A sourdough baguette is the perfect side to nearly any dinner. With a perfect crispy crust and chewy interior, you’ll love the savory tang of this classic French bread.
I’ve been experimenting with sourdough bread for a few years now.
And every time I try something new, I am always so blown away at just how much you can do with a sourdough starter.
These sourdough baguettes are no exception!
I always keep bread on hand as it is a staple side dish to many dinners here at the farmhouse. A fresh slice of sourdough baguette with homemade herb butter is quickly becoming the bread of choice with the kids.
Although it does take some patience to make these and get it just right, it will be worth it once you get it down!
What is a Sourdough Baguette?
A baguette is a French bread that is known for its long, thin shape and golden crust.
Traditionally, French baguettes are made with yeast. However, using sourdough starter as your leavening agent adds a delicious, tangy flavor that really takes this bread over the top!
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Why you’ll love this recipe:
Flavorful: Traditional baguettes are made with a few staple ingredients. Having the sourdough starter added gives this bread a bit more of that sourdough tang we all know and love!
Nutritious: Since you are using sourdough, you get all the benefits of fermented grains. This means it is more digestive and the nutrients are more available for your body to absorb.
Impressive: You’ll impress all of your dinner guests when you have a beautiful, golden crusted sourdough baguette on the dinner table.
Tips for Success:
- You’ll need an active sourdough starter for this recipe. New to sourdough? Click here to learn how to make a sourdough starter and here for how to care for one.
- During the rising process and bulk fermentation, make sure to cover the dough with a damp towel or plastic wrap to avoid any unpleasant crusts from forming.
- The time it takes for your dough to double is not an exact science. There are many environmental factors that play a role. Rising times will vary for everyone.
FAQ:
What is the difference between a French baguette and a sourdough baguette?
The only difference is your leavener. Sourdough uses a special starter made with flour and water, while a traditional French baguette is normally made with commercial yeast.
You’ll still get the same shape and crust, but you’ll also get a more robust flavor with sourdough.
Why is sourdough bread better for you?
Thanks to the fermented grains in sourdough, it is typically easier to digest. That also means it’s easier on your body to absorb the vitamins and minerals in the bread.
How do you eat a sourdough baguette?
We love to have a piece of sourdough baguette as a side to dinner. It can go with almost anything, but we especially love it with soup, like my Roasted Red Pepper And Tomato Soup, and even eggs!
Adding a little herb butter on a warm slice will take it over the top.
Ingredients:
All Purpose Flour
Water
Sourdough Starter – make sure it is active and bubbly!
Salt – Sea salt is best.
Tools you may need:
Baguette pan or Baker’s couche
How to make Sourdough Baguettes
Feed your sourdough starter 4-12 hours before starting the bread so it is active and bubbly once you start the bread.
Hydrate the flour
Combine your warm water and flour in a large bowl. You’ll want to let this mixture rest for 30 minutes for a process called autolyse.
Using wet hands, dimple in your sourdough starter to the rested flour and water mixture.
Sprinkle salt on top.
Mix and Rest
Using your hands, mix the dough for about 5 minutes so the dough comes together.
Cover the dough with plastic wrap or a damp towel and let the dough rest for 30 minutes.
Stretch and Fold
After the resting period, this dough will need 6 rounds of stretching and folding in order to develop the gluten and obtain a nice rise.
With the dough in the bowl, grab the edge of the dough firmly and pull up – stretching it upwards. Then place the dough in your hands into the center.
Turn the bowl about a quarter turn and do this stretch and fold again. Repeat this process one to two more times. This is considered one stretch and fold round.
Repeat according to the directions below. If the dough is too sticky, you can dip your hand in water.
First 3 stretch and folds – every 15 minutes.
Last 3 stretch and folds – every 30 minutes.
Bulk Ferment
When you are finished with the 6 rounds of stretch and folds, cover your dough with a wet towel or plastic wrap. Allow it to bulk-ferment until it has doubled.
The timing for this will vary greatly depending on many factors – temperature, hydration, maturity of your starter, etc.
If you’d like, you can let this step go longer for further health benefits. I typically do this in the morning and let it go all day.
When the dough is ready, there will be small bubbles on the surface.
Shape your dough
Divide the dough into three equal parts.
Pre-shape by providing slight tension and creating a ball with each piece of dough. Allow to bench rest for about 20 minutes on the counter.
Shape the baguette dough by gently stretching the dough out into a rectangle about 10” long by 5” wide.
Fold one long side into the middle and press your fingers into the seam all the way down it to seal it. Repeat with the other long edge, so that there is one seam in the middle where the two sides meet.
Roll the dough over, so that it is seam side down, and gently create tension along the seam by pulling it against the counter. This will also elongate the shape as you continue to pull the dough.
I like mine to be about 14” for a final length, so they can rest in my perforated baguette mold.
Repeat for the other two pieces of dough.
Let your shaped dough rise
Place your shaped baguettes in a baker’s couche or baguette tray or mold.
A baker’s couche is a canvas cloth used to shape your baguettes. You could also make a DIY version using a tea or kitchen towel and a few clothes pins to help it keep its shape. If using a couche or cloth, you may want to place it all on a baking sheet so you can easily transport it. Please note: Do NOT put your couche in the oven.
Cover with plastic wrap or place inside a large plastic bag or trash bag and refrigerate overnight or up to 36 hours.
Prep your oven and baguettes
The next day, preheat a baking stone (optional) at 500 degrees for about an hour. Although I don’t actually bake directly on the pizza stone, I like to have it in there to keep the oven very hot when I put the cold baguettes in. This helps them to poof up, also known as oven spring.
Get a pot or kettle of boiling water going.
On the rack at the bottom of the oven, add a 9 by 13 baking dish.
Remove the baguettes from the fridge. Score the top of the dough with 3 or 4 fairly deep scores cut at a 45 degree angle.
Fill the 9 by 13 dish you placed in your oven with boiling water.
This creates steam in the oven, which gives you oven spring. You can also use a long cast iron dutch oven like this one or this is another great option.
Basically, you have two options. You can either make your whole oven steamy with boiling water and heat, or enclose the baking process in a dutch oven.
Of course, baguettes are too long to fit in a regular sized dutch oven, which is why I opt for the stone and steam method.
Bake
Spritz the top of the baguettes with water for browning.
Load the baguettes onto the stone. I leave mine in the perforated baguette pan, and just place that on top of the stone. If you use a couche to shape your dough, remove the baguettes from the couche and place them directly on the stone. Do NOT put the couche in the oven.
Carefully open the oven door, as you’ll likely have quite a bit of steam come out once opened.
Reduce the heat to 450 degrees and bake for 35 minutes. In my oven, I achieve the best browning when I rotate the baguettes about 20 minutes into the baking process.
Enjoy!
Troubleshooting:
Crust is lacking crisp and golden color:
There could be a couple of factors at play here, but the most likely culprit is lack of moisture in the oven. Adding the boiling water to your oven may seem like overkill, but it is essential in developing a crisp, golden crust.
The starches in your dough will eventually absorb the moisture from the oven. With the right amount, the baguette will form a starch-like gel on the outside. This eventually turns into your crunchy crust.
The right moisture level makes all the difference in a perfect crust.
The inside of the bread is dense after cutting into it:
Dense bread without that airy crumb tends to indicate a lack of yeast activity, meaning your dough did not proof long enough. Don’t forget – the bulk ferment may take a lot longer depending on temperature and other environmental factors.
Baker’s Schedule:
8 a.m. – Feed sourdough starter.
12 p.m. – Combine your warm water and flour. You’ll want to let this mixture rest for 30 minutes for a process called autolyse.
12:30 p.m. – Add sourdough starter and salt. Mix dough. Let rest for 30 minutes.
1 p.m. – Begin 6 rounds of stretches and folds according to the schedule above.
3 p.m. – Cover your dough with a wet towel or plastic wrap. Allow it to bulk-ferment until it has doubled.
8:30 p.m. (or sooner/later) – Shape your dough into 3 equal parts and shape into balls. Let rest for 20 minutes.
9 p.m. – Complete final shaping of dough and place it in a baguette mold or baker’s couche. Cover and refrigerate overnight or up to 36 hours.
9 a.m. the next morning – Prep your oven and baguettes and bake!
More sourdough bread from the farmhouse
- Easy Artisan Sourdough Bread
- Jalapeño Cheddar Sourdough Bread
- Sourdough Ciabatta Bread
- Rosemary Sourdough Bread
- Sourdough Rye Bread
If you try this recipe and love it, I would love if you could come back and give it 5 stars! Tag me on Instagram @farmhouseonboone
Sourdough Baguette Recipe
Ingredients
- 625 grams all purpose flour
- 450 grams water
- 100 grams sourdough starter
- 13 grams salt
Instructions
- Feed your sourdough starter 4-12 hours before starting the bread so it is active and bubbly once you start the bread.
- Combine your warm water and flour in a large bowl. You’ll want to let this mixture rest for 30 minutes for a process called autolyse.
- Using wet hands, dimple in your sourdough starter to the rested flour and water mixture.
- Sprinkle salt on top.
- Using your hands, mix the dough for about 5 minutes so the dough comes together.
- Cover the dough with plastic wrap or a damp towel and let the dough rest for 30 minutes.
- Complete 6 rounds of stretch and folds (First 3 – every 15 minutes; Last 3 – every 30 minutes)
- When you are finished with the 6 rounds of stretch and folds, cover your dough with a wet towel or plastic wrap. Allow it to bulk-ferment until it has doubled.
- Divide the dough into three equal parts.
- Pre-shape by providing slight tension and creating a ball with each piece of dough and allow to bench rest for about 20 minutes on the counter.
- Shape the baguette dough by gently stretching the dough out into a rectangle about 10” long by 5” wide.
- Fold one long side into the middle and press your fingers into the seam all the way down it to seal it. Repeat with the other long edge, so that there is one seam in the middle where the two sides meet.
- Roll the dough over, so that it is seam side down, and gently create tension along the seam by pulling it against the counter. This will also elongate the shape as you continue to pull the dough. I like mine to be about 14” for a final length, so they can rest in my perforated baguette mold.
- Repeat for the other two pieces of dough.
- Place your shaped baguettes in a baker’s couche or baguette tray or mold.
- Cover with plastic wrap or place inside a large plastic bag or trash bag and refrigerate overnight or up to 36 hours.
- The next day, preheat a baking stone (optional) at 500 degrees for about an hour. Although I don’t actually bake directly on the pizza stone, I like to have it in there to keep the oven very hot when I put the cold baguettes in. This helps them to poof up, also known as oven spring.
- Get a pot or kettle of boiling water going.
- On the rack at the bottom of the oven, add a 9 by 13 baking dish.
- Remove the baguettes from the fridge. Score the top of the dough with 3 or 4 fairly deep scores cut at a 45 degree angle.
- Fill the 9 by 13 dish you placed in your oven with boiling water.
- Spritz the top of the baguettes with water for browning.
- Load the baguettes onto the stone. I leave mine in the perforated baguette pan, and just place that on top of the stone. If you use a couche to shape your dough, remove the baguettes from the couche and place them directly on the stone. Do NOT put the couche in the oven.
- Reduce the heat to 450 degrees and bake for 35 minutes. In my oven, I achieve the best browning when I rotate the baguettes about 20 minutes into the baking process.
Notes
- The timing for bulk fermentation will vary greatly depending on many factors – temperature, hydration, maturity of your starter, etc. If you’d like, you can let this step go longer for further health benefits. I typically do this in the morning and let it go all day. When the dough is ready, there will be small bubbles on the surface.
- A baker’s couche is a canvas cloth used to shape your baguettes. You could also make a DIY version using a tea or kitchen towel and a few clothes pins to help it keep its shape. If using a couche or cloth, you may want to place it all on a baking sheet so you can easily transport it. Please note: Do NOT put your couche in the oven.
- Instead of using a 9 x13 dish, you can also use a long cast iron dutch oven like this one or this is another great option.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
They turned out great as far as shape, size and texture. The only thing is the tops turned out way too dark, while the bottoms were pale. Wondering what I could do differently. I used my Baguette pan (nonstick with holes) on the stone on the lower middle rack, I have seven positions. I had the pan of water on bottom rack. Only thing I changed is I pastry brushed with water as I didn’t have a spritzer.
Oh my goodness, these look DIVINE. Your website is the main one we use for all things sourdough and fermenting and we have fallen in love with SO many of your recipes! Can’t wait to try these. Thank you for sharing!
Question: I’ve seen on your site that you mill your own grains, but your recipes read like they’re written for store bought flour, and have always worked great for me as such. We’re just switching over to fresh-milled wheat and I’m nervous about messing up all the recipes we’ve come to love. Do you make your recipes as written with the fresh-milled grain, or will I need to make adjustments? Thank you!
I have to say, that it is incredibly hard to navigate on your site. Between your banner taking up a quarter of the page and the ads on the left and bottom taking up a third, there is only a sliver of the recipe to scroll.
Take a look: it is impossible.
I can’t deal with it even though I like your ethic and your recipe.
Carmen
It was a gloppy mess from the get go. I kept saying ‘trust the process’ to myself but it didn’t work at all for me. I got good rise at the bulk ferment stage but it was so wet there was just no forming it at all. I finally just threw the glop in the pan and baked it. No. Threw it all away – it wasn’t even viable for bread crumbs. If I try again I’ll decrease the water by – like – 100g. My starter is strong and 100% hydration and I weighed everything carefully. I used gold medal all purpose flour as opposed to my regular king Arthur all purpose flour but the bulk ferment rise in a clear straight sided container was perfect so the flour was fine – my starter seemed to love it. It just never came together during the stretch and folds and was totally unmanageable after that. Should have just made focaccia but I didn’t want focaccia I wanted beautiful baguettes like yours! 😢
Can I use bread flour instead of all purpose?
Yes.
I followed this recipe exactly and my baguettes came out delicious. Your instructions were very detailed and clear. My only observation was that I did not get any rise in the overnight refrigeration and not much “oven spring”. I used the bulk fermentation temp guide for how long to let my dough rise. My dough was sticky as you mentioned in previous comments that it tends to be. My balls formed well and had bunnles after the bench rest. You memtioned in a previous comment that you could skip the overnight refrigeration. I’m wondering if I skip the refrigeration and allow the shaped dough to proof , if that would allow for more rise. Please let me your thoughts.
Yes, you can!
All I can say is WOW!! These were perfect…I wouldn’t change a thing! I didn’t have the appropriate baguette pans. I have a couple pullman pans, so I created a sling in each pan with a silicone mat attached to the top with clothes pins. When I was ready to bake, I transferred both silicone mats to the baking sheet that I had been preheating on top of my pizza stone. It worked perfectly! I took pictures in the sling and after they were baked up if you want to see them. I made two baguettes instead of three. Thanks for a fantastic recipe!!
I followed exactly with scale measurements. Dough was way too sticky to form
It may have needed a little extra flour. This is a sticky dough, but if it did not shape well after it was kneaded, then it may have needed more flour. Sometimes depending on the hydration of your starter, you may need a little more or a little less flour.
I noticed this recipe doesn’t have a final proof after placing it in the fridge. Is there somewhere that happens because dividing and shaping leads to a flat baguette…
The final proof is in the fridge. Cover and place in the fridge overnight or up to 36 hours.
About how long does it take to double in size?
Depends on the temperature in your home! Roughly 8 hours, but could be faster or slower.