Fannie Merrit Farmer School Fannie Merritt Farmer Fanny Cradock Francois Pierre de la Varenne Francois Vatel Galloping Gourmet Gary Rhodes Georges-Auguste Escoffier Gino d'Acampo Gordon Ramsay Graham Kerr Grimod de la Reynière Harold McGee Harumi Kurihara Henry John Heinz Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall Irma Rombauer Isabella Mary Beeton James John Howard Gregory Jane Grigson Jean-Anthelme Brillat-Savarin Jean-Étienne de Boré Jean-Pierre Clause Jean Paré Jennifer Paterson John Cadbury John Lawson Johnston John Tradescant Joseph Campbell Josephine Garis Cochrane Julia Child La Maison Dorée La Varenne Laurie Colwin Louis Eustache Ude Previous | Next | Raymond Calvel© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedRaymond Calvel was one of the 20th century French leading authorities on bread. Julia Child referred to Calvel as her first breadmaking teacher. Her husband Paul had been trying to make French bread to help Julia, but then gave up and pointed Julia at Calvel, whom he'd run across references to. Julia tracked him down and asked him to help her figure out how to make French breads with American ingredients. He agreed. She packed up American ingredients and flew over to France with them, for her and Calvel to experiment with. She said Calvel taught her to pay attention to the noises that bread loaves make as soon as they start to cool out of the oven, as an indication of the quality of the bread. (One of the tips that he taught her, she said, was that within a few minutes of starting to cool, a soft crackling noise should come from the bread.) Calvel was a chemist by training. He took a modern approach to preserve and improve an ancient art. He advised that for the best yeast performance, the amount of salt used in a bread recipe should be 1.8 percent of the weight of the flour. He pointed out that for slow-fermenting breads (such as sourdoughs), what was important was not the quantity of gluten in a flour, but rather the quality, so that it could stand up to the long, slow rising times. Early YearsCalvel was born in the Tarn region in south-west France. In the 1930s, he apprenticed as a baker; worked in Toulouse for a while, then studied at the École des Grands Moulins de Paris. In the spring of 1935, he was offered a position at the Ecole Française de Meunerie in Paris, renamed in 1971 to ENSMIC (École Nationale Supérieure de Meunerie et des Industries Céréalières.) He accepted, and started working there in 1936.A prisoner during World War II, he was sent to a small village to cook bread, but at the start of 1943, he managed to escape. Chronology of his Career
Calvel also published a great deal of articles in many journals and magazines
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