User
Write something
Pinned
Yeasted vs Poolish vs Sourdough Baguettes. Which One Should You Bake?
There are three ways to make a baguette at home. Yeasted, poolish, and sourdough. They all end up looking like the same loaf, but the journeys are completely different. In this video I walk you through all three. Who each one is for, when it makes sense to pick which path, and the three things that matter more than the recipe itself. If you've ever stood in your kitchen wondering which baguette you should actually start with, this is the breakdown you've been looking for. Pick yours for this weekend's bake-along: 🥖 No starter? Start here. https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/french-bread-baguette?utm_source=skool&utm_medium=community&utm_campaign=recipe-share 🥖 Want bakery flavor without managing a starter? https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/classic-poolish-baguette?utm_source=skool&utm_medium=community&utm_campaign=recipe-share 🥖 Active starter ready to go? https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/sourdough-baguettes?utm_source=skool&utm_medium=community&utm_campaign=recipe-share We've been climbing this staircase for three weeks. Couche on the ciabatta. Poolish on the ciabatta. Now scoring and the roll-out shape on the baguettes. Nothing wasted. Watch the video. Pick your path. Drop questions before you bake. Easier to fix dough than crust. Perfection is not required. Progress is. Come bake with us. — Henry ⭐🔥
Pinned
This Weekend We're Baking Baguettes (Building on What We Just Learned)
This weekend we're going to baguettes. And there's a reason we're getting to them now. Look at what we've done the past two weeks. We learned the couche on ciabatta. We built a poolish for that same ciabatta and watched what an overnight pre-ferment does to flavor and extensibility. Both of those skills carry straight over to baguettes. We're not learning new things this weekend. We're putting the same tools to work in a new shape. That's the method. Each bake builds on the last one. Nothing wasted. Three recipes in the Recipe Pantry. Pick the one that matches where you are. 🥖 New to baguettes? Start here. Classic French Bread Baguette — four ingredients, overnight cold ferment, 72% hydration. Two loaves, cleanest entry point in the pantry. No pre-ferment, no starter. Just dough, time, and shape. https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/french-bread-baguette?utm_source=skool&utm_medium=community&utm_campaign=recipe-share 🥖 Liked the poolish ciabatta? Run it back. Classic Poolish Baguette — same poolish you just built, in a new shape. 12 to 16 hour pre-ferment, 75% hydration, three baguettes. If you nailed the ciabatta, you already know how this dough is going to feel. https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/classic-poolish-baguette?utm_source=skool&utm_medium=community&utm_campaign=recipe-share 🥖 Sourdough bakers, this one's yours. Sourdough Baguettes — overnight levain, 75% hydration, three baguettes at 265g. Same shaping rhythm we practiced on the ciabatta couche. https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/sourdough-baguettes?utm_source=skool&utm_medium=community&utm_campaign=recipe-share
This Weekend We're Baking Baguettes (Building on What We Just Learned)
📌 New in the Recipe Pantry: Fresh-Milled Einkorn Sourdough
This one started with a question. A member asked if I had a recipe for whole, fresh-milled einkorn, the kind you get from a local organic farmer, not the sifted commercial stuff. She'd tried baking with it and ended up with a dense loaf that dried out by day three. She wasn't doing anything wrong. Einkorn just doesn't behave like modern wheat. So I built one. Fresh-Milled Einkorn Sourdough is now live in the Recipe Pantry, and it's designed for the grain as it actually arrives in real kitchens. Whole. Fresh-milled. Full of bran, germ, and flavor. What's in it: - A 100% einkorn levain that adapts your starter to the grain before you bake - Optional 70/30 einkorn-spelt blend for better structure and shelf life - The traditional dough conditioner system (vitamin C and lecithin) that old Amish recipes have used for generations, with the science explained - Gentle handling, short bulk, and cooler bake temps because einkorn is fragile and browns fast - An overnight cold retard for flavor depth This is one of the oldest grains humans ever domesticated. It rewards bakers who learn its rules. Eat it day one, toast it day two, freeze the rest. If you've been curious about ancient grains, this is your way in. Recipe link: https://pantry.bakinggreatbread.com/recipes/fresh-milled-einkorn-sourdough A yeasted version is coming for anyone who wants the same flavor on a same-day schedule. Drop a comment if you bake it. I want to see how it turns out. Henry ⭐🔥
📌 New in the Recipe Pantry: Fresh-Milled Einkorn Sourdough
Live on Thursday 5/7/2026
Come join the chat at Counter Culture with Dave & Henry! We'll raise a glass to you if you do 🥃
0
0
1-30 of 1,465
powered by
Crust & Crumb Academy
skool.com/crust-crumb-academy-7621
#1 Rated Bread Community on Skool
Coaching, not judgment. Sourdough, yeasted, enriched & every bread in between.
✔ ProveWorth Certified ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Build your own community
Bring people together around your passion and get paid.
Powered by