sandwich de pain de lionel poilâne

Lionel Poilâne’s Bread Sandwich

My father was a playful man, so when he first described his bread sandwich—a piece of thin bread, buttered and toasted, sandwiched between two buttered slices of untoasted bread—I thought he was joking. In fact, it was one of his favorite dishes. Beyond its deliciousness, my father wanted to illustrate the idea that bread is a fully self-sufficient food, in no need of a separate filling.

Originally he made his with three slices of our Poilâne-Style Sourdough. I prefer our Rye Bread, either plain or currant-studded as the center slice. Either way, the contrast between the soft and crispy bread and the salted and unsalted butter is memorable. Make sure to use the best butter you can find—it makes all the difference.

Instructions

Level

Easy

Quantity

Makes 1 sandwich

Ingredients

Two ½-inch (1.2-cm)-thick slices Poilâne-Style Sourdough or other sourdough
1½ tablespoons (¾ ounce; 21 g) unsalted butter, softened
One ¼-inch (0.6-cm)-thick slice Rye Bread, Rye Loaf with Currants, or other rye bread
1½ tablespoons (¾ ounce; 21 g) salted butter, preferably cultured, softened

01

Use a butter knife or small spatula to spread one side of each slice of sourdough with the unsalted butter.

02

Toast the slice of rye until crisp and golden and butter it on both sides with the salted butter. Sandwich the toasted bread between the untoasted slices, buttered sides in, and eat right away.