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Bread Alone [Hardcover]

Daniel Leader , Judith Blahnik , Patricia Wells
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
RRP: £16.99
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Book Description

18 Nov 1993

"Good bread is hard to find and easy to make," says Dan Leader as he draws you into the ancient world of traditional bread baking. Unlike any other bread book, Bread Alone will provide you with a comprehensive guide to creating--at home--the country-style breads that have consistently captured the imagination and the taste buds of the world.

In a richly told tale, Leader chronicles his crossings of America and Europe to locate the most vital ingredients at the source, to learn from the methods of the world's great bakers, and to perfect their traditional techniques. His recipes are ones that have been used for centuries: large sourdough ryes, rich and dark raisin pumpernickel loaves, real French pain au levain, big round wheats with walnuts, crusty baguettes, high and airy breads, and more. Made from organic, stone-ground grains, these breads are slow-leavened, hand-shaped, and baked to perfection on heated baking tiles. As you read through the recipes, you can almost smell the ancient aroma of baking bread. And as you begin to bake, you will learn the importance of the primary ingredient in great bread: your own observations.

These are some of the breads and techniques you will master:

In the chapter "Becoming Bread," you will learn to identify and shop for the highest quality flour available. And you will seek it out because you'll taste the difference.

Making a poolish will become second nature to you as you master the Learning Recipe: Classic Country-Style Hearth Loaf and its delicious variations.

Whatever your schedule, there is a bread for you. In the chapter "Straight-Dough Breads: Traditional Breads for a Modern Life-Style," you are shown how to start and finish a recipe in five hours, or morning-to-night, or night-to-night.

You will bake sourdough bread in its many forms. By gently introducing the concept of sourdough--how it is made, how it is maintained, and how to get the best flavor from it--Leader demystifies it and makes it accessible to you.

Discover the wonders of rye bread: From the dense and chewy Finnish Sour Rye to the fragrant Danish Light Rye, everyone's tastes are served.

The mystery of pain au levain, French for "bread from a sourdough or wild yeast," unfolds into an understandable, user-friendly process. From My Personal Favorite Pain au Levain, a typical large Parisian loaf, to Pain au Levain with Pecans and Dried Cherries, the "Family of Traditional Pain au Levain" includes some of the best loaves baked around the world.

A perfect baguette is a beautiful thing. From shaping to scoring, you will learn how to make the authentic French baguette at home.

The purpose of an organic certifier--find out how and why one farmer becomes dedicated to his role as land steward.

Brioche, Chocolate-Apricot Kugelhopf, Panettone, and Semolina Sesame Rolls are a few recipes you will find in "A Family of Breads Inspired by Traditional French and Italian Breads."

Finally, when a quick bread is all you have time to bake, you will find recipes for such delights as Vanilla Bean Butter Loaf; Dried Pear, Port, and Poppy Seed Loaf; and Provolone Sage Corn Loaf.

Bread Alone is the bread book that cooks and bakers have been waiting for. From the wheat fields of the Midwest to the hot and steamy boulangeries of Paris, you will travel the long and delicious road to flawless bread baking. You will emerge a better baker and with a deeper understanding of what it takes to make perfect loaves. Bakers entertain you with stories of their love of baking (even in the most adverse situations). Bread Alone is the bible of bread books and a must-have for bread lovers everywhere.


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Bread Alone + Local Breads: Sourdough and Whole Grain Recipes from Europe's Best Artisan Bakers
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: William Morrow; 1 edition (18 Nov 1993)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0688092616
  • ISBN-13: 978-0688092610
  • Product Dimensions: 21 x 2.8 x 26 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 587,224 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars It works very well!! 29 Jun 1999
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
I wrote one review after I read the whole book. But now, after owning other very famous books of bread and after gaining much experience now as a homebaker who bakes bread every other day, I must say this book is a must for the serious ones. Comparing the explanations of the ingredients and techniques, as well as that of the recipes of how to make complicated starters and sourdough with other books, this one is indeed the most detailed and easiest to follow. And, like other reviewers said, they make really high-quality breads which far excel those available in the market. Of course, like any skills which aim at excellence, the Bread Alone methods take a bit of time and patience to master.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
Learned how to make a good sour-dough bread and a marvelous hearth bread, but the level of detail is extreme and very boring. As a previous reviewer suggests, the detail could be cut at least by half or more and there are several mild contradictions and/or errors that would have been removed by an editor familiar with bread-making. After all, how many times must you be warned about spraying a hot oven light and the tiresome emphasis on adjusting temperatures to exactly 78 degrees? Also, the mechanical book construction is poor at best and careless by any standard. The book fell apart just from a few days of use.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Nice try, but some ruthless editing would help 1 Mar 1998
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
Having worked with several other books on baking bread, I have to say that this book is among the most disappointing. I bought the hardcover edition, and within a few months it was falling apart, even though it was not heavily used. But there are other, more serious problems. In a section entitled "Traditional" breads, Mr. Leader includes recipes for breads he fully acknowledges are creations of his own whim. Throughout the section on "levain" (sourdough), he confuses in several recipes "chef" when he means "starter" and vice versa. And the instructions themselves for making the starter would have you mix the starter with a wooden spoon until it is the consistency of a "stiff dough." A STIFF dough?! Any dough would be difficult to mix with a spoon, let alone a stiff one. Perhaps he means "stiff batter?" For the novice baker, this would be terribly frustrating. There are no illustrations, and the copious color photographs are not instructive, but rather pictures of his breads, and those of his French mentors' breads, in various poses. One photograph purports to show you what your batter should look like as your sponge develops; even here, it's not clear what you should learn from this. Better if there were illustrations or photos showing you how to knead, for example. Finally, I wonder what the motivation was to set out writing a book with a "Master Recipe" -- a great idea, in my opinion (think of Julia Child's books) -- and then repeat every last painful detail in every single recipes. And some of the recipes differ only in the size of the loaf!! I think the useful information in this book could have been reduced to a book about one-fourth its size, and it would be more useful, and cheaper, too.
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