Basler Brot

Basler Brot
Type Bread
Place of origin Switzerland
Region or state Basel-Stadt and Basel-Landschaft
Main ingredients Pre-ferment, flour, salt, yeast, water
Cookbook: Basler Brot  Media: Basler Brot

Basler Brot (German: Bread of Basel), in Basel also Basler Laibli, is a bread traditionally made in the Swiss cantons of Basel-Stadt and Basel-Landschaft, but now popular in all of Switzerland. It is distinguished from other Swiss breads by a very soft, porous dough and a mealy, crunchy crust.[1]

The age of the recipe is uncertain. The Basler Brot was first described in a bakers' journal in 1944. After a marketing campaign by the Swiss Bakers Association in the 1950s, it was made available in all Swiss bakeries.[1]

Production

A traditionally made Basler Brot without cracks in the crust.

Production of the Basler Brot begins the day before baking with the production of the Hebel, a mother dough that is left to ripen overnight, producing the bread's characteristic aroma.[1] It is then mixed with plain flour, salt, yeast and water to produce a dough with a very high water content (over 80%), making the bread very soft.[1]

After a light kneading, the dough is formed into rough pieces, which are weighed and laid on flour-dusted wooden bards for half an hour.[1] They are only lightly rolled into an oval shape, which allows for the dough's large pores to form, and then baked for at least half an hour at up to 330 °C (626 °F)[1] Usually, two loaves are baked attached point to point, and steam is used to prevent a premature hardening of the crust, which should – unlike the loaf pictured above – not crack during baking.[1]

Significance

Distributed nationally through the retailers Migros and Coop, Basler Brot is eaten in all of Switzerland as an everyday food. It is also sold in the area near Basel in Alsace (France) and Lörrach (Germany)[1]

References

Bibliography

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Basler Brot.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/26/2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.