Following up on recent post, I made another batch of poolish baguettes, as well as sourdough batards with a Jeffrey Hamelman stiff levain converted to a liquid levain. The internal structure of the baguettes was amazing, and they tasted great. I brought some to a French woman who loved them, but remarked that the bread was not as white as she expected. I explained why this was a good thing (autolyse, reduced mix/bleaching).
But here's the question. Although I have never been great at scoring, it seems like the scoring on my revised baguettes is worse than with the non-autolyse/more mixing approach. You can only see a hint of it. You will notice that the scoring on the batard is good (at least I think so), and I used the same motion. The baguette dough has higher hydration and is noticeably more pillow-like (reminding me of ciabatta). So do I need to compensate somehow, or do I just suck?
The scores achieved their purpose: your bread did not burst at some unwanted area. The scores are meant to allow expansion during baking. In some circles we grow rather fond of the big ears and nice bloom. I use an 85% hydration white sourdough that almost never produces an ear. So in short, lack of an ear is definitely not a flaw.
Thanks you so much for the kinds words. I feel better.
I love the scores on the batard. I am no expert, but on the Baguette, I don't know that there is much wrong with the scoring, but either the shaping or proofing wasn't optimal, because it does not seem like you got a lot of oven spring - especially on the top baguette. OTOH, there is a lot of talk here about scoring, and ears, yet I have never heard anyone say " Well, that baguette was great, it didn't taste too good, but it was perfectly scored" To me taste is the only concern - if it looks pretty, that is a plus, but shouldn't be the focus.
I agree that shaping is a work in progress, and I will try the scoring that la baguette suggested. It is exactly what we learned in class on full size baguettes, and I was compensating for the fact that I am making half size baguettes in my home oven. But really, there is no reason I have to change anything.