough smooths and becomes elastic. Transfer the dough back into the bowl. Transfer the dough to a bulk fermentation container and cover.
  4. Warm Bulk Fermentation (2:15 p.m. to 4:45 p.m.)
    This dough will require 2 sets of stretches and folds during bulk fermentation at 30-minute intervals. After the second set, let the dough rest, covered, for the remainder of bulk fermentation.
  5. Cold Bulk Fermentation (4:45 p.m. to 9:00 a.m.)
    After the warm bulk fermentation, place the covered bulk fermentation container in the refrigerator overnight.
  6. Divide and Preshape (9:00 a.m., the next day)
    Gently scrape the dough from the bulk container to an un-floured work surface. Divide into 325g pieces and preshape the pieces of dough into rounds (my preference) or rough tubes. Because the dough is cold and firm, very little bench flour is needed to pre-shape. Let the preshaped dough rest for 35 minutes, uncovered.
  7. Shape (9:50 a.m.)
    Prepare a couche and dust it with flour. Shape each piece of dough into a baguette shape.
  8. Proof (10:15 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.)
    Proof the pieces until they pass the poke test, about 1 hour and 45 minutes at room temperature.
  9. Bake (12:00 p.m.)
    Preheat your oven to 450°F (230°C) for an hour with baking stone/steel inside. Divide the bake into two sessions if you only have one baking surface. Bake three baguettes first, and chill the rest in the fridge for the second session. Prepare a pizza peel with parchment paper matching the width of your baking surface. Grab and end of the couche and pull it out, moving the piece of dough away from the rest. Then, using a dough transfer board (a smaller pizza peel or a small cutting board could also work), place the board to the inside of the baguette (the side closest to the rest of the dough pieces). With the hand holding the couche, quickly flip the dough onto the peel by tugging up and slightly over the transfer board. The baguette should now be seam-side down on the transfer board. Repeat until you have three pieces on the peel. Score each baguette with three overlapping slashes. Transfer the dough onto the baking surface in the oven using the parchment paper. Next, steam the oven and bake for 20 minutes. Remove the steaming pans and bake for another 20-25 minutes until done. Cool on a rack. Repeat the process for the remaining baguettes in the fridge.

Sourdough Baguette Recipe FAQs

Why are these scaled to 325g?

This dough weight makes for baguettes that fit my home baking surface at 14-inches long. It makes for a fatter baguette in the end, but one that’s perfect for the home oven.

Why is scoring difficult with baguettes?

One (of the many) reasons I like to do a cold-proof with almost all my other doughs is because scoring is much easier. When the dough is warm, it’s easy for your blade to drag and get stuck. My best advice is to use a new, super-sharp blade and make your cuts as smooth and fast as possible. If you notice you didn’t cut through the skin of the dough sufficiently in the first pass, lightly drag the blade inside the cut to give it a little help.

Why do cold bulk fermentation with baguette dough?

Doing two-day fermentation is a great schedule for home bakers (and pro bakers, too!), so I do like to use the fridge; it brings a little more flavor. This means you’d either have to do cold bulk or cold proof in shape. Doing the latter gives these a slightly thicker crust since the dough will be exposed to cold temps when they’re in their final shape. Therefore, I opt for cold bulk fermentation to keep a thin crust (it’s also easy to shape cool dough!).

Sourdough Baguettes via @theperfectloaf

What’s Next?

This sourdough baguette recipe results in exquisite delicate baguettes. The brittle crust grounds the eating experience and gives added body to the otherwise tender bread. It’s through this contrast that the bread is elevated to the next level—a baguette with a soft, flimsy crust would be a sad baguette indeed.

I’ve said it before, and I’ll probably say it a million times more: fermentation is a mysterious and beautiful thing. I hope you try this recipe and you show up to your next gathering with an armful of exquisite and incredibly delicious pointy sticks.

To continue with the baguette theme, try your hand at my green olive filoncini, which are kind of like an Italian version of baguettes‚ but twisted!

Or, if you’re looking for a large, crusty loaf, my sunflower and sesame sourdough has loads of flavor and are a go-to recipe when you want to impress.

Buon appetito!

Picture of Maurizio Leo
Maurizio Leo
Maurizio Leo is the creator of the independent sourdough baking website The Perfect Loaf. His cookbook, The Perfect Loaf — The Craft and Science of Sourdough Breads, Sweets, and More, is a James Beard Award-winner and a New York Times bestseller. He lives in Albuquerque, NM, with his wife and two sons, where he's been baking sourdough for over a decade. He's been labeled "Bob Ross but for bread."

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455 Comments

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  1. If I want to use diastatic malt, what percentage will I use ? Will I have to take it in account in my ingredients ? I read in Tartine Bread, they make a poolish in addition to levain when baking baguettes. Do you have already tried it too? Thank you for all your explanations. I appologize for my english, I’m french speaking !
    PS : The flour I’m using contains no malt.

    I’ve baked baguettes today : not fine at all. the first recipe out of 3 that I try that fails. I’ve tried so sourdough baguettes recipes, I can’t count… Is the pre fermented flour is starter?

    1. If you want to use malt, I’d start low, perhaps 0.25% to total flour weight. I have not tried baguettes with a pooilsh because I don’t typically bake with commercial yeast—everything you see here is naturally leavened.

      The prefermented flour in this recipe is the levain.

      1. Thanks for your answer, Maurizio. I’ve tried the recipe with some adjustments (2 warm bulk fermentation in my oven with light on and door very lightly opened. My poolish is made with fresh yeast and not dehydrated one. By the end, the dough was incredible ! Like if it was alive when I manipulated it.).
        I think, I’ll bake your recipe once more without poolish but no cold bulk fermentation, so 2 warm, in the same way I did this week-end.
        I’ll give news if you want.
        I’ve made your sourdough waffles recipe once more, this time with organic coconut oil. Try it, waffles are also delicious although having a different taste.
        Thank you !

        1. The recipe is for a sourdough that reaches maturity in how long? Thank you and Happy New Year!

  2. Hi Maurizio,
    Tried this recipe,was it tasty? Yes! Was the crust crunchy? Oh yes! Did my house smell wonderful during baking? It sure did and we enjoyed some nice sandwiches with tuna salad !
    However, I was disappointed that I had zero oven spring, and the crumb was very dense. My guess is that it was over proofed, because when I transferred them to the baking tray they were very soft and lifeless, no spring back during the poke test… what do you think? Could it be the opposite? Mind you that I followed your recipe’s schedule, with same hydration but with a strong white flour (13.2%) only, and my kitchen is a little cooler, at 20-21degC I dunno if it could lead to underproofing. Any proposals for my next try?

    1. Hey, Nikos! You likely would have needed more time in the warm bulk fermentation step given the cool temperature of your kitchen (I’m assuming your dough temperature was similar). If you place the dough into the fridge without sufficient fermentation (which could happen with a lower dough temperature and if you followed the same times as in this post), your dough will struggle to reach full fermentation by the time you go to bake. Be sure to get the dough’s temperature to the “final dough temp” listed up in the recipe to help keep it on track!

  3. New to all of this, so may be a basic question, but- No yeast other than what is in the starter (and thus the levain later)? Most of the other recipes I was looking at include yeast, even with a starter.

  4. Thank you for another great recipe. 👌🏻
    Struggling for the first time though, as my baguettes always come out of the oven with the bottom all cracked up. I bake them on a parchment paper placed on a USAPAN preheated sheet…. I have tried to bake them with seam up and down, it doesn’t make any difference, they end up bursting from the bottom wile the scores on top do not expand at all.
    They still taste amazing and keep they shape, with a moderately open crumb…
    Any idea why this keep happening ?
    Would help me greatly. 🙏🏻

    1. Hmm, that’s interesting, Sophie! That could be from a few things. If you have excessive top heat in your oven (the pan might be high up near a top heating element?), not enough steam, under proofed dough, and/or the dough isn’t scored sufficiently deep. It could also be the pan you’re using, perhaps too much bottom heat coupled with insufficient steam? Those are a few ideas!

  5. What percent idy(roughly) could I use?(with still cold fermenting it.

    I just started a sourdough starter and would like to make these with idy just to get the hang of it.

    I built a temp controlled dough retarder so can hold it at any temp!

    Thanks

    1. I’m very inexperienced in using IDY, but my guess would be 1-2%? Nice move on the retarder, that’s what I’ve made here and it’s a wonderful thing to have! Keep me posted on how its going and have fun!

  6. Any adaptations for fresh milled flour? I’m trying the Kamut baguette with Hard White Wheat instead of Kamut (I don’t have Kamut,) but love this recipe so much I’d like to just use this one instead.

    1. You might expect the dough to need a bit more water and you’ll likely see an increase in activity in the dough—keep an eye on it in bulk and divide as necessary!

  7. Hi! Your shaping video link is broken.

    Can i leave these in the fridge any extra day? I planned to bake today but now prefer tomorrow?

    1. I’ve left these up to 5 days in the fridge… they were wonderful! Definitely more of a sourdough taste which we loved!

      So now I make a full recipe and shape/bake throughout the week :).

  8. Hi Maurizio, Any chance you can show pictures or a video of how you get the baguettes off the couche into the oven? I’ve tried this 3 times now with different levels of success but feel it shouldn’t be this difficult. I’m not in a hurry by any means and love following your posts.

  9. Any luck baking these baguettes in the Rofco? I’ve had a few attempts but struggling with timings and temp? Who doesn’t love a good baguette?

    Thanks for all your great info and baking tips!

    1. Yes, I’ve had great results in my Rofco as well. Generally baguettes benefit from a slightly hotter bake, so I really crank the heat on them. They bake quickly, too! I’ve still been dialing in the times and temps, I’ll try to update this post with findings.

  10. Hey Maurizio, love your recipes, but I’ve tried these a couple of times now and I’ve been struggeling with the interior ending up really dense. I thought this could be overproofing.

    As I live in Norway I don’t have access to the same flours, but I’ve found a few different ones I like. Using this recipe I used my main go-to white flour, however I didn’t really think of the protein content of the main portion 🤦‍♂️ So I ended up using only flours containing 13% and 14%.. I guess this might be the reason, perhaps in addition to overproofing?

    1. Anders — hard to say whether it’s over or under proofing! If you’re seeing bubbly and active dough after the bulk in the fridge, it might be going over. If so, try to put it into the fridge earlier and see if this helps.

  11. Hi Maurizio, I tried these but got little rise after cold bulk fermentation. My fridge is 37 and yours is 39, but can that make such a huge difference? Should I try warm bulk fermentation the next time? I have no problem with the beginner’s sourdough bread proofing in the fridge, but the bulk fermentation happened outside the fridge. I know my starter is okay, as the bread came out just fine. Can one try using more leaven? Thanks.

  12. What type of flour should I use for the couche? I use rice flour for my bannetons. Is that a good choice here? I’ve made a number of your loaves here (thank you!) but this will be my first attempt at baguettes.

      1. Thanks maurizio! I ended up using a combination of rice and bread flour. Proofed a little longer before refrigerating. My first baguettes were a success! Tagged you on insta. Thanks again 🙂

  13. I know you use a retarder. The fermentation time seems short considering the % of pre-fermented flour and, then using it young. I am wondering if you are retarding a little warmer than 38F.

    The crumb is absolutely gorgeous, it was surely fermented and shaped to perfection. Gorgeous bread!

    Danny

  14. I just wanted to know what temperature is your refrigerator at for the cold bulk fermentation, as that should help me to gauge how long it should be in mine. Mine is currently at 37F which seems to be a bit cooler than most fridges and could explain why it seems to not rise quite as much. Thanks!

  15. Hi Maurizio – amazing site! I’ve baked a few successful sourdough recipes but this one has left me scratching my head. As a reference I’ve successfully shaped and baked baguettes with non-sourdough recipes, but after trying twice on the above recipe I’m at a loss. The baguettes come out extremely flat, hold very little shape during proofing and the crumb is dense and very moist (not in a good way). For the first attempt I followed the instructions above exactly (time of day, cold bulk etc) the only variable was the type of flour I used which was T65 stone milled of French origin and containing 10% protein. After the additon of the levain and additonal water the dough was very wet but I proceeded. The levain activity and post cold bulk stage had very similar appearance to your reference images above. Shaping was ok, but I could feel they lacked some stiffness. At proofing they slowly collapsed and never recovered, I thought perhaps it was some variance in temperature (it was a warmer day) that had lead to overproofing, or that perhaps it was the lower protein content flour used and so I attempted the recipe again again. This time with especial caution. I went for a 50/50 mix of the T65 flour and a stronger bread flour with 12.5% protein content. I reduced the reserved water from 100g to 60g and ensured the levain was at peak; that there was clear activity after the stretch and folds before the cold bulk and closely watched the proofing baguettes (shaping went better this time) but to no avail – I had an almost carbon copy repeat of the first attempt. I’ve attached some pics of a baguette for you to see the result Baguette
    Crumb
    Cross Section
    I did notice the second time round that the dough continued to be very wet despiute the reductioins in additonal water and the stronger bread flour used. I have worked with wet doughs before and can slap and fold until they start to form structure and surface tension comes into play, but these really do seem to be wetter than even relatively high hydration mixes.

    My starter is fed on a dark rye and unbleached white flour 50/50 mix at a 1:2:2 ratio and rose as expected when creating the levain, passed the float test etc. Dough passed the window test before shaping so I don’t believe it’s a lack of gluten structure either. I proofed until the poke test seemed spot on forthe second attempt to avoid any overproofing concerns.

    Any help would be much appreciated.

    Thank you for the amazing reseource otherwise.

    1. Survivorist, I had the EXACT SAME result as the bread in your pictures, and I used all strong bread flour following the recipe in all the proportions. Did you find what was happening to your bread?

      Any tip would be appreciated.

      Maurizio, the website is amazing!

    2. @disqus_Z0Zdbz0Kta:disqus @survivorist, I had the exact same experience with my first attempt! I’m on my second now. I let the levain proof for an additional hour– it nearly tripled in volume and was clearly ready to go. After incorporating it into the final mix, I also let the dough warm bulk for twice as long; it wasn’t showing very many bubbles, but 2x warm bulk time seemed like a good test (it was 79 degrees the entire time). I’m sort of surprised the pre-fermented flour is only 4%. Could it be that the flour (I’m using KAF AP) makes *that* big a difference?? For what it’s worth, I make the Tartine BCB consistently well (so this isn’t my first attempt at sourdough or something).

  16. Hello, I have tried to make these twice now and I’m not sure what I am doing wrong. Hoping someone can give me some insight. Both times I ended up with what looks to be Fool’s Crumb – a few large holes, tunnels. Not the multiple, even, random holes that you should have. Does anyone have any thoughts??

    1. Sounds like under proofed dough, that’s usually the cause for large holes and dense spots. Be sure to let the dough far enough at room temp bulk before placing in the fridge!

  17. Hi Maurizio – Thank you for your wonderful site. I have learned so much! I’m wondering two things:
    1. Can I substitute whole wheat flour at 14% protein for the high protein bread flour at13%?
    2. If I adjust the hydration to 68% from 73% do I need to adjust anything else in the recipe?
    Thanks for taking the time for all us new bread bakers out there!

    1. Protein content doesn’t matter that much so the Whole Wheat will work just fine. Honestly, I wouldn’t adjust the hydration because whole wheat absorbs even more water that white. Adjusting the hydration to 68% will work, it will just lead to a slightly less airy crumb. Also, you dont need to change anything else if you do choose to adjust the hydration.

    2. If you add the whole grains then there’s no need to adjust hydration, it’ll likely even out. You’ll end up with a slightly more dense baguette with potentially some sourness, but whole wheat would be great!

      1. Thank you Maurizio. I appreciate your thoughts and time to answer my questions. Hopefully you are healthy and safe.

  18. Thank you for this recipe and all your recipes, they are perfect! If i wanted to use just one kind of flour (just AP flour, or just high protein bread flour) would this recipe still work? Thanks!

  19. Hi, I attempted this recipe twice, and both times resulted in more “flat” baguettes, but with an open crumb. I am using Organic Artisan Bakers Craft Plus for 100% of the flour, as I do not have anything else on hand. I am not quite sure what I am doing wrong. Perhaps they are not proofing long enough? I also have a problem with them sticking to the couche despite putting a lot of flour on before hand, which makes me think that perhaps since the dough is wetter from the fridge and cold temperatures, it can cause some sticking. I also have a gas powered oven, so perhaps this could be the cause, as getting moisture to stay in the oven, and not be vented out, is quite difficult. Do you have any thoughts? Any help would be amazing!!

    1. I’d say if you’re using all ABC try dropping the hydration 2-5% to compensate. Be sure to use your starter when very ripe to make the levain, then the levain very ripe when mixing into the dough. Also, you could try letting the dough go longer in bulk at room temp before fridge.

  20. In the Levain Mix table, the weights are all equal, but the Baker’s Percentages say 100, 50, 100. Am I reading it wrong?

  21. Hi I made this recipe yesterday, it’s the fourth time I’ve made it and I was so excited they came out perfect and they were the best baguettes I ever made.
    Thank you for posting it.

    1. @disqus_oarjCw94n7:disqus , do you follow the recipe exactly as written? I’ve tried twice now and both times the warm bulk produced verrrrrry little fermentation activity. I’m on the verge of just doubling or tripling the levain amount!

      1. Yes, I do my bulk fermentation in a proofing box at 78 degrees and mine definitely takes longer maybe four hours

  22. Hi, a number of your recipes call for “bread flour, malted”. I note this seems to be a thing in the USA. I’ve not come across it here in the UK though. Perhaps I’m looking in the wrong place, or for the wrong thing.

    Some of your recipes, ie pizza, say to use Diastatic Malt. This I have found but not yet used. Waiting for a pizza steel.

    I’m wondering if adding diastatic malt powder to normal bread flour would result in a similar outcome as malted bread flour?

    I’m very new to baking so please excuse me if this is a really stupid question.

    I’m really enjoying the depth and background you go into with your recipes. I feel like they are helping progress from a fairly dumb follower of recipes into someone that has more of an idea about what’s actually going on and what to look for during the process. I feel like the more I learn the more ignorant I am. I think that’s normal though. Just enjoying the journey for now.

    1. I’ve seen him replied in other posts something along the lines “sure, add 0,5% diastatic malt to the total flour weight”, to replace malted flour. I may be wrong and cannot find the original reply, but it’s a small amount and you could not go wrong with that. Diastatic malt only accelerates a bit the fermentation, because the enzymes in it break down carbohydrates into simpler sugars. In higher amounts it can make crumb gummy, so beware.

    2. Your flour might already have malt added, always check the “ingredients” list if there is one. But yes you could add malt if you want to bring a bit more color to the crust and help aid fermentation — I like to start at 0.5% and work up if necessary. Too much can result in a gummy interior and overly red crust, though, so be liberal.

  23. Hi Maurizio,

    I made this dough alongside a batch of your weekday sourdough. Using some new bread flour from a nearby mill made all the difference in the world and finally got my batard to hold shape. The baguettes on the other hand… well they’re in the oven now and it’s hard to look at them without laughing. Two problems I’m hoping you can shed some light on:
    1. Shaping was as challenging as expected, but now I’m thinking I approached it wrong. They had no surface tension coming out of the couche and were impossible to score. I’m wondering if the rolling action is supposed to create tension in a similar way to dragging a boule to tighten it up.
    2. Judging by the poke test, my loaves seemed overproofed just about an hour in to the room temp morning proof. I don’t think I left them in the fridge too long. Does that mean I took bulk fermentation too far?

    Thanks as always!

    1. 1. The rolling action isn’t so much to tighten, it’s the folding and sealing steps that provide that structure.
      2. Sounds like they might have gone over during the room temp proof portion. If they needed a tighter shape AND were slightly over proofed it would be hard to score. Next time a last-minute thing you can do is toss the couche with dough into the freezer or fridge for 10 minutes or so, just until they are cold to the touch. This cold skin will help them keep their shape a bit and make it easier to score.

  24. Hi there,
    First of all it is great website, loved it so much! I am beginner in sourdoughs but I love to bake, found this website very detailed and helpful! So far I made beginner bread and my sourdough babka is in the oven now, and I have tried this recipe for baguettes.
    For some reason my baguettes came out flat from the oven, I tried already second time and result is the same. Could you let me know why could it be?
    I read that maybe my oven not steamed enough but not sure if this is only one reason.
    Any suggestions?
    I also not sure about how thick the dough should be, because first time when I made it was thick enough, and second time was kind of on a runny side

    1. If you’re doing a cold bulk fermentation be sure the dough has fermented enough before you place it in the fridge. You want to see some rise to the dough and it should feel alive before you place it in the fridge.

  25. Hi there,

    I’ve been baking basic and sometimes flavoured sourdough boules and loaves for several months now, so thought I would take it to the next step and try a baguette! I’m reading through your recipe, and got stuck in the weights/baker’s percentages in the levain. I read through your beginner’s sourdough tutorial on the baker’s percentages, but I’m still confused as to why starter, flour, and water are all calling for 47g when their percentages are 100, 50, and 100% respectively.

    Thanks for any help you’re willing to give! I’m new to your site but love it so far!

    Best,
    Chrissy

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