How to make a good "1930s Baguette" I Taught by Bread industry legend Toshio Nihei.

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  • Опубліковано 1 жов 2024
  • For more information on Toshio Nihei's bread making techniques, please click here.
    Donq: The Road to Bon Pain with Toshio Nihei
    asahiya-jp.com...
    【Toshio Nihei】
    Toshio Nihei was born in Kanagawa Prefecture in 1947 and joined Donq Co. Since his training in France in 1983, he has been active in internal and external seminars, and has made efforts to teach and support young Japanese bakers who go to global competitions.
    He was in charge of the bread for the dinner at the G7 Climate and Energy Environment Ministerial Meeting held in Sapporo in April 2023. He is called a legend by bakers in the bread industry for his overwhelming technical skills and wealth of knowledge.
    【Raymond Calvel】
    Professor at the French National School of Flour Milling (ENSMIC), born in Tarn, France.
    In 1954, he stayed in Japan for three months and held international baking workshops at 17 venues across the country, introducing authentic French bread to Japan. At that time, Donq's president Yukio Fujii began exchanges with Raymond Calvel. Donq has been learning orthodox French bread from Professor Carvel and spreading it in Japan since then.
    【Baguette in the 1930s】
    Mr. Nihei adopted the method of making baguettes with a fermentation time of 5 hours and 30 minutes, which was described with pictures in "Traité de Panification" (by EMILE DUFOUR) published in 1935, and introduced it to Japan as "1930s Baguette".
    【Process】
    Mixing
    1.
    Spiral mixer (with flour, malt, water, and salt) low speed for 2 minutes
    2.
    Autolysis (from 30 minutes to overnight, as needed.
    (If autolysis is longer than 1 hour, add salt before autolysis)
    3. 
    After autolysis, sprinkle in semi-dry yeast and let rise at low speed for 4 to 5 minutes.
    Kneading temperature
    21℃ (21℃ is too low for a baguette fermented for 3 hours, but this dough is allowed to rise overnight, so this temperature is fine.)
    ・Fermentation time
    The dough should be fermented for 5 hours and 30 minutes, but such duration does not conform well with the contemporary work and life culture, so the fermentation room temperature is lowered a little (15°C) and the dough is left to ferment for 12 hours instead. After that, the baguette is left to ferment at room temperature (27°C) until the optimum fermentation state is reached.
    ・Splitting
    If you think of the baguettes of the 1930s, it would be interesting to bake a baguette with a product weight of 300 g. In this case, the dough weight would be 430 g.
    ・Bench time:20 minutes
    ・Forming:baguette
    ・Heating:50 min.
    Bake at 240℃ on the upper heat and 230℃ on the lower heat until solid and crisp sound is heard when the bottom of the loaf is tapped with a finger.
    【Additional explanation by Mr. Nihei】
    About Autolysis
    This method was announced by Professor Raymond Calvel in 1974. (it also prevents the dough from oxidizing), and it also improves the dough's extensibility.
    However, it also reduces the mixing time a little (less oxidization) and improves the dough's elasticity.
    ・The birth of "Retrodor"
    Gérard Meunier was the man behind the creation of Retrodor, the flour used by the flour mill company Viron to make traditional French bread.
    In the spring of 1983, Gérard Meunier bought the business rights to an old bakery on rue d'Orc in the 19th arrondissement of Paris and opened his own store, which originally baked baguettes with a three-hour fermentation. However, at that time, most bakery baked baguettes using the no-time method (fermentation time was close to zero).
    This was because the price of baguettes was fixed by the official price, and most bakeries did not have to be particular about the quality of their baguettes, and the short time method was the norm. Therefore, vitamin C was added to the flour in advance as an oxidizing agent.
    When he made long-fermentation bread with such flour, the oxidant interfered with the dough and prevented it from stretching, which was a challenge for Mr. Meunier, but at the time, flour with no added improver was rarely available on the market.
    He met Philippe Viron, the previous president of Viron, and asked him for a flour with no oxidizers or improvers.
    When Philippe Viron tasted a baguette baked with the first test flour, he wrote in his book "Vive la Baguette": "It was just perfect!
    Mr. Vilon had his technicians train in Mr. Meunier's kitchen and launched "Retrodor," a flour that he was obliged to make based on the methods he had learned.
    From there, Mr. Vilon further lobbied politicians and contributed to the "Decree of Bread" of 1993.
    Courtesy of the venue (Special Thanks):
    Boulangerie L'ESSENTIEL
    ------------------------
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 35

  • @calynnping
    @calynnping Рік тому +13

    Baguette is definitely one of the most difficult bread to master. Gotta get that crust, that shine, that oven spring, that crumb, that flavour and texture. And it is only made with flour, water, salt and yeast. Incredible hand technique, observation and much understanding on dough knowledge are required. Practice makes perfect! So much respect to all these bakers. Thank you for documenting this episode❤️

  • @ydhb6169
    @ydhb6169 Рік тому +7

    This is probably the most informative video on youtube. Thank you so much.

  • @tangohotellima1895
    @tangohotellima1895 Рік тому +7

    😍🙏🏻Thank you - especially for the valuable baguette shaping details.

  • @miasolala8415
    @miasolala8415 Рік тому +6

    thank you, this is precious. love his calm energy and patience.

  • @patrickkish6662
    @patrickkish6662 Рік тому +4

    Respect the past. Engage the present. And reach for the future 🙏🏼

  • @oscarmartinezrios5194
    @oscarmartinezrios5194 Рік тому +3

    Buen amasado, buen fermento excelente elaboración,, muy buen horneado, muy crujientes y muy buena miga 🥖🍞🥖🥨✨🏆🥇✨

  • @tomokomimishimada6622
    @tomokomimishimada6622 Рік тому +3

    凄く勉強になります。

  • @zachariusziegler
    @zachariusziegler 27 днів тому +1

    Is there a version without the captions?

  • @1misago
    @1misago Рік тому +2

    It was a pleasure to see another masterclass from Nihei-san. As a home-baker, itʻs also useful. One observation though - sticking oneʻs arm into a rotating mixer bowl seems unwise!

  • @mami7017
    @mami7017 Рік тому +3

    待っていました!仁瓶先生!

  • @bakadudinakhinja
    @bakadudinakhinja Рік тому +1

    Srbija Beograd lajk od baka Dudine kuhinje ❤️ i meni lajk ❤️ bravo ❤️

  • @YaoiMastah
    @YaoiMastah Рік тому +1

    Finally, a more scientific approach to making baguette. When I hear French or Moroccan bakers go about Baguette, they always do things like tearing it, to listen to the cracks or push their noses in to smell the inside.

  • @edwardkim1349
    @edwardkim1349 Рік тому +2

    thank you Reiya Watanabe

  • @PaulPerotti
    @PaulPerotti 2 місяці тому +1

    Arigato Sensei

  • @joaopedroalmeidadasilva9285
    @joaopedroalmeidadasilva9285 Рік тому +1

    Thank you very much for sharing! Cheers from Brazil

  • @fullertonepickups2049
    @fullertonepickups2049 Рік тому +1

    excelente !! obrigado pelos ensinamentos

  • @佐藤博紀-g9i
    @佐藤博紀-g9i 4 місяці тому +1

    RIP二瓶さん。
    尊敬しています。ありがとうございました。

    • @reiyawatanabe
      @reiyawatanabe  4 місяці тому

      コメントありがとうございます。

  • @Emma-my5hc
    @Emma-my5hc 7 місяців тому +1

    😍🙏❤️❤️❤️❤️🇺🇦🇯🇵

  • @jabberbinablan7808
    @jabberbinablan7808 2 місяці тому +1

    i have just discovered your channel it isbso informative, you have put lots of effort into it,
    I wish you all the success

    • @reiyawatanabe
      @reiyawatanabe  2 місяці тому

      Thanks so much!!

    • @jabberbinablan7808
      @jabberbinablan7808 2 місяці тому

      I made the baguette based in the video with my own recipe worked it out and was great

  • @thienkhuu7895
    @thienkhuu7895 7 місяців тому +1

    I want to buy this book but I'm in Vietnam, where can I buy it ?

    • @reiyawatanabe
      @reiyawatanabe  5 місяців тому

      please ask this publisher
      asahiya-jp.com/book/9784751112014/

  • @sallyhu5028
    @sallyhu5028 6 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for sharing this video. It is clear we are in the presence of a master. His deep knowledge and passion are something to behold.
    Is there a recipe for home bakers? Or at least, how much malt (% )should be used?

    • @reiyawatanabe
      @reiyawatanabe  5 місяців тому

      this is the book you wrote. but only in Japanese..amazon.co.jp/-/en/%E4%BB%81%E7%93%B6-%E5%88%A9%E5%A4%AB/dp/4751112015

  • @nabijan4413
    @nabijan4413 Місяць тому +1

    굉장히 도움이 많이 되는 영상입니다. 고맙습니다. 감사합니다

    • @reiyawatanabe
      @reiyawatanabe  Місяць тому

      시청해 주셔서 감사합니다. 앞으로도 열심히 하겠습니다.

  • @ericnogara2802
    @ericnogara2802 Рік тому

    sasuga da na. jiji.

  • @cristianbollert902
    @cristianbollert902 4 місяці тому +1

    La traducción?

  • @trijezdci4588
    @trijezdci4588 Рік тому

    It is a common misconception that autolyse means dough rest without leaven. This is false. Prof. Calvel who invented and named the technique has always maintained that autolyse is dough rest WITHOUT SALT, but WITH leaven. Just about everybody gets this wrong.

    • @dogenzo3684
      @dogenzo3684 Місяць тому

      Minor corrections: his name was Calvel and autolyse is just flour mixed with water.

    • @trijezdci4588
      @trijezdci4588 Місяць тому

      @@dogenzo3684 Sorry for the typo, but if you read Calvel's book you will find that you are wrong. Autolyse is WITHOUT SALT, all else in.