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Wood Oven Baked Rye Sourdough Bread


nonkeyman

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 How to Make Rye Sourdough Bread

I don't know what it is about bread, but it is my favorite thing to make and eat. A freshly baked loaf of bread solves a world of problems. I was lucky enough to get to be one of the main bakers when I worked at the Herbfarm. We baked Epi, Baguettes, Rolls, Pretzels and so much more.

 

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Rye Sourdough Wood Oven Baked Bread

 

My fondest memory when I worked there was our field trip to the Bread Lab(wait something this cool came out of WSU, of course!) here in Washington. They grow thousands of varieties of wheat and have some pretty cool equipment to test gluten levels, protein, genetics and so on. I nerded out so hard.

 

What came out of that trip was this bread. Now I can't recall the exact flour we got from them, but using a basic bread and rye will do the trick. We used to get a special flour for our 100 mile menu. This was where we were limited to only serving food from 100 miles away. So finding a wheat farm that made actual hulled wheat in 100 miles was a miracle. The year before...the thing we made, was closer to hard tack.

 

Now if you don't have a starter, I recommend starting one! It is a great investment!

 

Rye Sourdough

1000 g flour (60% Bread Flour, 40% Rye)

25 g salt

 

75 g of honey/molasses

200 g of Rye starter 

650 g of water, cold

Equipment

Baker Scale (or other gram scale)

Bench Cutter

Bread Razor (you could also use one of those straight razors)

 

Start by taking the cold water, yeast and Honey and mix together and let sit for 10-15 minutes

 

I know, some of you just freaked out, cold water? Won't that kill the yeast.

 

Nope, the yeast just needs to re hydrate. I prefer using cold water to slow the yeast down. That way the lactobacillus in the starter has  a good amount of time to start making lactic acid, and really get to flavor town!

 

While that is sitting, I mix the flour and the salt together(How many times I have forgotten to salt the bread).

 

Now mix the two products with a kneading hook for 3-5 minutes, only until thoroughly mixed but not yet at the window pane stage of kneading.

 

 

Instead, place into a bowl and set a timer for one hour. Then when that hour is up, push the dough down and fold all the corners in

 

Repeat this step 2-3 more times, pending on the outside temperature.

 

If you happen to have those cool bowls to shape round loafs! Awesome, use them. I would break the boules into 3 balls of about 333 grams

 

If not then just put the dough in the fridge and do the steps below the next day.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Once you have bouled the bread, can put it into the fridge and let it sit over night

 

Again, this lets the bacteria, really get to work(misconception is the yeast adds the sour flavor, nope, think yogurt!)

 

Now on the next day, heat up whatever form of oven you plan to use. We used a brick oven but if you just have a normal oven, that is fine. Crank it to 450 degrees Fahrenheit.

 

If you have not bouled your bread yet, go back and watch the video and break the dough down into three balls of abut 333 grams. Then place the balls on a lightly greased sheet pan. Let sit for about 45 minutes to 1 hour.


If you have used the fancy bowls then turn the the bread out on a lightly greased sheet pan, without the bowl and let temper for 15-30 minutes.

 

 

If your oven is steam injected, build up a good blast of steam.

 

If not, throw in a few ice cubes and close the door or put a bath of hot water inside.

 

The steam is what creates the sexy crust!

 

Let it build up for a few minutes!

 

Right before you put the bread into the oven use a bread razor to slice the top of the bread.

 

Place the dough balls into the oven and douse with another blast of steam or ice and close the oven.

 

Let them bake for 13 minutes at 450 degrees. Then turn the loaves and bake for another 10 minutes.

 

Remove when the crust is as dark as you want and the internal temperature exceeds 190 degrees Fahrenheit.

 

Now pull out and make sure to let cool off of the sheet pan with room to breath underneath. You don't want your crust steaming!

 

Now here is the hardest part, wait at least 20 minutes before getting into the bread. Also, cutting into bread to early really seems to come out poorly. I would rip the bread until 1-2 hours has passed.

 

Now serve it with your favorite butter, goat butter or whipped duck fat!

 

Edited by nonkeyman (log)
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