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Pompe à l’huile (Olive oil brioche)
This delicious French bread is part of a Christmas tradition of 13 desserts in Provence, and it tastes like my idea of the perfect donut. It’s airy and subtly sweet with citrus and anise aromatics. Pompe à l’huile is actually a sort of brioche-fougasse hybrid that dates back to at least the 1600s. Pompe (French: pump) refers to a pump of olive oil, and this bread traditionally doesn’t have butter or eggs in it.
The cuts made in the dough before the final proof make it a lovely pull-apart dessert or breakfast bread to share while warm, though it also keeps well wrapped in plastic and softened in the microwave for 10-15 seconds just before eating.
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Tender crumb with flecks of orange zest
Pompe à l’huile can be plain, allowing the fruity flavors of a good olive oil to come through, or as in the recipe below, flavored with orange blossom water, orange zest and juice, and ground anise. The final sprinkling of powdered sugar on the bread is optional.
Mixing the zest, ground anise, oil, water, orange blossom water, sugar, and salt
Leavening and Olive Oils
I made yeast and sourdough versions of this recipe, testing each leavening type a couple of times to iron out measurements and methods. Please keep in mind that your kitchen temperatures, and yeast or starter liveliness may make your rise times different from mine. See the note on temperature below, and look to the gallery following the recipe for before and after photos that show target fermentation and dough expansion.
The recipes I studied used a yeast poolish, like this Saveur recipe, or they used a combination of instant yeast and stiff sourdough starter, presumably for flavoring, and perhaps for a fermentation boost, like this recipe video from Ecole Internationale de Boulangerie. I learned about the history of this bread from baking-history.com and that recipe also used instant yeast and a stiff starter.
1 1/2 hour to reach this fully proofed state for the instant yeast version
My own instant yeast version doesn’t have a preferment and actually uses a lot of yeast, yet I found the fermentation to be slow enough to develop good flavors and gluten strength in the dough. Initially, I made this dough with a mix of a light olive oil and an extra virgin olive oil with a very high polyphenol level (dark green and bite-y in flavor, antioxidant properties). That dough’s fermentation was comparable in length to what I would expect from sourdough, with more than 7 hours at room temperature. I did a little science reading to investigate this, and I suspect that the polyphenols slowed the fermentation. This “antioxidant” bread was quite delicious, but for a second test bake, I used only light olive oil to get a faster rising time, a smidge longer than a typical yeast leavened challah, which has both oil and eggs.
First batch with potent olive oil, quite delicious
Based on those experiences, I built a very large stiff levain for the sourdough version of this recipe. 250g firm sourdough starter for only 350g flour. Note that if you look closely at my math, there is 10 grams more total flour in the sourdough version of this recipe. This was to make the dough have a similar feel to the yeast version. Baking involves both calculations and sensory adjustments. The sourdough breads came out less sweet, but delicious nonetheless.
I started my first test batch in the early afternoon and needed to refrigerate it overnight when it wasn’t ready at a reasonable time. This resulted in increased acidity in the dough and minimal Maillard reaction. For the second batch, I grew the levain overnight, mixed the dough in the morning, and was able to bake on the same day. That faster sourdough process indeed resulted in a less sour bread, but with the scrumptious added flavors from lacto fermentation.
Sourdough version
I give instructions on how to build a stiff levain in the recipe below. However, you can arrive at the 250g levain in a different manner if you prefer. To not recalculate the water and flour amounts of the recipe, aim to have 160g flour and 90g water in your final build, about 56% hydration. If you want to experiment and use 250g of a typical 100% hydration starter, simply use 375g flour (500-125) and 45g water (170-125) in the final dough. I plan to try this some day and report on how it turns out.
Temperature
Both of my sourdough test bakes began fermenting at warm temperatures, in the low 80s, on the Raisenne in one case and in the oven with the light on in the other case. After hearing reports from a few bakers that their sourdough doughs did not rise at all, despite their use of lively starter, I would urge anyone making sourdough version of the recipe to keep the dough warm at least until the fermentation takes off. As I mentioned above, I did retard one of the sourdough doughs, but well after it had started expanding.
Shape and Baking
Based on my research, pompe à l’huile usually have four or six cuts. I found that a metal spatula worked perfectly for cutting the dough, but in many videos, people used a wooden tool, or when the rounds are large, their bench knife.
Also, some bakers make a circle in the center of the dough with a small glass as in this video from ProvenceTV.fr. The dough is proofed on round pizza pans covered in aluminum foil in that video, but I used one large baking sheet with parchment paper. With my final batch of sourdough leavened pompe à l’huile dough, I actually decided to explore some different shapes.
“Donuts” cut out from the rolled out dough with a pint glass, and a braid made with scraps.
Substitutions
The recipe below lists “the zest of a medium orange,” but if you have mandarins or tangerines, that’s fine too. I used two mandarins for each batch of dough. Also, if you don’t have orange blossom water, you can use additional fresh orange juice or 2-3 drops of orange extract in a tablespoon of water.
My ground anise was milled fresh in my Mockmill. Using whole anise seeds or skipping the anise are also options.
Pompe à l'huile (Olive oil brioche)
Pompe à l'huile is a traditional Christmas dessert from Provence, France. It's an olive oil bread that's subtly sweet, very soft, and tantalizingly aromatic with orange and anise. The bread is made in a pull-apart style that's perfect for sharing and savoring warm from the oven.
Ingredients
Yeast Version
Sourdough Version
Stiff Levain (250g, 56% hydration)
Final Dough
Optional
Instructions
Both Recipes
Shopping List
Pompe à l’huile (Olive oil brioche)