Sourdough Rye with Caraway Seeds
- 2 cups (18 ounces) rye sourdough starter, recipe follows
- 3 cups spring water
- 1 3/4 cups (9 ounces) rye flour
- 1 3/4 cups (9 ounces) whole wheat flour
- 1 (3/4 ounce) tablespoon fine sea salt
- 1/4 cup (1 ounce) caraway seeds
- 4 to 5 cups (20 to 25 ounces) 20 percent bran wheat flour
- 1 cup (9-ounces) ripe rye chef, at room temperature
- 1 cup (5-ounces) rye flour, preferably medium ground
- 1/2 cup (4 fluid ounces) spring water
- Combine the starter and water in a 6-quart bowl.
- Break up the starter well with a wooden spoon and stir until it loosens and the mixture is slightly frothy.
- Add the rye flour and stir until well combined.
- Add the whole wheat flour, salt, caraway seeds, and just enough of the bran flour to make a thick mass that is difficult to stir.
- Turn out onto a well-floured surface and knead, adding remaining flour when needed, until dough is soft and smooth, 15 to 17 minutes, or make in a heavy-duty mixer.
- All finished rye doughs will remain slightly sticky.
- Be cautious about adding too much flour when kneading.
- The dough is ready when a little pulled from the mass springs back quickly.
- Shape the dough into a ball and let it rest on a lightly floured surface while you scrape, clean, and lightly oil the large bowl.
- Place the dough in the bowl and turn once to coat with oil.
- Take the dough's temperature (ideal temperature is 78 degrees).
- Cover with a clean damp towel or plastic wrap and place in a moderately warm (74 to 80 degrees) draft free place until doubled in volume.
- Deflate the dough by pushing down in the center and pulling up on the sides.
- Transfer the dough to a lightly floured work surface and knead briefly.
- Cut into 2 equal pieces.
- Flatten each with the heel of your hand.
- Shape each piece into a 12-inch log for long loaves.
- Using 2 well-floured towels and wood blocks, make a couche* in a moderately warm draft-free place.
- Place the loaves seam side up the couche.
- Cover with a clean damp towel or plastic wrap and let proof until almost doubled in volume, or until a slight indentation remains when the dough is pressed with the fingertip.
- Preheat the oven and baking stone on the center rack of the oven to 450 degrees, 45 minutes to 1 hour before baking.
- The oven rack must be in the center of the oven.
- If it is in the lower 1/3 of the oven the bottom of the breads may burn, and if it is in the upper 1/3, the top crusts may burn.
- Gently slip the loaves from the couche onto a well-floured peel so that they are right side up.
- Using a very sharp, serrated knife or a single-edged razor blade, score the loaves by making quick shallow cuts 1/4 to 1/2-inch deep along the surface.
- Using the peel, slide the loaves onto the hearth.
- Quickly spray the inner walls and floor of the oven with cold water from a spritzer bottle.
- If there's an electric light bulb in the oven, avoid spraying it directly?it may burst.
- Spray for several seconds until steam has filled the oven.
- Quickly close the door to trap the steam and bake 3 minutes.
- Spray again in the same way, closing the door immediately so that steam doesn't escape.
- Bake until loaves begin to color, about 20 minutes.
- Reduce the heat to 375 degrees and bake until loaves are a rich caramel color and the crusts are firm, another 15 to 20 minutes.
- To test the loaves for doneness, remove and hold the loaves upside down.
- Strike the bottoms firmly with your finger.
- If the sound is hollow, the breads are done.
- If it doesn't sound hollow, bake 5 minutes longer.
- Cool completely on wire racks.
- Note: If the dough temperature is higher than 78 degrees, put it in a cooler than (78 degree) place like the refrigerator, until the dough cools to 78 degrees.
- If it is lower than 78 degrees, put in it a warmer than 78 degree place until the dough warms to 78 degrees.
- The point is to try to keep the dough at 78 degrees during its fermentation.
- If you do have to move the dough, be gentle and don't jostle it, or the dough may deflate.
- *Couche?French for "couch" or "resting place".
- This is a simple holding device you make yourself for proofing long loaves like logs, torpedo shapes, and baguettes.
- Using well-floured canvas or linen towels create folds to separate loaves while hold them securely next to each other during proofing.
- Use a length of fabric at least a yard long.
- Place 12 to 16-inch wooden blocks cut from 2 by 4's at either long end to contain the loaves.
- Or substitute large books to contain the loaves.
- Place the chef in a tall 2 to 3-quart flat bottomed, round, clear plastic container with a tight fitting lid.
- Add the rye flour and spring water, and stir vigorously with a wooden spoon until the mixture becomes thick and pasty.
- Mark the level of the mixture on the side of the container with a black marking pen.
- Scrape down, cover tightly, and let stand in a moderately warm (74 to 80 degree) draft-free place until almost doubled in volume, 8 to 10 hours.
- The mixture will look light and spongy.
- You can observe the level of sourdough by using the black mark on the side of the container as an indicator.
- Do not let the sourdough ferment for longer than 10 hours, or the yeast may exhaust itself and the dough may not rise properly.
- The ripe chef has now produced 18 ounces of ripe sourdough, which you can use in any rye sourdough recipe.
- The Rye Chef: Day 1 1/2 cup (4 fluid ounces) spring water 2/3 cup (3 ounces) organic stone-ground rye flour, preferably medium ground
- In a tall 2 to 3-quart clear plastic container with a tight-fitting lid, stir together the water and flour.
- Scrape down the sides of the container with a rubber spatula.
- Cover tightly and put in moderate (74 to 80 degree) place for 24 hours.
- Day 2 1/2 cup (4 fluid ounces) spring water 2/3 cup (3 ounces) organic stone-ground rye flour, preferably medium ground
- Open the container.
- The young chef will probably show few signs of activity; the mixture will look like cardboard pulp.
- Don't worry!
- It's still a young chef.
- It will, however, have a sweet and musty smell and the beginnings of a tangy taste.
- Continue building the chef by adding the water and rye flour.
- Stir vigorously to bring fresh oxygen into the chef and distribute the fresh flour and water.
- Scrape down the sides, cover tightly and put in a moderate (74 to 80 degrees) place for another 24 hours.
- Day 3 1/2 cup (4 fluid ounces) spring water 2/3 cup (3 ounces) organic stone-ground rye flour, preferably medium ground
- The chef should have expanded noticeably.
- There should be bubbles on the surface.
- Taste it; it will have a pronounced sour taste and smell.
- Hold the container up and observe the large and small holes formed beneath the surface.
- Stir it with a wooden spoon; you should hear the faint crackle of gas bubbles popping.
- The chef is very much alive and maturing.
- Insert the spoon again and lift it up slowly.
- Short glutinous strands will stick to the spoon.
- Once again, nourish the chef by vigorously stirring in another addition of the spring water and rye flour.
- Scrape down the sides, cover tightly again, and return to its moderate-temperature place.
- Let stand for another 24 hours.
- Day 4 1/2 cup (4 fluid ounces) spring water 2/3 cup (3 ounces) organic stone-ground rye flour, preferably medium ground
- The chef is almost mature and ripe.
- It has expanded a great deal; maybe almost doubled in volume from Day 3, and it is very lively with bubbles and a well-developed cellular structure.
- You will see a honeycomb of large and small holes through the clear plastic container.
- Taste and smell the chef; it is pungent and unmistakably tangy, sour but not bitter.
- Nourish again with the last addition of spring water and rye flour, stirring vigorously.
- Using a black marker pen, mark the level of the chef on the side of the clear plastic container.
- Scrape down the sides, cover tightly, and let stand again in the same place for only 8 hours.
- If your chef was ripe, the mixture should almost double in volume.
- You can check its growth by comparing the height of the risen chef against the mark you made on the side of the container before the last rising.
- The chef is now ready to use to create your sourdough starter.
- If you are not going to make the starter immediately, refrigerate the chef in its tightly covered container for up to 3 days.
starter, spring water, flour, whole wheat flour, salt, caraway seeds, bran wheat flour, rye chef, rye flour, spring water
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/sourdough-rye-with-caraway-seeds-recipe.html (may not work)