Baking bread at the farmhouse

A lengthy process in the 1930s and 40s.

By BAYERN TOURISMUS Marketing GmbH

Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten in the district of Upper Bavaria

Baking House from Arget (vor 1800, mehrmals verändert)Original Source: Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten

The bakehouse from Arget at Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten

Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten offers regular demonstrations showing how bread used to be made in farmhouses (Upper Bavaria, district of Großweil). The fragrant. wood-fired bread can be purchased directly in the museum.   

Baking bread played an important role in ensuring that peasants could be self-sufficient. This is why the bakehouse was one of the most common outbuildings on a farm. It was usually freestanding and set slightly apart from the main house because of the risk of fire.

Baking bread: Oven set up with firewoodOriginal Source: Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten

The Garner-Hof in Arget

This was also the case with the Garner-Hof in Arget. The bakehouse, which now stands at Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten, was part of this farm. It was built before 1800, but has changed a lot over the course of time.

Baking bread: Leaking smoke at the baking houseOriginal Source: Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten

Life at Garner-Hof farm

Arget is a small village near Munich. Up to 17 people lived on the farm in the 1930s: The farmer and his wife, their four daughters, four sons, and around five to seven maids and farmhands. The women baked around 20 loaves of bread every 10 to 14 days.

At the age of 20, the farmer's daughter, Elisabeth Schapperer (* 1916), started helping to bake bread. She regularly took charge of this task with her sister Barbara until the end of the 1940s. In the 1980s, as the museum was dismantling the building and rebuilding it in Glentleiten, she explained what a day of baking looked like:

Baking bread: Mixing the bread starter with the remaining flour (1985)Original Source: Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten

Kneading is the order of the day!

To start, a "Dampferl" made the evening before from sourdough, yeast, and milk is mixed with part of the flour. Early in the morning on baking day, she mixed the pre-ferment with the remaining ingredients and kneaded the dough for the first time, then again for the second time two hours later.

A baking trough was usually used to mix the ingredients with the pre-ferment and to knead the dough for the first time.

Baking bread: Oven fireOriginal Source: Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten

Don't forget to pre-heat the oven!

In the late morning, Barbara and Elisabeth would heat the baking oven using dry spruce wood, and around an hour later the oven would be hot enough.

Baking bread: Kneading the dough and shaping loavesOriginal Source: Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten

Knead again...

While the oven warmed up, the dough had to be kneaded one last time.

Baking bread: Scoring the loaves (1985)Original Source: Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten

What happens in between kneading and baking?

Then the sisters would shape the bread loaves, lay them on a rolling board and coat them with water. To make the loaves rise better, they placed them on their sides and scored them with forks.

Baking bread: Spreading out the embers with the ovenrake ("scraper")Original Source: Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten

And now into the oven!

By midday the fire had burnt out. The embers were initially spread across the oven and then cleaned out shortly after using a "scraper". Then the sisters would clean the oven using a damp cloth.

Baking bread: Sliding the bread loaves into the ovenOriginal Source: Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten

Insertion?!

Now the loaves would finally be ready for "inserting". This is when they would be lifted from the rolling board one by one and placed in the oven. They would stay there for one and a half to two hours.

Baking bread: Taking out the ready baked loaves of breadOriginal Source: Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten

Get me out of here!

The baked bread is placed on the rolling board to cool. By the early afternoon, the loaves could be placed on an airy rack in the pantry.

Credits: Story

Freilichtmuseum Glentleiten in the district of Upper Bavaria

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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