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Recipes: 273 results
Chestnut cake
Chestnut cake
(Found inTextsIngredients)
This delightful cake is doubly chestnutty: it contains chestnut flour, and sweet chestnut purée.
321K5 1 hour 13 min. May 8th 2020
Brioche dough
Brioche dough
(Found inTextsStagesIngredients)
It's a soft and rich dough, with butter and eggs which give a smooth and incredibly tasty brioche. This is the basic recipe for brioche dough, used for all other brioche-based recipes on the site.
507K 44.2 14 hours 27 min. September 16th 2020
How to succeed in making sabayon (syllabub)
How to succeed in making sabayon (syllabub)
(Found inTextsStagesIngredientsComments)
A sabayon is a delicious and delicate preparation based on egg yolks and sugar, with a liquid added (wine, alcohol, fruit juice, etc), which is then whipped in a bain-marie until it is both light and smooth. Usually sabayon is sweet (syllabub), but you can make it savoury, in which case there is...
919K 54 18 min. November 12th 2017
Four quarters
Four quarters
(Found inTextsStagesIngredients)
It's "the simpliest cake in the world", called four quarters, because it's made with 1/4 eggs, 1/4 sugar, 1/4 flour and 1/4 butter.
308K3.7 1 hour 15 min. February 21th 2011
Natural leaven
Natural leaven
(Found inTextsStagesIngredientsComments)
Leaven is a natural raising agent, a fermented mixture of water, flour and the microscopic yeasts which are present in the air. It's a delicate living substance, sensitive to the external environment. The recipe is around 4000 years old and dates back to the Egypt of the Pharaohs, via a beautiful...
1.7M 304.0 7 days 15 min. April 3rd 2020
Sandwich bread
Sandwich bread
(Found inTextsIngredients)
Soft and moist, almost like brioche, it can be made in a tin or mould or as a classic long French-style loaf.
340K3.9 3 hours 26 min. October 24th 2017
Surprise bread
Surprise bread
(Found inTextsComments)
This recipe is for a large surprise bread so you can make six layers (48 small sandwiches if you divide each layer in 8), with three different flavours: smoked salmon/lime, smoked ham/butter, mayonnaise/chicken.
687K 84.5 6 hours 24 min. December 27th 2020
Leavened bread
Leavened bread
(Found inTextsStagesIngredientsComments)
It might be harder to achieve good results than with traditional yeast bread, but what a flavour! It also keeps better. This recipe is designed for baking bread in a wood-fired oven but, of course, you can use the conventional oven in your kitchen.
1.2M 23.8 6 hours 26 min. May 23th 2017
French baguettes
French baguettes
(Found inTextsStagesIngredientsComments)
This classic of French baking is rather different from the recipe for leavened bread, it's a question of making a good crust and light crumb along the whole length. To succeed, you should know that there are two secrets: water first of all (much more than for normal bread), and the working of the...
1.1M 364.7 5 hours 6 min. October 24th 2017
How to dust
How to dust
(Found inTexts)
"Dusting" in cooking is sprinkling a very fine layer of something in powder form. Icing sugar or cocoa powder on cakes for example. As this is not very easy to do evenly, here is a way to do it.
143K5 2 min. October 13th 2010
Big knife-cut chips (French fries)
Big knife-cut chips (French fries)
(Found inTexts)
These chips (French fries) are made from potatoes steamed then fried in their skins. Usually we make big ones (3 times the usual French fry) and serve 2 or 3 per guest.
265K4.1 1 hour 19 min. February 21th 2011
Bechamel sauce
Bechamel sauce
(Found inTextsIngredients)
Bechamel sauce is a classic, made from a cooked butter-flour mix called "roux", where milk is added and slowly cooked. We get a thick sauce, used in many recipes.
411K4.3 18 min. February 21th 2011
Prune Far
Prune Far
(Found inTextsIngredients)
Far is a traditional recipe from Brittany in northwest France. The name comes from the Breton word 'farz' meaning flour. This is the traditional way, with prunes, but you can adapt it according to taste.
225K 15 1 hour 10 min. October 3rd 2010
Pears in red wine with blackcurrant
Pears in red wine with blackcurrant
(Found inTexts)
Pears cooked until soft in a red wine and blackcurrant syrup, served with the reduced syrup and custard sauce (crème anglaise).
233K4.1 2 hours 35 min. February 21th 2011
Boeuf (beef) bourguignon
Boeuf (beef) bourguignon
(Found inTextsIngredients)
Bœuf bourguignon is a traditional recipe of French cuisine (bourguignon means from Burgundy). It's chunks of meat cooked slowly with bacon, onions, carrots and mushrooms in red wine.
459K 32.5 4 hours 20 min. February 21th 2011
Oat shortbread biscuits
Oat shortbread biscuits
(Found inTextsStagesIngredientsComments)
Little biscuits with home-made oat flour (made from rolled oat flakes).
267K 15 2 hours 41 min. February 21th 2011
Cornmeal baps for Anne
Cornmeal baps for Anne
(Found inTextsIngredients)
These small round baps are made with a mix of wheat flour and fine cornmeal. The dominant corn gives a moist and very yellow crumb.
250K4.3 5 hours 53 min. October 24th 2017
Spinach fritters
Spinach fritters
(Found inTextsIngredients)
This Indian inspired recipe gives a delicious contrast betwen the hot crispy fritters and the cool, slightly sharp herb dressing.
221K4 2 hours 6 min. May 20th 2015
Eggs meurette
Eggs meurette
(Found inTextsIngredients)
Eggs meurette or "œufs à la bourguignonne" is a great classic of French cooking, and of Burgundy in particular. It consists of poached eggs on a bed of fondue onions and bacon, served on a slice of fried bread. This is topped with a tasty reduced red wine sauce.
190K 14.1 1 hour 11 min. March 29th 2020
Rabbit with mustard
Rabbit with mustard
(Found inTexts)
This recipe uses boned rabbit. This is sautéed in mustard then cooked in the oven. It is served with broad beans, bacon and mushrooms, and a sauce made with reduced white wine.
178K4.9 2 hours 9 min. May 15th 2011
Pages: 12 results
Flours
Flours
At the most basic level, wheat grain is put through a mill, which produces a white-ish powder flour... Well, actually it's not quite that simple. First of all we need to distinguish between the different grains that can be made into flour: wheat of course, but also rye, barley, buckwheat, etc. So we...
720K 413.6 August 29th 2023
Website technical evolution
Website technical evolution
Site updates, list of new additions by date .
199K3.8 August 29th 2023
Making your own bread
Making your own bread
In praise of home-made bread, so much better.
562K 63.9 August 29th 2023
The recipes
The recipes
Hints for using the recipes: how to read and recreate them.
164K3.6 August 29th 2023
Some hints for a pizza-party
Some hints for a pizza-party
Some hints for a successful pizza party.
185K3.7 August 29th 2023
Information on weights and measures in the kitchen
Information on weights and measures in the kitchen
Weights, measures and volumes in a recipe.
818K3.7 December 10th 2023
My best addresses...
My best addresses...
My good addresses, favourite suppliers, ingredients, products and equipment.
295K4.0 August 29th 2023
Start off well to cook well
Start off well to cook well
How to get off to a good start in cooking; what equipment and basic ingredients you should always have to hand.
302K 13.6 August 29th 2023
Basic temperature in bread-making
Basic temperature in bread-making
Basic temperature in bread-making.
224K3.7 August 29th 2023
Soured dough
Soured dough
Underneath this strange name lies a baking secret: when you want to give a bread or pastry dough (without leaven, but with yeast) a certain percentage of fermented dough must be added, i.e. the same dough made the day before, and left to ferment overnight in the refrigerator.
143K 24.1 February 23th 2024
The amateur baker
The amateur baker
You may have noticed over the pages of this site, I am passionate about everything that is related to the bakery: I love making bread, pastries, maintain my leaven, etc.. This page contains links to all the different parts of the site where we talk about bread: recipes, special pages, etc.
162K 44.1 August 29th 2023
Calculator for water temperature in bread-making
Calculator for water temperature in bread-making
The temperature of the water, known as "process water" ("eau de coulage" in French), in a bakery recipe is very important, here is a small calculator allowing you to determine it quickly and simply.
73K4.4 August 29th 2023
Blog articles: 24 results
Devising a recipe
Devising a recipe
A question I'm often asked is: how do you come up with your recipes? How do you perfect them? This is something I've already mentioned on this page, but I'll take this opportunity to go into a bit more detail.
13K4.4 October 15th 2012
Different kinds of pastry and dough
Different kinds of pastry and dough
When cooking in general, and particularly in baking, we can make and use many different kinds of pastry and dough. All built on the same "base": flour - a powder to which we add fat, liquid or both to produce the dough which is then cooked. .
104K 14.0 November 6th 2012
Raising (or leavening) agents
Raising (or leavening) agents
When we want to make a dough or batter rise when baking, either in patisserie or bread-making, we need to use a raising agent or leavening agent, one of which is called leaven. In the context of baking, a raising agent is simply what "makes something rise". It is a substance which, when added to...
51K4.8 June 16th 2021
The window-pane test in bread-making
The window-pane test in bread-making
The home bread-makers often ask themselves “Have I kneaded my dough long enough?” . A good question, as dough that is insufficiently kneaded will not rise properly or will fall flat when the top is slashed, which is very frustrating. To know when the dough is ready, one can rely on the length...
86K 23.9 June 16th 2021
What is the difference between bakery and patisserie?
What is the difference between bakery and patisserie?
This is a question that you may well have asked yourself and which I will attempt to answer. In France the two trades of "boulangerie" (bakery) and "pâtisserie" (patisserie and confectionery) have always been quite distinct, but where exactly do the boundaries lie? .
119K 14.1 February 7th 2017
The right way to use a blender
The right way to use a blender
You may well have a blender in your own kitchen. You know, that useful gadget that allows you to liquidize stuff at high speed into a smooth liquid. Of course, the most obvious use that comes to mind is for soups: if you have boiled some vegetables in water, with just a quick blast of the blender,...
19K5 May 31th 2017
A few tips for effective kneading at home
A few tips for effective kneading at home
When you have to knead dough for bread or some other recipe, you may well use a food processor or the type of machine known as a stand mixer. The best-known brands are Kenwood and KitchenAid. They are useful tools, but here are a few tips to help you get the best out of them.
266K 23.7 June 23th 2021
The golden-brown finish on puff pastry
The golden-brown finish on puff pastry
Let's take a look at the tricky matter of producing puff pastry with an attractive, golden-brown finish. French pastry chefs call this "dorure" (literally, "gilding"). Behind this quirky term there lurks a real problem (and the solution): when using puff pastry (pâte feuilletée) for a pie, or...
39K 24.7 February 8th 2018
Egg yolks and caster sugar
Egg yolks and caster sugar
We often come across recipes where we need to mix egg yolks with caster sugar. This would appear to be a very ordinary and simple thing to do but, be warned, these two ingredients can behave oddly together.
71K 24.4 February 15th 2018
85 grams of eggs?
85 grams of eggs?
Some time ago, I already spoke to you about the difference between baking and pastry-making, I emphasized, among other things, the precision of pastry-making which requires grams, cm, degrees and minutes. That's why, on the one hand, you have baking and cooking, where a certain tolerance is...
46K4.6 November 26th 2018
The first breads of humanity?
The first breads of humanity?
I have already told you in a previous article the beautiful story of the croissants, but do you know what it is about the bread, who "invented" it, where and when? Well, you can imagine that recent discoveries, in 2018, have profoundly changed the history of bread.
8,9755 February 16th 2019
Salt and yeast
Salt and yeast
Let's take a look at an old baker's legend: You may have already read that somewhere in a recipe that uses baker's yeast(bread, pastries, leavened doughs in general) it is often specified "Don't put salt in contact with the yeast, you'll kill it (the yeast)"! Well, that's a belief, and there are...
68K4.3 March 15th 2019
The cake and the raisins
The cake and the raisins
When you bake a cake, like a cake or pound cake, you may have already encountered this thorny problem: How to make sure that the raisins, or the candied fruits, or any other small filling, do not fall to the bottom of the pan during the baking process?
10K4.7 May 31th 2019
Baking cakes
Baking cakes
Where we see that to put a cake in the oven, once the dough is finished and in its mould, there is no hurry and that the cold is your friend.
38K4.1 June 28th 2019
The French baguette and UNESCO
The French baguette and UNESCO
As you may have already read here or there, France has initiated for some time the procedure to try to have the French baguette classified as an intangible world heritage by UNESCO. When you put it like that, it sounds a bit namby-pamby, and it would be tempting to imagine an American (for...
10K4.9 March 18th 2020
Baking a cake at the right time
Baking a cake at the right time
When you make a cake, which most likely contains butter, a cake for example, chances are that as soon as the batter is finished, you put it in the pan and bake it immediately. Classic, everyone does it like that, and then if, on top of that, you have a few kids around you who are getting...
15K4.5 April 18th 2020
Let's go easy on the salt
Let's go easy on the salt
In terms of cooking, I'm probably not teaching you much, salt is ubiquitous, we put it in almost all our dishes, in varying amounts depending on our taste, some like salty, others less, others still not. Its main role is the flavor, the taste, we say that it is a flavor enhancer, ie it reveals the...
4,4624.8 February 20th 2021
What happens to the bread when you make it?
What happens to the bread when you make it?
This bread that we eat every day, and that our baker makes for us, what happens during its manufacture so that it becomes bread? I will try to answer this question, and to summarize the complex alchemy that takes place.
8,6184.9 May 28th 2021
 The super powers of cornstarch
The super powers of cornstarch
I start this new year by evoking an old product, that you most probably have in your cupboards, a white powder, often in a small cardboard package with a slightly outdated look, only the "gluten free" is relatively recent, it is simply cornstarch, hence its name of maïzena. It's used for a lot...
8,205 January 14th 2022
The color of the bread crumb
The color of the bread crumb
When you go to buy bread, at your baker's, at the time of the choice, if you hesitate of course, you will undoubtedly be very sensitive to the color of the crust, and you will be right. The color of the crust, from golden, to sometimes very dark, deep brown almost black, depending on the maturity...
12K4.6 April 30th 2022
Lexicon: 2 results
Flour
Flour
(Found inTexts)
Dusting, dredging or sprinkling, usually with flour.
727K
Poolish
Poolish
(Found inTexts)
Poolish is a fermented batter, generally a mixture of water, flour and yeast which acts as the leaven for certain kinds of bread dough.There are distinct bread types, depending on the rising agent: yeast-raised bread, poolish bread, and leavened bread.Although it doesn't have the full flavour of a...
727K
Utensil: 9 results
Strainer
Strainer
(Found inTexts)
Circular in shape and available in different gauges (size of holes). Very useful for straining something liquid or sieving a powder, like for example a raspberries coulis to extract all the seeds, or for sieving flour.
727K
Brush
Brush
(Found inTexts)
For coating or glazing with a liquid, water or beaten egg-yolk for example, or for gently removing excess flour or sugar.
727K 1
Short-handled brush
Short-handled brush
(Found inTexts)
This is a small hand brush with very fine bristles, used for gently brushing the dough during bread making, to remove excess flour. Very useful, indispensable even, for bread recipes where the soft dough has a high water content, like French baguettes.
727K
Cake and pastry moulds
Cake and pastry moulds
(Found inTexts)
For cooking all your cakes. Available in various shapes and sizes for tarts, cakes, madeleines, financiers, etc.
727K
Bannetons (bread rising baskets)
Bannetons (bread rising baskets)
(Found inTexts)
Once dough is kneaded and worked, it needs to be left to rise in a warm place before baking. Turning the risen uncooked dough onto the peel for transfering to the oven can be a tricky moment, especially if the dough has stuck to the container. To avoid this, bread is traditionally left for its final...
727K
Dredger or shaker
Dredger or shaker
(Found inTexts)
For whenever you need to flour your work surface or sprinkle flour onto dough, pastry, etc.It also allows you to add a little flour to a recipe, without having to use a sieve.
727K
Brush
Brush
(Found inTexts)
For brushing the bottom of loaves, straight from the oven, to remove excess flour and any remaining bits of charcoal.
727K
Short-handled brush
Short-handled brush
(Found inTexts)
This is a soft brush, used to brush dough gently during working to remove all excess flour. It's essential for working soft very hydrated dough like for French baguettes.
727K
Baking sheet
Baking sheet
(Found inTexts)
This is a metal sheet or tray, covered with a non-stick coating, similar to the lining of an oven. It can be used for cooking a wide range of things, but mainly small items to be cooked together such as rock cakes or profiteroles. .
727K
Ingredient, product: 5 results
flour
flour
(Found inTexts)

727K 1
filo pastry
filo pastry
(Found inTexts)
Filo pastry (or phyllo - fillo) is a flour-based product from Greece or Turkey. The very thin sheets are often used to wrap fillings and produce a very crisp roll or parcel.Filo pastry is used for some famous Middle Eastern sweet pastries like baklava.
727K
chestnut flour
chestnut flour
(Found inTexts)
Made from dried chestnuts, this is a light brown flour without gluten. Not suitable for making bread (unless mixed with a proportion of wheat flour), but it's excellent for cakes, biscuits, pancakes,...
727K
Cornflour
Cornflour
(Found inTexts)
Cornflour is a starchy flour made from maize. It is mostly used as a thickening agent: when mixed with a liquid and heated, it thickens rapidly without altering the flavour. .
727K
ground almonds
ground almonds
(Found inTexts)
Grounded almonds, or sometimes flour almonds, are almonds very finely milled.
727K 3


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