Vietnamese baguettes or more specifically the baguette
was introduced by the French during its colonial period. Bánh mì is a
Vietnamese term for all kinds of bread. The bread most commonly found in
Vietnam is a single serving baguette, therefore the term Bánh mì is synonymous
with this type of bread. The bread has thin crust and soft airy crumb. It is
used to make the famous Vietnamese Sandwiches. (Source- Wikipedia)
I was very keen to bake Vietnamese
Baguettes. The spindle shaped baguettes with thin crust and soft airy crumb
beckoned me to try out my own batch.
We loved the chewy baguettes with soft
crumb.
Bánh mì – Vietnamese Baguettes
Recipe adapted from Danangcuisine and
Vietworldkitchen
Ingredients
2 cups all-purpose flour
180 ml warm water
1 ½ teaspoon instant dry yeast
1 ½ teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon sugar
Method
Sponge
In a large bowl take 180 ml warm water. Add sugar and
yeast. Add 1 cup all- purpose flour. Mix well. Cover the bowl and keep in a
warm area for 3 hours.
Add remaining 1 cup flour and salt to sponge and stir well.
Remove the dough from the bowl to the floured counter and knead by stretching
and folding method (stretch the dough with the heel of the hands and fold it
back with the fingers without tearing it). This helps gluten to develop. Knead
for 8 to 10 minutes till dough becomes smooth, supple and elastic.
Make a boule (ball) and place it in a large bowl.
Cover and keep in a warm place to rise for 1 to 1 ½ hours or until double in
size.
Remove the dough carefully from the bowl without
deflating it completely, into the counter. Cut the dough into three equal
pieces. Form each piece into boule. Cover and let the balls rest for 10
minutes.
Gently flatten each boule, slap it gently into the
counter three times. Flatten it again to get a rectangular shape. Roll it
lengthwise and pinch the edges together. Place both hands on the rolled dough,
roll it back and forth on the counter, applying more pressure on baby fingers
than on your thumbs to shape it into a spindle shape roll – Banh mi. (watch the
video here….its helpful)
Place the shaped roll on a piece of parchment paper
and cover with a kitchen towel. Let it rest for 1 hour or until double in size.
Preheat the oven and the baking tray at 230 degrees C.
Place a bowl of hot water at the bottom of the oven.
Slash the baguette with a sharp knife or a fresh razor
blade. Keep the blade at 45 degree angle and make quick slash across the
baguette. Bake immediately after slashing.
Remove the preheated tray, lift the parchment paper
with the baguettes and transfer onto the tray. Spray water on the baguettes.
Bake for 20 to 25 minutes. After the first 8 minutes,
spray some more water on the baguettes. Keep rotating the parchment sheet so
that the baguettes turn golden evenly. Turn off the heat and let the baguettes
remain in the baking tray for 5 minutes. Remove from the oven. You can hear the
crackling sound from the baguettes.
Let the baguettes cool before serving.
Submitted for Yeastspotting
It's my birthday in a few weeks and Steve asked me what I wanted for my birthday tea. I love fresh rolls loaded with marinated veggies and so he said that he would make me some bread. Guess which recipe I am going to share with him :) Cheers for the most timely share Namita :)
ReplyDeleteLooks perfectly shaped and baked dear... ur a bread perfectionist.
ReplyDeleteCan you upload some photos of kneading and placing the kneaded dough into the container... The breads I bake are of a weird shape..
ReplyDeleteHello Chaitra, I shall do that next time. When you keep the dough for bulk fermentation (first rise), you do it in a container. Dough rises taking shape of the container. I would also suggest that you watch the video in the links given for this bread. It might help you. Happy Baking!
DeleteI thought the bread for bahn mi was made with rice flour as well, to make it shattery and crisp...
ReplyDelete😊
Delete