Boulangerie: The Craft and Culture of Baking in France
Books / Hardcover
Books › Cooking › Regional & Ethnic › French
ISBN: 0026008653 / Publisher: Macmillan- Prentice Hall, March 1995
Offers recipes and provides a history of the craftmanship of the boulangers, artisan bakers of bread, and of the many boulangeries in France where fresh breads, baguettes, croissants, and pastries can be purchased
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In France, if you have a church and a bakery - a boulangerie - you have a village. It's hard to say which is more important. Villagers might go to church once or twice a week, but they visit the boulangerie two or three times a day, buying baguettes fresh out of the oven for every meal.The French are a nation of bread-eaters, but not of home bread-makers. They buy their bread from boulangeries, each one an institution, each with a devoted, discerning clientele. But with the recent advent of modern bakery chains, the venerable boulangerie - almost as old as France herself - is under threat, and with it, the French craft of bread-making.Boulangerie invites you inside a French bakery to savor its smells, its bustle, its history. Author Paul Rambali has talked to boulangers - artisan bakers of bread, brioches, and croissants - and patissiers - artists who create cream-filled eclairs and glistening fruit tarts - to capture the passion that drives them to bake a baguette with a perfect crust, or to try to improve on the flavor of a strawberry. It's a story of devoted and exacting craftsmanship, and of centuries of culinary ingenuity, told with flair and sympathy for what may be the sunset on a golden harvest.
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