Richard Bertinet
Author of Dough: Simple Contemporary Breads
About the Author
Richard Bertinet, born and raised in northwest France, is the owner of The Bertinet Kitchen cookery school in Bath, England, which draws attendees from all over the world. His first book, Dough, was awarded the James Beard Foundation Award for Baking and Deserts.
Image credit: Richard Bertinet
Works by Richard Bertinet
Patisserie Maison: The step-by-step guide to simple sweet pastries for the home baker (2014) 27 copies
Pains Gourmands 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Bertinet, Richard
- Birthdate
- alive
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- baker
- Nationality
- France
- Birthplace
- Brittany, France
- Places of residence
- Paris, France
Salisbury, Wiltshire, England, UK
London, England, UK
Bath, Somerset, England, UK - Associated Place (for map)
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
The notion of no-knead bread has become commonplace in the last few years - The smell and flavor of fresh bread with minimal effort. After several failures at 'real' bread making, no-knead provided a magical shortcut for this tricky, humiliating, process. Several years later I gave kneading another chance, inspired by a video of Richard Bertinet athletically slapping the dough on his work surface and conjuring four perfect baguettes. Only kneaded bread can be shaped this way, so I mixed the show more four ingredients to his specification (flour, water, salt, and yeast) blundered through his simplified process, and removed my own perfect baguettes from the oven. Compared to the slightly cakey texture of no-knead bread, these were perfectly chewy with nice, rustic-looking holes. "Lucky," I thought, because I was no idiot, and I'd thumbed through several bread books that dedicate significant space to the delicate chemical balance that nurtures the yeast without killing it. But I've not failed with that recipe since. The kneading process is truly enjoyable, only takes about 5 minutes if using bread flour, and one can have an uncompromised loaf of the good stuff in less than three hours with only about 20 minutes of actual work. I have yet to explore all the variations on that basic loaf that this book provides, but there have been no false notes yet; it has restored my confidence as a baker. show less
I love his sourdough recipe (but with far less water). I find his attitude to his sourdough far too hardline and prescriptive - just relax and it will all be fine!
There was not enough general guidance in the book for my taste, but if you're looking for very prescriptive recipes, it may appeal to you. I took it out of the library and have no great wish to own it.
There was not enough general guidance in the book for my taste, but if you're looking for very prescriptive recipes, it may appeal to you. I took it out of the library and have no great wish to own it.
This is a very pretty book. The recipes are interesting and those that I've tried are pretty tasty. I like that measurements are given in weights as well as volumes in order to be more precise.
The companion book to "Dough" by the same author. Beautiful photography, great recipes and techniques. Highly recommended. This book exposes the reader to more complicated breads, but they are presented in an easy-to-follow manner.
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 12
- Members
- 778
- Popularity
- #32,713
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 7
- ISBNs
- 45
- Languages
- 8
- Favorited
- 1















