Classroom lesson 路 Food馃嚝馃嚪 France

The French baguette

A loaf so important it is protected by law

A basket of fresh baguettes in a French bakery

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

A baguette is a long, thin loaf of bread with a crunchy golden crust and a soft fluffy inside. People in France eat about 10 billion of them every year - that's nearly 30 million baguettes a day, all over the country.

Tell me more

A real French baguette is made from only four things: flour, water, salt and yeast. That's it. In France, a law says that if a bakery wants to call its bread a 'traditional baguette' (baguette de tradition), it must use only these ingredients - no shortcuts, no extras.

A baguette is around 65 centimetres long - longer than your arm. It is sold the same day it is baked, because it goes hard quite fast. Many French people pop into a bakery on the way home to pick one up fresh, and it is normal to nibble the end of it on the walk home.

The shape took off in Paris in the 1920s, when a new law said bakers were not allowed to start work before 4 a.m. The long thin shape baked much faster than a round loaf, so they could still have bread ready for breakfast time. Necessity invented the baguette.

In 2022, the French baguette was added to a special UNESCO list of things that are part of the world's 'living culture' - things people still do, not just buildings or artefacts. The baguette joined the same list as Korean kimchi-making and Belgian beer culture.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might a country want to protect its everyday food with a law?
  2. 02What is a food that feels like home to your family? Where did it come from?
  3. 03Bread is eaten almost everywhere on Earth. Why do you think this one food shows up in so many different cultures?
Try this

Classroom activity

As a class, make a 'bread map' of the world. Each pupil draws a different kind of bread on a card - chapati, tortilla, pita, naan, sourdough, baguette, bagel, brioche, focaccia - and pins it to the country where it is most often eaten. How many breads can you find?

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