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In Search of the Perfect Loaf: A Home Baker's Odyssey Hardcover – September 4, 2014


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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Viking Adult (September 4, 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0670025615
  • ISBN-13: 978-0670025619
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.8 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #7,282 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Terrific…. Fromartz is much more than an obsessive cook. He’s also a fine reporter and writer. And Perfect Loaf is much more than a book about baking bread….What Fromartz is really writing about is how a deeper understanding of something leads to a deeper appreciation of it.
He is showing us the world through a slice of bread.”
Los Angeles Times
 
“[An] engaging and informative book…about, among many things, the return of artisan baking in France and its rise in the United States, the cultivation of wheat here and abroad, the magic and mystery of sourdough starters, and by no means least, the education of a baker.”
Washington Post
 
“A flavorful delight….Fromartz’s ‘Odyssey’ is just that; he has stoked every coal when it comes to bread. Though this isn’t a cookbook by any means, he does include nine recipes…all graded by difficulty and annotated so that it’s like having an expert at your side. Does he find the perfect loaf? He finds a lot more than that.”
Kansas City Star
 
“[Fromartz] educates readers through a journeyman narrative, with a handful of recipes from an “easy-to-make baguette” inspired by travels in France, to pain de compagne from California bakers and German Roggenweizenbrot he learned in Berlin.….If you don’t know much about how or why handcrafted bread is vastly different from what’s sold in bakeries and grocery stores, start with this book.’
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
 
In Search of the Perfect Loaf asks and answers some essential questions….I hope his book leads other people to go on their own search for the perfect loaf.”
–Jim Lahey, The Wall Street Journal
 
“Thoroughly researched and engagingly written….This impressive work falls somewhere between a cookbook, an exploration of bread-baking techniques, and a history of bread....Even those who think they know bread will find something to gain here….Highly recommended.”
 Library Journal, starred review
 
“[A] fun and informative memoir [that] provides a fascinating miniature course on the techniques involved in making different varieties…baking methods used by our ancestors…and even a little history on grains and practices dating back to the Fertile Crescent.”
Publishers Weekly
 
“A consummate celebration of the deceptively simple loaf of bread…Besides imparting a history of grains and their places in culture over the past 105,000 years (when grain consumption appears to have begun), Fromartz includes step-by-step recipes for nurturing dough starters and for baking baguettes, flatbread, rye bread (which he learned to make in Berlin) and a loaf made from an artisanal grain, Turkey Red wheat….Richly detailed [and] lively.”
Kirkus Reviews
 
“Part food science, part cultural history, part memoir, Fromartz's book blends a variety of ingredients (the history of wheat production, the science of yeast fermentation, half a dozen bread recipes) into a delicious, informative dish that will have readers reaching for their aprons.”
ShelfAwareness
 
“Fromartz offers the fruits of his researches so that other home bakers may profit. His recipes are
detailed and accessible for any earnest and patient home baker committed to an honest loaf.”
Booklist
 
"This fascinating, beautifully written memoir reveals Sam Fromartz as that rare breed of cook: craftsman, historian and scientist all in one, following his senses and questing after what is delicious, authentic, and pure."
Alice Waters, vice president of Slow Food International, owner of Chez Panisse, and author of The Art of Simple Food
 
"In this lovely book, Sam Fromartz offers a signature mix of baking insights and wonderful storytelling as he hits the road to find his perfect loaf. If you make bread—or ever intend to—you need to read this book."
Ruth Reichl, former editor-in-chief of Gourmet and author of Delicious!
 
"Sam Fromartz's odyssey teaches us that being a great baker takes more than simply following recipes–it is a relentless quest. His conversations with bakers and then his reinterpretation of their lessons at home is a double education. I love this book."
Nancy Silverton, founder of La Brea bakery and author of The Mozza Cookbook
 
"In Search of the Perfect Loaf is really the best kind of read—a quest for true bread enriched by research, knowledge and pleasure. The passion Sam Fromartz brings to this journey is incredible and infectious. Fromartz is generous in sharing his baking intel, but the real recipe for delicious bread, we learn, begins long before the kitchen. This book will change the way you look at bread.”
Dan Barber, co-owner/executive chef of Blue Hill and Blue Hill at Stone Barns and author of The Third Plate
 
“In his search for the holy grail of baguettes, Sam Fromartz has beautifully captured the joys, loneliness, frustrations, and rewards of his bread making journey. And, wonderfully for us, he shares both the life and baking lessons learned from the many amazing people he met along the way. You will want to bake from this book.”
Peter Reinhart, author of The Bread Baker’s Apprentice and Bread Revolution
 
"This book makes the reader reexamine a subject truly overlooked:  the culture of the baker and, in particular, of bread.  Through his quixotic quest to find and learn how to make the perfect bread, Sam Fromartz brings us into the bakery and illustrates and captures the essence of what bread culture is.  It is an exquisite work, written with passion and expertise.  With many of the stories, Fromartz helps the reader understand the mind of the baker.  He himself is truly obsessed, and this book is ideal for anyone wishing to further their knowledge of the subject of what craft or artisan baking is and ought to be.  He presents, through the lives and stories of other practitioners of the craft, a future for bread which is both meaningful and dignified."
Jim Lahey, owner/founder of Sullivan Street Bakery and author of My Bread
 
"If you love great bread, you will love this book! Inside, Sam shares his journey in search for the perfect loaf, baking with some of the most inspirational and leading bakers of our time. From Paris, to Berlin, to Marienthal, Kansas, we follow Sam on his quest as he shares his love for great bread and the ‘baking secrets’ he learned along the way. I read this book with my favorite music in the background, in my most comfortable chair, a glass of wine in hand, and a rustic loaf of bread."
Daniel Leader, founder of Bread Alone Bakery and author of Bread Alone: Bold Fresh Loaves from Your Own Hands
 
"Great bread is one of life's simple pleasures, and this book captures so much of what is inspiring in the realm of bread baking right now. From California to Berlin, we meet passionate, committed bakers, and see how Sam translates their craft to the home kitchen. Bread geeks will love it, but so too will those wondering about all we've lost in our daily bread—and what we might recapture."
Heidi Swanson, author of Super Natural Every Day
 
“Fromartz is a passionate, deeply serious home baker who writes eloquently and gracefully about what it takes in skill and ingredients to produce a delicious baguette or country loaf.  His account of the history and comeback of heritage wheat grains is a revelation that will send even the most gluten-phobic reader to search for breads made from them. In Search of the Perfect Loaf is a lovely book—a perfect read for anyone who cares about good food.”
Marion Nestle, professor of nutrition, food studies, and public health at New York University and author of Eat, Drink, Vote: An Illustrated Guide to Food Politics
 
"Fromartz has managed to elevate the humble loaf of bread into a riveting tale of history, passion and practical technique along with a rare glimpse into the workings of early morning bakeries from Paris to Berlin to San Francisco. You won't look at bread the same way again."
Kathleen Flinn, author of The Sharper Your Knife, the Less You Cry and Burnt Toast Makes You Sing Good

About the Author

Samuel Fromartz’s work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Atlantic, among other publications. He lives in Washington, D.C.

More About the Author

Discover books, learn about writers, read author blogs, and more.

Customer Reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
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The perfect book for this family of bread bakers!
Cheryl
The author does a wonderful job of transporting the reader back to the New York of his childhood and around the world to understand the intricacies of bread.
Shoagosaurus
It is well researched and fascinating to read - just the right balance of science and anecdote.
Don65

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

14 of 17 people found the following review helpful By A.L. Husbands on September 5, 2014
Format: Kindle Edition
I received a copy of this book through a Goodreads giveaway.
At first, I was a little bit disappointed to see how few recipes were included in this book, compared to the bulk of storytelling prose. Then, as I began reading, I began to appreciate the story being told a lot more than the recipes anyway. The narration is effortless, elegant, and mildly addictive; I was midway through the book before I realized I was hooked. The author has a good habit of tricking you into reading things you probably wouldn't normally; the biblical begats of wheat, for instance, or the biogenetics of what exactly gluten is. Some of the driest topics in this book turned out to be the subjects that lingered longest in my mind.
However, the actual recipes do leave a lot to be desired, in my opinion. All measurements are given in weights and while I know this is the more accurate way of baking, I think lots of home bakers will be thrown by it. And that's what this book bills itself as -- a story of bread making from one home baker to other home bakers.
Ultimately, though, I really enjoyed this book. I would recommend it to people just beginning to have an interest in baking, and to someone who'd spent their lives chasing culinary affairs.
But not to people on diets... no, not to them.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful By Mortimer Casey on September 15, 2014
Format: Hardcover
This is a surprising read no matter what your motivation in coming to the book. Whether its for epicurean purposes, craft interests, food science or history, or a just a good page-turner on a subject often below the radar, you will not be disappointed. The author knows his business in all of these realms, and displays an inviting and yet confident hand that sweeps you along effortlessly on his own odyssey of curiosity and pursuit of the perfect loaf. There's much here for the beginner as well as for the self-confessed, small-batch expert. Plus tasty recipes to play with. But the main lesson to be learned on this odyssey is that it is in mastering the method, not the recipe, where the pleasure of satisfaction lies. Like much else to be gained from reading this book, it's a lesson that is delivered with the freshness and appeal of warm bread straight out of the oven. The telling of the tale here transcends its subject matter. A good read.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful By Don65 on October 7, 2014
Format: Hardcover
The first half of this book is about bread. The second half is about wheat. The bread section is good but not that much different from all the many other books about bread - Ken Forkish's "Flour Water Salt Yeast" remains my favorite on that topic. The wheat section is the real reason to read this book. It is the back story of bread. It is well researched and fascinating to read - just the right balance of science and anecdote. I grew up in a tiny wheat farming town in western Kansas and have pre-school memories of climbing up and sliding down mountains of what I now know was white wheat (today it is probably red wheat). This book brought back the smells of that wheat.

I read a library copy but this book goes on my Christmas gift list.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful By Daniel Owens on September 15, 2014
Format: Hardcover
One part travel memoir, one part science journalism, one part ethnography. A fantastic read for anyone interested in breadmaking, but also with much to offer those who choose not to keep a bubbling "mother" in their kitchen corner. The passages detailing the history of wheat are particularly fascinating, and the recipes are models of detailed instruction.
I once had the great pleasure of tasting a Sam Fromartz baguette and must say the quality of the book matches the quality of the bread.
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