The Fresh Loaf

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Horseshoes (les fers a cheval)

Bred Maverick's picture
Bred Maverick

Horseshoes (les fers a cheval)

I am going through the recipes, one by one,  in Special and Decorative Breads (Bilheux, Escoffier et al  c.1987)

I want to bake horseshoes twists.

directions state "Standard bread or country style bread"

the procedure starts by preparing a long split loaf, les fendus (which I've sort of mastered using a long dowel) . Next, directions indicate to "twist each loaf so that the split makes two complete rotations over its entire length" Then "place each loaf in a light leaf floured elongated rising mold"

this does not make sense to me because the finished bread does not look "twisted". perhaps it's a translation problem from French to English

anyone familiar with this 2 volume book or recipe?

 

 

 

albacore's picture
albacore

Sorry, not familiar with that book, but I found a short video - not sure if it is any help.....

https://webtv.hotellerie-restauration.ac-versailles.fr/Formes-des-pains-Fer-a-cheval-ou-couronne?lang=fr

Lance

Bred Maverick's picture
Bred Maverick

thank you for the video link. I am so impressed that you found it!

now the translated to English directions makes sense,

 

albacore's picture
albacore

You're welcome!

A tip for regional searches (though I didn't need to use it this time) is to use Bing rather than Google and set the country and language as required - France/French in this case. Then enter the search phrase in French.

You will get much more relevant hits by doing it this way.

Lance

Bred Maverick's picture
Bred Maverick

that is a very good suggestion. Much appreciated

 

Diane

onionsoup's picture
onionsoup

Just because the final product doesn't look 'twisted' doesn't mean the process doesn't make sense. When baking, the bread can stretch a bit and lose the definition of the swirls, especially if you're using a longer rising pan. As the dough rises and bakes, the swirls might become less noticeable, but the inside will be more uniform and interesting.