Site last updated: Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Log In

Reset Password
MENU
Butler County's great daily newspaper

Apollonia Poilne's first cookbook in English is a perfect bread handbook

While many of us are stuck at home, with time to read as we compulsively stress-bake and feed our sourdough starters, may I make a suggestion? Get a copy of French baker Apollonia Poilne’s cookbook, which will happily address your baking concerns as well as what to do with all that bread.

“Poilne: The Secrets of the World-Famous Bread Bakery” came out in October and is the first book in English from Poilne, the granddaughter of Pierre Poilne, who opened the family bakery in 1932 on the Left Bank in Paris. If you read the New Yorker, you may already know her story: how her parents died in a 2002 helicopter crash, when she was a teenager, leaving her to run the family business — from her Harvard dorm room.

Not only did she take the helm of the company and graduate with a degree in economics, but she and her younger sister, Athena, have also expanded and modernized the boulangerie. (There are bakeries now in Paris and London, and you can order Poilne’s bread, flour, bannetons and filled cookie tins online, even shipped overnight to California.)

After a forward by Alice Waters, the first recipe is, of course, for the sourdough boule that made the bakery famous. (I once walked across Paris to get one of the massive loaves, engraved with the swirled letter P, the size and shape of a Citroën hubcap.) Apollonia Poilne takes you through the process, which includes making starter from scratch (she uses yogurt), proofing, shaping, scoring and baking (in a 12-inch lidded Dutch oven).

Poilne is a patient teacher, taking novice bakers through the steps, providing encouragement for instructions that many might find daunting, and including marvelous tips on technique, flours, “baking with all your senses” and stories about growing up and learning how to bake herself.

More surprising, however, is that this is not a wonky book, written by one master baker for other master bakers.

Rather it’s a gentle, user-friendly cookbook that provides recipes which are sometimes utterly, beautifully simple.

Sure, you’ll find stuff on decorative flourishes and laminating dough, but this book is also a paean to loaves and even single slices of bread.

There are also wonderfully useful tips for storing and refreshing bread, what to do with stale bread (make ice cream), where to find baking gear (directly from Poilne) and how to make good croutons (spice and fry them).

The thick catalog of recipes includes as many for what to do with your bread as for the breads themselves, such as bread chips, bread granola, whipped cream made with cream steeped in brioche, simple dishes made with all those bread crumbs and a recipe for, yes, perfect toast.

More in Recipes

Subscribe to our Daily Newsletter

* indicates required
TODAY'S PHOTOS