My family's been making 4-ingredient baguettes for years, and I think everyone should know our easy recipe
Baguettes are surprisingly easy to make and go well with so many meals.
Not counting the optional egg wash, my family's bread recipe only calls for four ingredients.
The timing is the only part that can be a little tricky, so make sure to keep your eye on the clock.
If you can think of anything that's both as simple and as satisfying as French bread, I'm all ears.
Luckily, my family has been making foolproof baguettes that only call for four ingredients and an optional egg wash for years.
Here's our bread recipe.
Start by gathering the basic ingredients.
My family's recipe mostly uses things I already have in my pantry on a regular basis.
For two baguettes, you'll need:
· 5 (generous) cups of all-purpose flour
· 5 teaspoons of active yeast
· 1 teaspoon of salt
· 2 cups of warm water
· (optional) 1 egg + ¼ cup water for egg wash
For the equipment, I like to use a stand mixer with a bread-hook attachment, a large bowl, and a cookie sheet.
Mix the dry ingredients.
Combine two cups of flour with the yeast and salt in a stand mixer, briefly turning it on to stir the dry ingredients together.
Form a base dough and gradually add all the flour.
Pour two cups of warm water — around 110 degrees Fahrenheit is ideal — into the stand mixer and run it on low for one minute to form a sticky base dough.
Add the remaining three cups of flour to the mixer and run it on a low speed for about five minutes. A thicker, semi-sticky dough ball should form.
Then, remove the dough from the mixer, form it into a ball, and place it into a greased bowl. I recommend using olive oil.
Let the dough rest for about an hour.
Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and a kitchen towel and place it somewhere warm for one hour.
I usually set my dough near a floor heating vent, but places like a closet with a water heater or even a warm bathroom also work well.
If you let your dough rise in the bathroom, make sure the bowl has an air-tight seal.
The dough should rise quite a bit.
When the dough has doubled in size, press the excess air from it with clean hands and roll it into two balls. Set these aside as you prep a cookie sheet with parchment paper and a dusting of flour.
You'll also want to prep a dry, smooth workspace on your counter with a heavy dusting of flour.
Flatten the dough balls out and roll them into long batons.
Using a rolling pin, roll the dough balls out into flat, roughly ovular shapes — about 16-by-12 inches big and no more than ¼ inch thick.
Starting at one of the longer edges, roll the flattened dough into a long tube and pinch the ends shut.
Transfer to baguettes to a cookie sheet for another rest period.
Place each dough tube on the prepared cookie sheet. If you're using the optional egg wash, combine the egg with ¼ cup of water in a small bowl. Lightly brush the mixture across both tubes of dough.
If you like crustier bread, I recommend using the egg wash. Without it, you'll get a softer baguette.
Cover the dough with plastic wrap and let it rest again for 20 minutes. In the meantime, preheat the oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit.
Slash the risen dough for looks and texture.
Once the 20 minutes are up and the tubes have risen slightly, remove the plastic and diagonally slash the dough about 10 times with a serrated knife.
This is partially just for looks, but it also encourages the bread to expand while baking.
Bake, egg wash again, and rotate the pan in the oven.
Bake the bread for 20 minutes, do another egg wash, and return the dough to the oven with the pan rotated — if you're not using an egg wash, simply rotate the pan so all sides of the dough bake evenly.
Bake for another 15 minutes.
Remove the bread from the oven, get it off the cookie sheets, and enjoy.
When the bread is ready to come out, quickly transfer the baguettes from the cookie sheet to a cooling rack.
The baguettes stay fresh for two days, and I think the texture is still OK on the third.
You can also freeze baguettes if you want them to last longer. To thaw them out, heat your oven to 450 degrees Fahrenheit, turn the heat off, and pop the frozen bread into the warmed oven for about 10 minutes.
This story was originally published on March 1, 2024, and most recently updated on March 5, 2025.
Read the original article on Business Insider