Rye Sourdough Starter And Bread Recipes

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

RUSTIC RYE SOURDOUGH BREAD



Rustic Rye Sourdough Bread image

A light rye sourdough bread with a soft crumb, that you can make at home with active sourdough starter.

Provided by Amanda Paa

Categories     Sourdough

Time 10h55m

Number Of Ingredients 7

55 grams active sourdough starter
280 grams slightly warmer than room temperature water
15 grams honey
100 grams fine rye flour
260 grams bread flour
40 grams whole wheat flour
7 grams salt

Steps:

  • Before beginning, it will be helpful to watch this SHORT VIDEO to see me make this bread, noticing that the dough will be stickier than normal because of the rye flour, but it will come together - you just have to trust!
  • Add starter, water, and honey to a bowl. Whisk thoroughly until combined, with a fork. Add flours, and mix together first with the fork to start to incorporate, then with your hands until a shaggy dough is formed, and the bits of flour left just disappear. Sprinkle the salt on top and do not mix in, just leave it on top. Cover with a damp cloth.
  • Autolyse: let dough sit for one hour, covered and undisturbed.
  • Bulk ferment: Now you will knead the salt that is sitting on top, into the dough for about 1 min 15 seconds. There is no precise way to do this, just think of working the dough through your hands and up against the bowl, push and pull. You will start to feel the dough relax a bit around 1 minute. Continue for about 15 or 30 seconds more. Then leave the dough alone, covered, for 30 minutes. This counts as what would be your first set of stretch and folds.
  • After those 30 minutes pass, perform a set of stretch and folds. Repeat 2 more times.
  • Now you will let sit, undisturbed and covered with a damp cloth, for about 7ish hours at 70 degrees F. If the temperature in your home is above 70, this will take less time, vice versa. You will know it is finished with its bulk ferment when the dough has risen about double, is smooth and puffy on top, with a few bubbles. It will not be as jiggly as some sourdough you've made before.
  • At this point, lightly dust your work surface with flour. Put dough onto the work surface, and pre-shape. This video will show you what that means. Let sit for 15 minutes on your work surface.
  • Then shape your dough, using this method as a guide.
  • Place dough into your flour dusted banneton, (or flour dusted linen lined banneton) seam side up. (Optional, you can wait 15 minutes after placing it in banneton, and pinch the perimeters of the dough into the center to hold the shape even more, called stitching.) The dough will now go through its final rise. You can do this on the counter, which will take about 2 hours at 70 degrees F for the dough to puff up and be jiggly. It will not double. OR you can do the final rise overnight in the refrigerator, with the banneton covered in a plastic bag or with a very damp cloth. You need this for holding moisture in.
  • Time to bake. Preheat your oven to 500 degrees F, with your dutch oven preheating inside the oven. When the oven is preheated, flip your dough out gently onto parchment paper and score your dough. If you did the final rise in the refrigerator, take it straight from fridge to scoring. You should score it cold, and DO NOT need to let it come to room temp.
  • Then put dough into the dutch oven on the parchment, and put cover on. Turn oven down to 450 degrees F and slide dutch oven in. Bake for 20 minutes, then remove cover.
  • Turn heat down to 430 degrees F, and bake for 25 more minutes, until crust is golden brown and crackly. Remove from oven, and remove bread from dutch oven and place onto a cooling rack.
  • Wait AT LEAST one hour to cool otherwise, the interior will be gummy.

SOURDOUGH STARTER AND SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD



Sourdough Starter and Sourdough Rye Bread image

A very satisfying and tasty country bread from Eastern Europe, this is not difficult to make. The starter has to be left to ferment for a couple of days, so it does require a little advance planning. This makes 2 large loaves. Enjoy! Adapted from Classic Home Cooking. Prep time does not include time to make the starter or sponge, but does include rising time.

Provided by Sharon123

Categories     Sourdough Breads

Time 3h20m

Yield 2 large loaves

Number Of Ingredients 12

2 cups unbleached white flour
1 teaspoon fast-rising active dry yeast
1 cup lukewarm water
1 3/4 cups rye flour
1 cup lukewarm water
12 cups unbleached white flour, plus extra for sprinkling (may replace 2-4 cups of the white flour with whole wheat)
1/4 ounce fast-rising active dry yeast
1 cup lukewarm water
3 tablespoons caraway seeds (optional)
1 tablespoon salt
sunflower oil, for greasing (or corn oil)
cornmeal, for sprinkling

Steps:

  • Make the starter:.
  • Put the flour into a large bowl and stir in yeast. Make a well, pour in the water and mix.
  • Cover tightly and leave at room temperature for 2 days. Or you could leave the starter in the refrigerator for up to 1 week.
  • Make the sponge:.
  • Put the rye flour into a large bowl, add 2 cups of sourdough starter and the water, and stir to mix. Cover tightly and leave at room temperature for 8 hours or chill in the fridge for up to 2 days.
  • Make the bread:.
  • Put the flour into a bowl, add the sponge mixture , yeast, measured water, caraway seeds(if using), and salt, and mix to a soft and slightly sticky dough.
  • Turn the dough into a large ungreased bowl, sprinkle the top with flour, cover loosely with oiled plastic wrap. Leave in a warm place to rise for about 2 hours, until doubled in size.
  • Lightly sprinkle 2 baking sheets with cornmeal. Turn out the dough onto a lightly floured work surface and punch down with your fist. Knead for 3-4 minutes, until smooth and elastic. Halve the dough and form each half into a round. Score the tops with a sharp knife.
  • Place on the baking sheets, cover loosely with oiled plastic wrap, and leave in a warm place to rise for 45 minutes or until they have doubled in size.
  • Place loaves in a 425*F. oven. Fill a roasting pan with boiling water and place at the bottom of the oven. Bake the loaves for about 35 minutes, until they are lightly browned. Tap the bottoms to see if the loaves are cooked; they should sound hollow. Leave to cool on wire racks. Enjoy!

Nutrition Facts : Calories 3517.3, Fat 10.4, SaturatedFat 1.6, Sodium 3518.3, Carbohydrate 739, Fiber 37.8, Sugar 3.3, Protein 100.9

RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER AND BREAD



Rye Sourdough Starter and Bread image

Before going gluten free, I used to make this rye bread as a staple. After some failures I succeeded in making the perfect starter which lasted a very long time and got better every time I used it. The secret of sourdough is that it makes the bread more storable. Bread made with sourdough will not become stale for quite a long time, and due to different fermentation many micronutrients can be better resorbed than from yeast bread. The quality of a sourdough depends on the quality of the grain and the mixture of yeasts and bacteria present in the flour. If the rye flour you use is neither chemically treated so that the natural cultures are killed nor contaminated with wrong bacteria, yeasts or mold, you will have a starter which keeps forever when properly kept and fed. The texture of the starter should be creamy, and the smell slightly sour, but not stinging the nose like vinegar. If it smells like vinegar, it contains too much acetic acid which is not desireable. The ration lactic acid - acetic acid should be about 80 to 20. That makes a delicate sour smell. If it smells rotten or looks reddish, it is rotten and you have to discard it.

Provided by Mia in Germany

Categories     Breads

Time P3DT1h

Yield 1 loaf, 1 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 9

100 g whole rye flour, finely ground
100 ml lukewarm water
100 g whole rye flour, finely ground
100 ml lukewarm water
800 g whole rye flour, finely ground
300 g sourdough starter
450 ml lukewarm water
2 teaspoons salt
flour, for dusting

Steps:

  • Starter:.
  • Day 1: In a 1 quart jar with a lid mix 100 g rye flour with 100 ml lukewarm water. Stir well to completely mix. Don't mind if it seems not to be enough water and the dough is sticky. Just mix well to have a homogenous dough.
  • Close the lid of the jar loosely and let stand for 24 hours at room temperature, maybe not in the coolest room of the house --.
  • Day 2: Stir the starter well, close the lid again and let stand for another 24 hours.
  • Day 3: Stir in 100 g finely ground whole rye flour and 100 ml lukewarm water, cover again and let stand for another 24 hours.
  • Open the jar and check the smell: DON'T stick your nose into the jar! I did that with my first attempt and nearly burnt off my mucosa with the cloud of acetic acid that evaporated from the vinegar starter I produced -- So, open the jar and carefully check the smell. If it doesn't sting but smell pleasantly sour, proceed. The colour of the starter should be greyish brown.
  • Bread:.
  • Place the flour in a large bowl, make a well and fill the sourdough starter into the well. Hold back about 2 tablespoons of the starter, put it into a glass jar, tightly close the lid and keep the jar in the refridgerator. It will not rise while in the fridge nor produce gas, so don't be afraid of tightening the lid.
  • Mix the starter with some of the flour, then add the salt and water and knead for about 15 minutes. The dough is very heavy, so most machines give in and collaps. I always kneaded by hand on a floured surface until the dough was smooth.
  • Form a ball and dust with flour, cover and let rest for 2 hours.
  • On a dusted surface, knead lightly, form an oval loaf, cover and let rest for another hour.
  • Preheat oven to 250 degrees Celsius (220 fan assisted).
  • Place bread on a baking tray layered with nonstick parchment paper, prick bread with a fork in a regular pattern all over and brush with water.
  • Place an ovenproof bowl with hot water on the bottom of the oven, then slip the baking tray into the oven and bake for 15 minutes.
  • After 15 minutes reduce heat to 200 degrees Celsius (180 fan assisted), continue baking for 30 minutes.
  • Put off the oven after 30 minutes, but don't open yet. Let the bread rest.
  • for another 15 minutes in the hot oven.
  • Take it out and knock at the bottom of the bread. It should sound hollow.
  • Let completely cool on a wire rack.
  • You need not keep the bread in the fridge.
  • If you use the starter for the first time, it works better if you add some yeast to the bread dough because the fresh starter is not very strong.
  • The starter which you hold back will be strong enough without adding yeast if you feed it again for 3 days like described above.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 3490, Fat 15.2, SaturatedFat 1.8, Sodium 4690.5, Carbohydrate 754.3, Fiber 118, Sugar 11, Protein 108.8

SOURDOUGH RYE



Sourdough Rye image

This bread takes a bit of time, but your effort is repaid with two chewy, flavorful loaves.

Provided by JACLYN

Categories     Bread     Yeast Bread Recipes     Whole Grain Bread Recipes     Rye Bread

Time P1DT1h40m

Yield 24

Number Of Ingredients 13

1 cup sourdough starter
1 cup rye flour
½ cup bread flour
⅔ cup water
¼ cup water
1 cup rye flour
1 cup bread flour
½ tablespoon salt
1 tablespoon white sugar
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 tablespoon caraway seed
½ cup water
1 teaspoon salt

Steps:

  • The night before you want to bake the bread, feed your active sourdough starter with 1 cup rye flour, 1/2 cup bread flour, and 2/3 cup water. Mix until fully combined, cover, and let stand at room temperature overnight.
  • The next morning, mix together the expanded starter and 1/4 cup water. Stir in 1 cup rye flour, 1 cup bread flour, salt, sugar, olive oil, and caraway seeds.
  • Turn dough out onto a lightly floured surface, and knead until satiny. Place in a well oiled bowl, and turn once to oil the surface. Cover with a damp cloth. Allow to rise in a warm spot until doubled.
  • Punch down dough, and shape into loaves. Place on a greased baking sheet or in greased loaf pans. Allow to rise until doubled in bulk.
  • Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
  • Score the tops of the loaves with a serrated knife. Bake in preheated oven until deep brown and loaves sound hollow when thumped on the bottom, about 40 minutes.
  • Alternate baking method for chewier, salty crust: Bake 20 minutes at 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). In a small bowl, mix together 1/2 cup water and 1 teaspoon salt. Remove loaves from oven and brush crust with salt water. Continue baking for 25 minutes more, brushing at 10 minute intervals.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 81.1 calories, Carbohydrate 15.8 g, Cholesterol 0.1 mg, Fat 0.9 g, Fiber 1.7 g, Protein 2.4 g, SaturatedFat 0.1 g, Sodium 245.4 mg, Sugar 0.9 g

RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER



Rye sourdough starter image

Use rye flour to make an easy sourdough starter with a deep molasses flavour. Once active, you can use it to make any type of sourdough bread

Provided by Barney Desmazery

Categories     Side dish, Snack, Soup

Yield 1 LOAF (12-15 SLICES)

Number Of Ingredients 1

250g wholemeal rye flour

Steps:

  • Day 1: To begin your starter, mix 50g flour with 50g tepid water in a jar or, better still, a plastic container. Make sure all the flour is incorporated and leave, covered with a tea towel, at room temperature for 24 hrs.
  • Day 2: Mix 25g flour with 25g tepid water and stir into yesterday's mixture. Make sure all the flour is incorporated and leave, covered with a tea towel, at room temperature for 24 hrs.
  • Day 3: Today you might see a few small bubbles forming and the mixture should smell grassy and a little acidic. Mix 25g flour with 25g tepid water and stir into yesterday's mixture. Make sure all the flour is incorporated and leave, covered with a tea towel, at room temperature for 24 hrs.
  • Day 4: More bubbles should have appeared today and the mixture should smell of yeasty beer. Mix 25g flour with 25g tepid water and stir into yesterday's mixture. Make sure all the flour is incorporated and leave, covered with a tea towel, at room temperature for 24 hrs.
  • Day 5: Fermentation should have set in now and the mixture might be ready to use. If a teaspoon of the starter floats in warm water, it's ready. If not, mix 25g flour with 25g tepid water and stir into yesterday's mixture. Make sure all the flour is incorporated and leave covered, with a tea towel, at room temperature for 24 hrs.
  • Day 6: The mix should be really bubbly and be giving off a strong smell of alcohol. Test in the same way as yesterday. If it's not ready, continue mixing 25g flour with 25g tepid water into the mixture daily until it becomes active.If your jar is becoming full, spoon half the mix out of the jar and continue.You now have rye starter, which is a malty flavoured base to sourdough bread. Keep it in the fridge (it will stay dormant) and 12 hrs before you want to use it, spoon half of it off and feed it with 100g flour and 100g water. Leave it at room temperature and it should become active again. The longer the starter has been dormant, the more times it will need to be refreshed - the process of pouring off half the starter and replacing it with new flour and water - to reactivate.Use the starter to make rye sourdough bread.

RYE SOURDOUGH BREAD



Rye sourdough bread image

This basic all-rye sourdough loaf has a deep malty flavour which works well with smoked fish or cured meats. Rye has less gluten than wheat so requires a slightly different technique

Provided by Barney Desmazery

Categories     Buffet, Side dish

Yield Makes 1 loaf (cuts into 12-15 slices )

Number Of Ingredients 5

250g wholemeal rye flour
100g active rye starter (see above)
500g wholemeal rye flour , extra for dusting
10g fine salt
25g butter , softened, for the tin

Steps:

  • Day 1: To begin your starter, mix 50g of the flour with 50g tepid water in a jar or, better still, a plastic container. Make sure all the flour is incorporated and leave, covered with a tea towel, at room temperature for 24 hrs.
  • Days 2, 3, 4 & 5 : Mix 25g flour with 25g tepid water and stir into yesterday's mixture. Make sure all the flour is incorporated and leave, covered with a tea towel, at room temperature for 24 hrs.
  • Day 6: The mix should be really bubbly and giving off a strong smell of alcohol. A teaspoonful of the starter should float in warm water if ready. If not, continue adding 25g flour and 25g tepid water into the mixture daily until it becomes active.If your jar is becoming full, spoon half the mix out of the jar and continue. You now have rye starter, which is a malty flavoured base to sourdough bread. Keep it in the fridge (it will stay dormant) and 12 hrs before you want to use it, spoon half of it off and feed it with 100g flour and 100g water. Leave, covered, at room temperature.
  • Tip 100g of the starter into a bowl and add 400g of tepid water. Whisk or rub the two together with your hands, don't worry if there are a few lumps. Add the flour and bring together (with a spatula or your hand) into a thick, sticky dough, making sure all the flour is mixed in, including any dry bits on the sides of the bowl. Cover with a damp tea towel and leave at room temperature for 2 hrs.
  • Work the salt into the dough then leave, covered, for another 2 hrs.
  • Heavily butter a 900g loaf tin. Dust the work surface with more rye flour, then scrape all the dough out. Mould the dough into a block roughly the same size as the tin and sit it in the tin. Press the dough down so it fills it completely and scatter the top generously with more flour. Leave the loaf out, uncovered, for 2 hrs until it's risen by about a quarter and gone craggy on the top, or leave it in the fridge, uncovered, overnight. This will give it an even deeper flavour.
  • Heat the oven to 230/210C fan/gas 8 with a shelf in the middle of the oven and a shelf below with a roasting tray on it. Put the loaf on the middle tray and carefully pour a small glass of water into the roasting tray. Cook for 50-55 mins until hollow sounding when tapped. (The middle of the loaf will read 98C on a digital thermometer when ready.) Remove the tin and leave to cool on a wire rack for at least 4 hrs. Will keep for 3-4 days in an airtight container.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 180 calories, Fat 2 grams fat, SaturatedFat 1 grams saturated fat, Carbohydrate 33 grams carbohydrates, Sugar 1 grams sugar, Fiber 7 grams fiber, Protein 4 grams protein, Sodium 0.86 milligram of sodium

LITHUANIAN BLACK RYE SOURDOUGH BREAD



Lithuanian Black Rye Sourdough Bread image

This black rye bread has a delicious sweet-and-sour flavor with citrus and licorice notes. It's soft, chewy, and wonderfully dense -- perfect to eat solo, with butter or cheese, alongside soups or as part of a delicious sandwich. The recipe is Breadtopia's take on The Rye Baker's Lithuanian black rye bread or "juoda ruginė duona," using toasted sprouted rye flour instead of red rye malt.

Provided by Melissa Johnson

Categories     Recipes

Time 1h50m

Number Of Ingredients 23

Volume amounts below are approximations.
Levain (Day 1 Morning)
70g whole grain rye flour (1/2 cup)
70g warm water 105°F (1/4 cup + 1 Tbsp)
10g sourdough starter (2 tsp)
Scald (Day 1 Morning)
35g whole grain sprouted rye flour toasted to about 176°F (1/4 cup)
200g hot water 170°F (3/4 cup + 1.5 Tbsp)
Opara (Day 1 Evening)
150g whole grain rye flour (1 cup + 2.5 Tbsp)
all of the levain/sponge (150g)
all of the scald (235g)
Final Dough (Day 2 Morning)
all of the opara (535g)
230g whole grain rye flour (1 3/4 cups)
50g bread flour (1/3 cup + 1 Tbsp)
100g warm water 105°F (1/3 cup + 1.5 Tbsp)
25g honey (1 Tbsp)
21g sugar (2 Tbsp)
10g salt (2 tsp)
Crust Glaze to apply during the baking
1 tsp corn or potato starch (3g)
1/2 cup water (118g)

Steps:

  • See the Photo Gallery for images of the different steps.
  • Day 1 Morning: Levain and Scald
  • Mix the levain ingredients in a container with space for tripling, cover, and let ferment 8-12 hours. Aim for the long end of that range if your kitchen is cold e.g. low 60s.
  • Toast your sprouted rye flour in a pan on the stove for a few minutes, stirring regularly, until it reaches about 176°F. Avoid overtoasting the flour as that could introduce bitterness to the flavor. Transfer it to a bowl and add the water that's been heated to 170°F. Cover and let the scald sit 8-12 hours while the levain is maturing. I stored the scald in a Thermos but this isn't necessary.
  • Day 1 Evening: Opara
  • In a bowl with room for tripling, mix together the levain, scald, and 150g rye flour. Cover and let sit overnight (8-12 hours).
  • Day 2 Morning: Final Dough
  • Combine the warm water (105°F), honey, sugar, and salt. Stir thoroughly until dissolved. In a bowl, mix together the this liquid, the opara, and flours. A stand mixer, danish dough whisk, or spatula work well.
  • Prepare a sheet of parchment paper or a well-floured peel.
  • Using damp hands, shape the rye dough into a tube that is about 10" x 4". Lay it on the parchment and further smooth the surface with damp fingers.
  • Cover and let the dough proof for 2-3 hours until it has expanded and has a more bumpy looking surface and a few small holes from air popping through. I used an inverted bowl as a cover to avoid plastic wrap or a cloth sticking to the dough.
  • Baking (Day 2 Late Morning)
  • Preheat your oven and baking stone or steel (inverted baking sheet is okay too) to 350°F for at least 20 minutes.
  • Prepare the glaze in a pan on the stove by whisking the corn or potato starch into the water (cold) and setting it to simmer until it has thickened. Set it aside to apply partway through the bake.
  • With wet fingertips, smooth the surface of the dough and then load it into the oven.
  • Immediately turn up the oven temperature to 445°F.
  • Bake at:
  • 445°F for 15 minutes
  • 390°F for 25 minutes
  • Remove the bread from the oven, apply the glaze to the surface of the bread with a pastry brush, then return the bread to the oven and continue baking at:
  • 390°F for 5-10 minutes
  • When the bread is finished baking, the internal temperature should be about 208°F. This is higher than The Rye Baker's 198°F but I believe it works for the moisture content.
  • Let the bread rest for 24 hours before slicing. Store in a bag, bread box, or under an inverted bowl.

RYE STARTER



Rye Starter image

This is a traditional sourdough rye starter made with wild yeast. It takes some time, and a watchful eye.

Provided by Jon

Categories     Bread

Yield 4

Number Of Ingredients 4

1 ½ cups whole meal rye flour
¾ cup filtered or spring water
1 ½ cups bread flour
¾ cup filtered or spring water

Steps:

  • In a small bowl, mix together 1/2 cup rye flour with 1/4 cup water to make a thick paste. Cover with a damp cloth, and set aside at room temperature for 24 hours.
  • Stir well, and discard 1/2 of the rye flour paste. Stir 1/2 cup rye flour and 1/4 cup water into the remainder. Cover with a damp cloth, and set aside at room temperature for 24 hours. Repeat for day three.
  • Some activity should now be noticeable: the starter should be bubbly. Stir well. Measure starter, and transfer to a 1 quart glass jar. Stir in amounts of water and bread flour equal to the amount of starter. Add more water until the starter resembles a thick but pourable batter. Set aside for 24 hours.
  • Starter should be very active with lots of bubbles in the batter. Stir well. Measure, and return 1 cup starter to the jar. Begin feeding regularly, every 4 to 6 hours, doubling the starter each time. For instance, if you have 1 cup starter, add 1 cup bread flour and 1 cup water.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 350.5 calories, Carbohydrate 71.8 g, Fat 1.6 g, Fiber 7.2 g, Protein 10.7 g, SaturatedFat 0.1 g, Sodium 1.9 mg, Sugar 0.2 g

ARTISAN SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD



Artisan Sourdough Rye Bread image

This is my favorite rye bread recipe of all time... so far. I could have just as easily called it Swedish Rye Bread or Aroma Therapy Bread for that matter (takes the coveted baking bread smell to another level). Covers both sourdough and instant yeast versions.

Provided by Eric Rusch

Categories     Recipes

Yield 1 Loaf

Number Of Ingredients 11

Water: 400 grams, 1 2/3 cups
Sourdough Starter: 70 grams, 1/3 cup (omit if making the instant yeast version)
Instant Yeast: 1 tsp (omit if making sourdough leavened version)
Whole Rye Flour: 245 grams, heaping 1 3/4 cups
Bread Flour: 245 grams, heaping 1 3/4 cups
Molasses: 44 grams, 2 Tbs
Fennel Seed: 8 grams, 1 Tbs
Anise Seed: 2 grams, 1 tsp
Caraway Seed: 3 grams, 1 tsp
Salt: 12 grams, 1 3/4 tsp
Zest of 1 Orange

Steps:

  • Sourdough Version
  • In a mixing bowl, mix the starter into the water. Add the molasses, all the seeds and orange zest.
  • In a separate bowl, combine the flours and salt.
  • Gradually stir the dry ingredients into the wet using a dough whisk or spoon until the flour is well incorporated. Cover with plastic and let rest for 15 minutes. After about 15 minutes, mix again for a minute or two. Again let rest for 15 minutes and mix one more time as before. Now cover the bowl with plastic and let sit at room temperature for roughly 12-14 hours.
  • Instant Yeast Version
  • The only difference is don't use sourdough starter and instead mix the instant yeast into the dry ingredients before combining with the wet ingredients.
  • Both Versions
  • After the long 12-14 hour proof, stretch and fold the dough and shape into boule or batard (round or oblong) shape for baking. (If you didn't follow that, I'm afraid you're doomed to watch the video.) Cover again with plastic and let rest 15 minutes before putting in a proofing basket for the final rise. If you don't have a proofing basket, line a bowl with a well floured kitchen towel and put the dough in there for the final rise. The final rise should last somewhere between 1 to 1 1/2 hours. Keep the dough covered with plastic to prevent it from drying out.
  • Preheat your oven to 475 F a half hour before baking.
  • Score the dough with a razor or sharp serrated knife and bake until the internal temp is about 200 F.
  • Let cool completely before eating.

More about "rye sourdough starter and bread recipes"

RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER | KING ARTHUR BAKING
rye-sourdough-starter-king-arthur-baking image
For the first feeding: Combine the 1/4 cup starter with 1/4 cup room-temperature water and a heaping 1/2 cup pumpernickel flour (organic preferred). Place the …
From kingarthurbaking.com
4.3/5 (6)
Total Time 72 hrs
Servings 0.75
  • For the first feeding: Combine the 1/4 cup starter with 1/4 cup room-temperature water and a heaping 1/2 cup pumpernickel flour (organic preferred)., Place the starter in a nonreactive container.
  • Sprinkle a light coating of pumpernickel flour over the top of the starter and cover it., Allow the starter to rise for 12 hours at room temperature (70°F)., For the second feeding: Keep 1/4 cup of your initial starter, the one you made 12 hours earlier; discard or give away the rest.
  • Feed the 1/4 cup starter with 1/4 cup room-temperature water and a heaping 1/2 cup pumpernickel flour., Sprinkle the top of the starter with pumpernickel flour and cover it.
  • Allow the starter to rise for 12 hours at room temperature., Repeat feedings as above until the starter is rising well and has a pleasantly tangy odor.


SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD RECIPE - THE HEALTHY TART
Instructions. Add all ingredient into a big bowl and mix until well combined. Oil two loaf tins and pour in the dough mixture. Sourdough rye dough is too liquid to bake it without a tin. Cover the tins with a plastic bag and let the dough proof in a warm room for 4-5 hours. You can also let it proof overnight.
From thehealthytart.com


RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER IN EASY STEPS – WEEKEND BAKERY
And now on with the easy steps! Day 1: Take a small clean jar (I use a 400ml jam jar) and add 40ml of water and 40g of whole grain rye flour, stir with a clean spoon for 30 seconds. Draw a line to mark the height of the mixture with a permanent …
From weekendbakery.com


HOW TO MAKE RYE SOURDOUGH BREAD STORY • HEARTBEET KITCHEN
Get Recipe. Step 1: Mix flours, water, honey, and starter together. Let dough rest for 1 hour, also know as the autolyse. Perform 4 sets of stretch and folds, at intervals of 30 minutes apart. Then dough will go through bulk fermentation for several hours. When bulk fermentation is complete, proceed with shaping the dough.
From heartbeetkitchen.com


HOW TO MAKE A NO KNEAD SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD - MARY'S NEST
2021-03-24 Place the round of dough onto the center of the cloth and cover loosely. Allow dough to rise for 1-2 hours. Generally, a 2 hour rise will create the best results. As the dough is rising, 30 minutes before the end of the 2 hour rise time, place the oven rack on its lowest rung. Place a covered Dutch oven on the rack.
From marysnest.com


RECIPE SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD - THERESCIPES.INFO
Sourdough Rye Bread - Nourished Kitchen new nourishedkitchen.com. Make the dough. Scrape the levain into the basin of a stand mixer, and then dump in 150 grams dark rye flour and 150 grams light rye flour. Add the water, molasses, salt, and caraway seeds.
From therecipes.info


SOFT RYE SOURDOUGH SANDWICH BREAD - NATASHA'S BAKING
2021-05-27 Mix water, flour, sugar, honey or molasses, sourdough starter (70g on its peak, the rest use for future feedings), salt and all flour. Mix the dough on low speed of your mixing machine for 3-5 minutes, or KitchenAid on speed 3 for 7-9 minutes until well incorporated. Add soft butter or oil, mix for 10-15 more minutes until the dough is well ...
From natashasbaking.com


SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD - CAROLINE'S COOKING
2018-10-16 Tip the mixture out onto a floured surface and knead for a minute or two. It should be soft but not sticky. Dust a bread basket with flour or line a large bowl with a clean cloth and dust with flour. Form the bread into a ball and put in the basket/lined bowl. Cover and leave to rise another 2 hours.
From carolinescooking.com


SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD - BOSTON GIRL BAKES
2020-09-24 Flip the dough over and let rest for 5 to 10 minutes. Meanwhile line an 8-inch bowl with a towel and dust with flour. With floured hands, gently cup the dough and pull it toward you in a circular motion to tighten its shape. Using a bench scraper, place the …
From bostongirlbakes.com


SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD - BAKING SENSE®
2020-07-23 Instructions. Combine the starter, water, rye flour and 1 cup of the bread flour. Mix with the paddle on low speed until it forms a thick batter. Cover the bowl and set aside for 30-60 minutes. If using a stand mixer, change to the dough hook.
From baking-sense.com


SOURDOUGH DANISH RYE BREAD (RUGBRøD) - TRUE NORTH KITCHEN
2020-04-21 Combine the Levain and the Soaker (no need to drain) in the bowl of a heavy duty stand mixer. Add remaining dough ingredients. Using the paddle attachment, mix on low speed for 3-4 minutes, scraping down the sides of the bowl occasionally.
From true-north-kitchen.com


EASY SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD RECIPE - SOURDOUGH&OLIVES
2018-01-25 Let the loaves rise until they pass the the finger poke test. The time required depends a lot on ambient temperature so don't look at the clock. Preheat your oven to 480ºF / 250ºC with two oven plates. One to bake the bread on and one just below.
From sourdoughandolives.com


SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD - NOURISHED KITCHEN
2015-02-27 Make the dough. Scrape the levain into the basin of a stand mixer, and then dump in 150 grams dark rye flour and 150 grams light rye flour. Add the water, molasses, salt, and caraway seeds. Using the dough hook, knead the dough about 5 minutes, and then cover the bowl and let the dough rise about 3 hours, or until puffy.
From nourishedkitchen.com


SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD (WITH 100% RYE FLOUR) ⋆ MY …
2020-01-25 Dust a proofing basket or bowl with a thick layer of rye flour and put the dough into it. Let rise until it has almost doubled its size (about 1 hour). After the first 30 minutes: Preheat the oven to 250°C / 482 °F with the baking sheet in it. When the hour is over: Flip the bread onto the hot baking sheet and place it in the oven.
From mygerman.recipes


HOW TO MAKE A SPROUTED RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER - CULTURED GURU
2020-07-25 Leave the mixture on the counter for 24 hours. (Days 3-7, Feeding and Discarding). In a clean jar add 50 grams starter mixture, 50 grams sprouted rye flour, 100 grams of water. Stir until evenly combined, and scrape down the sides of the jar. Replace the breathable lid and allow it to ferment for 24 hours.
From cultured.guru


RYE BREAD WITH SOURDOUGH (ROGGENBROT) RECIPE - THE SPRUCE EATS
2022-05-12 Use the entire rye sourdough and add the rest of the ingredients. Mix with a stand mixer for about 7 minutes on low with a dough hook. Turn onto a clean board and knead a few times with your wet hands. The dough is firm but sticky, wetting your hands will keep it from sticking too badly.
From thespruceeats.com


SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD STARTER : OPTIMAL RESOLUTION LIST
Explore RAMDOM_KEYWORD for thousands of unique, creative recipes.
From recipeschoice.com


MAKE YOUR OWN RYE SOURDOUGH BREAD (RECIPE) - THE SPRUCE EATS
2022-04-14 Place both rye and white flours into a large baking bowl along with salt and mix. Make a large well in the center and add starter dough. Using a fork, draw the flour into the center and mix lightly. Then, mix the starter, flour, and water a little at a time together to create a sticky dough. Either knead bread in a mixer with a dough hook or ...
From thespruceeats.com


RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER » LEELALICIOUS
2022-01-12 1. To begin making your rye sourdough start, add 10 grams (1 tablespoon) of rye flour with 10 grams (2 teaspoons) of filtered water to a container or jar. 2. Combine the rye flour and water until fully combined. Then try to scrape the sides and push everything down to the bottom to create an even layer. 3.
From leelalicious.com


HOW TO MAKE A RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER - THE BREAD SHE BAKES
2015-10-22 25g wholemeal rye flour & 50g tepid water (35°C/95°F) Using a medium sized plastic bowl with a lid, mix the flour and water, put the lid on and keep at a warm temperature for 24 hours. There is no need to add anything else to your starter mixture as the wholemeal flour contains all the yeasts and lactobacilli needed for the fermentation process.
From thebreadshebakes.com


HOW TO MAKE A RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER FROM SCRATCH - CBC
2019-05-31 Preparation. In a spotlessly clean, large nonreactive ceramic or glass bowl, combine the water and flour, and whisk to a smooth batter. Notice how …
From cbc.ca


HOW TO MAKE RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER - THE GOOD HEARTED WOMAN
2020-03-14 Using a wooden spoon, mix the rye flour and water in a mason jar or non-reactive bowl. Cover loosely and place in a dark place at 70°F for 24 hours. (I put mine up against the counter right next to my stove.) Your unfermented Starter will be the consistency of thick cook dough. It will loosen up over time.
From thegoodheartedwoman.com


ULTIMATE SOURDOUGH RYE STARTER GUIDE WITH SOURDOUGH
2021-10-31 Day 1: Mix 15 grams white flour, 35 grams rye flour, and 50 grams water together. Let it sit in a closed container for 24 hours at room temperature. Day 2,3,4,5: Feed with 25 grams white flour, 25 grams rye flour, and 50 grams water each day and keep it at room temperature. Day 6: Remove 200 grams starter.
From pantsdownapronson.com


JEFFREY'S SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD | KING ARTHUR BAKING
Preheat the oven to 450°F. Uncover the loaf, and slash a cross onto the top, to allow for expansion. Bake the bread for 15 minutes, then lower the oven temperature to 425°F, and continue baking for 20 to 30 minutes, until the loaf's surface is golden brown. Remove the bread from the oven and, after 5 minutes, transfer it to a rack to cool ...
From kingarthurbaking.com


AUTHENTIC FINNISH RYE SOURDOUGH | RECIPE - MY VINTAGE COOKING
2018-12-05 Making the sponge / raski. In a bowl, add 100ml warm water into 60 grams of rye flour and whisk vigorously. Cover the starter with a kitchen towel and let it rest in a warm spot. Repeat feedings a two more times adding 60 grams more flour and 100 ml of water each time.
From myvintagecooking.com


LIGHT RYE SOURDOUGH BREAD - KAREN'S KITCHEN STORIES
2020-05-12 Line an 8 or 9 inch bowl or banneton with a tea towel and rub in a mixture of wheat and rice flour into the towel to prevent sticking. Tighten the boule, and place it, seam side up, into the bowl, and cover with a damp towel. Let the dough rise …
From karenskitchenstories.com


EVERYDAY MULTIGRAIN RYE SOURDOUGH BREAD #BREADBAKERS
2020-05-12 Instructions. First make Levain. In a medium bowl add bread flour, whole wheat flour, rye flour, active sourdough starter and water and set aside for 6- 12 hours at room temperature. Make dough. Autolyse the flour. In a large bowl add, bread flour, whole wheat flour, rye flour, oatmeal bran and 415g water and mix and set aside for 1-2 hours.
From zestysouthindiankitchen.com


TRADITIONAL RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER RECIPE – BAKER RECIPES®
Instructions. Day 1 Morning – In a clean glass mason jar (approx. 600 ml content) stir 30 g wholemeal rye, or dark rye flour and 30 g water and cover loosely (with the glass lid) in a warm place. Let the mixture stand for 12 hours. In the evening, stir the dough with a small, clean spatula (for the oxygen supply).
From bakerrecipes.com


RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER - GREAT BRITISH CHEFS
Method. print recipe. 1. On the first day, mix 50g whole rye flour and 100g water together in a large bowl. Cover with cling film or place a dinner plate over the bowl, and put it on the counter for 24 hours. 2. The next day, add a further 50g rye flour and 100g water to the mix in the bowl.
From greatbritishchefs.com


RYE BREAD – SOURDOUGH BREAD RECIPE
2015-06-19 Place the tins or silicon containers into the oven on top of your stone. You may lightly spray the dough with water. Pour boiling water into the stainless bowl to generate steam. Change the oven temperature to 190°C (374°F) and leave the bread to …
From sourdoughbreadrecipe.com.au


EASY AND DELICIOUS 50% RYE SOURDOUGH – PROOF PERFECTED
200g whole-grain rye flour; 150g white flour; 50g bread flour; 265g water; 9g salt; 100g active, mature sourdough starter; Instructions; Mix everything together. Cover and let rest for 3-4 hours of bulk fermentation. “Shape” it (think Play-Doh). Cover and let proof for about 2 hours. Or retard. Score your loaf. Rye bread is great for ...
From proofperfected.com


RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER RECIPE | LEITE'S CULINARIA
2020-03-28 Day 1: Make the rye sourdough starter. Start with equal amounts of organic rye flour and water by weight. Dump them in a nonreactive (glass, porcelain, stainless-steel, plastic) container, mix by hand into a stiff paste, cover, and let stand at room temperature (68 to 72°For 20 to 22°C) for 24 hours. ☞TESTER TIP: Occasionally the yeast ...
From leitesculinaria.com


SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD RECIPES USING STARTER - THERESCIPES.INFO
a bread baking practice that allows moisture to escape during the baking process Enhanced bread recipe, including a new sourdough and rye sourdough starter, for an improved flavour Upgraded and calibrated every single oven (~3,000) across Canada for a ...
From therecipes.info


SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD | YUZU BAKES
2022-06-11 Preheat the oven to 250C/500F. Place the baking sheet in the oven to warm up. Add a roasting tin at the bottom of the oven. Carefully remove the hot baking sheet from the oven, dust it with flour and place the rye sourdough bread on to it.
From yuzubakes.com


EASY WHOLE WHEAT RYE SOURDOUGH BREAD RECIPE - THE PANTRY MAMA
2021-02-14 Place the sourdough into the pot using the baking paper as a handle. Put the lid on and place into the hot oven. If you want to you can spritz your dough with extra water before you put the lid on. BAKE TIME: 30 Minutes with the lid on at 230C/450F plus 10-15 Minutes with the lid off at 210C/410F.
From pantrymama.com


HOMEMADE RYE SOURDOUGH STARTER - A CANADIAN FOODIE
2015-12-11 Step Three: Day 4. Add 100g organic rye flour and 100g tepid water to the starter; mix with a spoon to combine. Place back in oven for 24 more hours; sealed with oven light on. Starter will start slowly growing.
From acanadianfoodie.com


BREAD MACHINE SCANDINAVIAN SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD - RED ... - RED …
Place ingredients in pan in order recommended by manufacturer. Select basic cycle and medium crust. Do not use the delay timer. Check dough consistency after 5 minutes of kneading. The dough should be in a soft, tacky ball. If it is dry and stiff, add water, 1/2 to 1 tablespoon at a time. If it is too wet and sticky, add 1 tablespoon of flour ...
From redstaryeast.com


SOURDOUGH RYE BREAD (USING SOURDOUGH STARTER) - BLACKSCORPIO.NET
2020-07-07 In mixing bowl or KitchenAid mixing bowl, combine sourdough starter, water, bootstrap molasses, seeds and orange flavouring. In a separate bowl, combine all the dry ingredients (rye flour, bread flour, salt) to ensure dry ingredients are evenly distributed. Gradually stir in the dry ingredients with the wet ingredients, mixing by hand or by ...
From blackscorpio.net


Related Search