Using a couche at home

Toast

Hello,

I used to work in a bakery where most of the bread proofed on couches. The couches would line wooden boards and go on racks.

I am thinking to buy a couche or two for at home use, but my question is what would I use in replace of the board? Does a sheet pan work or is there another way?

Thanks in advance!

I just use a 1/2 sheet pan. Only complaint is standard couche extends well beyond pan edges in all directions, so some unavoidable flour mess. Not sure how bakeries handle this, but I generally shake excess flour off (in garden) after each use and hang to air dry for at least 24 hours. Drying avoids moldy couche since I store the floury beast in a ziplock.

Cheers,

Phil

Provided I have floured the couche well—as I learned to do with a pastry brush back in the bad old days—I can generally move an ~800 g batard from couche to peel with hands or with the wine crate board I use as a transfer peel. Then there’s always the roll it from couche to peel method which I find awkward, especially if I am proofing multiple pieces on the couche. In truth, I have found that I get such great oven spring from 70-80% hydration doughs based roughly on dmsnyder’s San Joaquin Sourdough, that I can reduce handling by doing final proof on semolina-sprinkled parchment directly on the  peel. I should probably also mention that my doughs tend to include a poolish (~25% of total flour) in addition to levain (~10%of total flour) wiith whole grain flours (5-20% of total flour).

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TMB Baking in South San Francisco used to sell proofing boards. That's where I bought mine. I generally use just one at a time, as a home baker. No need (or room) for a speed rack. 

David