How do I get crispy but thin bread crust?
On a handful of occasions I've had bread in a restaurant where the crust is thin but very crispy, almost as if it had a couple layers. It looks crackly and gives easily to pressure. It's not a thick hard-to-chew crust. The inside is wonderful and soft. I'd call it "Italian bread" but I don't think that necessarily describes it.
My crust tends to turn out nicely colored, but 1/8"-thick and sort of soft/damp (like leaving bread out on a humid day) but also not terribly easy to chew.
Does anyone have any tips on how to get a crispy thin crust like this at home?
Bonus: What do you call this kind of crust? (It seems like "crusty" usually means hard thick crust, which is not what I want).
Best Answer
Assuming that this is what you want:
This kind of crust is made with steam injection. Normal household baking methods will give you a thick crust, which is usually also hard. Wetting and covering it right out of the oven will give you a chewy crust. If you bake the bread in a fitting pan and tweak the recipe, you can get thin, almost non-existant crust, but also soft, like sandwich bread.
For what you see in the picture, you need standard French bread dough (60% hydration, AP flour) and a blast of steam in the oven at the beginning of baking. Sadly, homemade steam methods which rely on evaporation won't work, because there is a limit to the amount of water which will evaporate even of high temperatures, and you need to get more steam inside than that. So, you'll either need a pro oven or a steam modding (which only works on an oven with vents, unless you are prepared to drill a hole into the oven cavity).
For extra tweaking the crust, you can use a glaze. We had a question explaining the different glazes and their results.
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Quick Answer about "How do I get crispy but thin bread crust?"
The ultimate way to develop a thin crisp crust has to be the use of a baking dome/cloche or pot to cover the baking bread and will even work in a leaky oven. This prevents early crust formation, the loaf achieves greater volume, and the grail of the thin crisp crust is usually achieved.How do I make my bread crust less thick?
Here are the best ways to ensure you get a thinner softer crust on your sourdough bread.Why is my bread crust not crispy?
Soft Crust If your crust is becoming soft too quickly and not staying crispy you simply need to bake the bread longer. The best way to do this is to lower the temperature of your oven slightly and bake a few more minutes to achieve the same color you would have at the higher temperature.What makes a crust crispy?
The secret to a thick crispy crust is steam and baking time. The introduction of steam to the first stages of baking is what forms the crust and the rest of the baking process is what makes it extra crispy as you are dehydrating this crust.What makes bread crusty on top?
The preferred trick to getting the perfect crust at home is to bake your bread in a Dutch oven. A closed Dutch oven will trap the water that evaporates from the dough and convert it to steam under the lid. The steam clings to the surface of the dough and keeps the entire loaf moist.Sourdough Bread Crust Experiment | When should you uncover? | Foodgeek
More answers regarding how do I get crispy but thin bread crust?
Answer 2
In some breads, a thin crust can be achieved by brushing the dough with oil and baking at a high temperature. Wetter doughs will also frequently have more crisp crusts.
At restaurants where the bread is really crackly, there's also a chance that the bread had been frozen. Par-baking bread, freezing it, and then baking it to the correct color tends to give bread a very (sometimes excessively) crisp crust.
Answer 3
1. Enclose the bread
An easy way is to trap the bread's own steam while it's baking. Some options:
- Wrap or otherwise enclose the bread in foil while baking.
- Place the bread on a cookie sheet. Place a metal pot, upturned, over it so that it is completely enclosed. Further enhance this by placing the bread on a piece of tin foil, then on a rack or grill (or anything that will keep it off the hot surface), before covering with the upside down pot.
- Place the bread inside the pot and seal the top with foil. Again, if you can keep it from touching the bottom of the pot, you can get an even thinner crust.
Bake the bread while enclosed, and then for the last 5 minutes, remove the pot and let it bake uncovered.
The first stage (enclosed) will give you a bread with virtually no crust, and then in the second stage (not enclosed), a thin crispy crust will form.
Note that this crispy crust will not last long in any kind of humidity! Re-heat to dry it out again if you want to eat it crispy.
2. Freeze the bread
Another way is to let your bread rise to the point a little before it should be baked (depends on side of bread). Place it in the freezer in a freezer bag. Once frozen, wrap it in foil and bake it directly. Don't thaw it. You'll achieve the same effect—zero crust, then bake another 5 minutes to get a nice crispy crust.
Note
If you want a very fancy crispy crust that cracks and sings coming out of the oven, you will need to use fancier techniques or get a steam injection oven. Lots of people achieve this without a steam injection oven, however. I recommend www.thefreshloaf.com as a spot to read from / talk with people who are really into this and have thought of all kinds of crazy ways to get maximum crispiness out of their crusts. Check out Txfarmer's bread here. She doesn't use any special oven and still gets amazing results, probably by placing bricks/oven stones in the oven, and enclosing the bread somewhat as I describe above.
Answer 4
I know this is an old question, but I make a wet dough, wetter than usual, and then cook it in a dutch oven, taking the lid off for the last 15 mins of cooking. Thin crust and crispy, every time.
Answer 5
I’ve been experimenting with trying to get a supermarket type French stick crust. So far I’ve identified six key prerequisites that will produce results. 1. Quality French flour, supermarket bought flour, in the words of a industry baker who worked on developing bread in the 60’s at the UK baking research centre, “supermarket flour is the sweepings from the mill”. 2. A very hot oven. 3. Steam all through the bake(I squirt a water filled syringe in at the very start and then every 10 mins), apart from the end. 4. A crisper tray with holes in it. 5. Oil glaze. 6. A wet mix.
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