The Least Intimidating bakery in the village has closed for good so now Iβve got to go to the Intimidating Bakery, itβs awful. If you donβt have a PhD in being French I donβt recommend going to that bakery, hereβs the humiliating account of the 3 times Iβve visited it so far:
the first time I went in there I pointed at one of those extra-skinny baguettes and said βa flute, pleaseβ feeling pretty sure of myself, and the baker said ββ¦ thatβs a ficelleβ (you idiot) (was implied) βa flute is twice as large as a baguette.β
Thatβs insane, first of all, a flute is a skinny instrument. Call your fat baguette a bassoon, ladyβI made some timid remark about how it would make more sense for a flute to be a skinny bread and the baker said, βIn Paris it is. I thought you were from the South?β
oh, that hurt
I guess Iβm from the part of the South thatβs so close to Italy the breadβs waist size matters less than whether itβs got olives in it, but I left the bakery having an existential crisis over whether living in Paris had made me forget my roots
the Least Intimidating Bakery just had normal baguettes vs. seedy baguettes vs. horny baguettes (easy mode, some have seeds, some have horns), while the new bakery has breads that are only different on a molecular levelβthereβs a good old loaf and then another, identical loaf called a bastard? google told me a bastard is βhalfway between a baguette and a breadβ but denouncing them like βthose are not regulation-sized bastardsβ would get me banned from the bakery for life
on my 2nd visit (while I stood in line discreetly googling baguette terminology) there was an English tourist who asked for a baguette while pointing at what was either a rustique or a sesame and I felt a bit worried for them, but the baker just clarified βthis one?β to waive any responsibility if they found out later it wasnβt a classic baguette, then handed them the bread without educating them in a judgmental tone and I felt envious
I know itβs because she thinks the English are beyond saving but still it made me want to come back with a fake moustache and an English accent so I wouldnβt be expected to play bakery on expert mode just because Iβm French. I asked for a pastry this time and the baker asked βno bread with that?β which felt cruel, like she wanted me to sprinkle myself with ashes and admit out loud that my level of bread proficiency isnβt as advanced as I once believed it was
The third time I went, I had lost all self-confidence and I hesitantly pointed at a bread and said βIβd like this, uhβwhat is it called?β and the baker looked at me in disbelief and said βThatβs a baguette.β
God.
for the record, if that stupid bread had been flanked by a skinny bread (ficelle) and a fat one (flute) then yeah of course I would have known to call it a baguette, but in the absence of reference points I now felt lost and scared of being called a Parisian again
itβs hard to express the depth of my suffering so Iβll just let the facts speak for themselves: this morning a French person (me) stood in a French bakery in France surrounded by French people and pointed at a baguette and said βwhat is this calledβ















