EASY RYE BREAD

facebook share image   twitter share image   pinterest share image   E-Mail share image



Easy Rye Bread image

I had a request to make "real" Jewish Rye Bread like we used to get on Long Island, NY. After checking out several recipes, I decided to use the method I was already familiar with (see Easy Crusty Bread Roll's) to make two large loaves of rye bread. They turned out delicious! They are easy to make because you measure out all the ingredients for the starter and the final dough at the same time. I find it easiest to weigh out my ingredients on a kitchen scale, directly into my mixing bowl. That is why I have given the ingredients in grams. I have also converted the measurements to cups, however, the recipe works best if measured on a scale. Read more: http://www.food.com/recipe/easy-crusty-bread-roll-rsquo-s-447320#ixzz1CpNew1FJ

Provided by lwunder

Categories     Breads

Time 6h55m

Yield 2 loaves

Number Of Ingredients 11

235 g bread flour (approx. 2 cups, 1.85 cups exactly)
200 g rye flour (2 cups)
5 g yeast, Active dry (1 tsp.)
40 g sugar (1/3 cup)
10 g malt drink powder (1 T, non-diastatic, source King Arthur Flour, Baker's Catalog)
725 g water (725 ml, 3 cups)
700 g bread flour (5.5 cups)
5 g yeast, Active dry (1 tsp.)
20 g salt, Kosher (1 T plus 1 tsp.)
30 g caraway seeds (4 T)
15 g vegetable oil (15 ml, 1 T)

Steps:

  • Weigh out ingredients for the starter in your mixing bowl and whisk together. They should be the consistency of pancake batter.
  • Measure out the remaining bread flour into the mixing bowl with starter (on top of starter).
  • Make two wells in the dry bread flour, add the salt and caraway seeds in one, the yeast in the other.
  • Place mixing bowl on its stand, cover (loosely with plastic wrap or a lid), and let ferment for 1-4 hours. The yeast will become active during this time.
  • Measure out vegetable oil and reserve until ready for use.
  • After the preliminary ferment, add oil to bowl and mix with a dough hook until a smooth, elastic dough ball is formed, about 5 minutes.
  • Turn the dough out onto a greased countertop (olive oil or Pam Spray works well).
  • Knead into a ball (1 minute) and place into a dough riser lightly coated with oil. Spray top of dough with oil, cover and let rise for 2 hours or until doubled in size*.
  • Preheat oven with a pizza stone to 450°F Be sure that the stone and a cookie sheet (bottom shelf) are in the oven when you start pre-heating it.
  • Turn bread dough out onto a lightly floured countertop and divide into two pieces.
  • Form loaves and place them on a sheet of parchment paper that is roughly the same size as your pizza stone.
  • Cover** and let rise for 45-60 minutes.
  • After rising, slash the tops of the loaves using a serrated knife.
  • Place the rolls in the oven using a pizza peel.*** At the same time, put a cup of ice on the cookie sheet to humidify your oven.
  • Bake at 450 F for 15 minutes. Reduce heat to 400 F and continue baking for another 40 minutes. If your oven has a convection bake setting, switch to convection for the last 10 minute of baking.
  • Cool on wire racks and enjoy!
  • *If you are not ready to form the loaves after the first rise, you can punch the dough down and let it rise again until doubled in size. **I use a plastic storage container that is designed to store things under my bed. It is the perfect size and keeps my dough safe from cats, dogs and other critters. ***An inverted cookie tray works in a pinch. ****If smaller loaves are desired, divide dough into four pieces and reduce baking time by 10 minutes.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 2707, Fat 17.6, SaturatedFat 2.3, Cholesterol 0.1, Sodium 3905.7, Carbohydrate 555.3, Fiber 34.9, Sugar 26.1, Protein 76.5

There are no comments yet!