The Fresh Loaf

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Deep Rye

bmeilinger's picture
bmeilinger

Deep Rye

This bread is a riff on Josey Baker's "Dark Mountain Rye" - I omit some of the seeds he uses (sesame), and incorporated lots of sprouted rye in its place. It is incredibly popular at the Cafe I bake for. Shoutout to JB for the inspiration and letting me hang out and get my hands on the dough while I was in San Francisco.

Keep in mind that that formula below is for 2 9x4.5" loaves.

 

Item

Weight

Percent

Rye flour, whole grain

780g

80%

Bread flour, T85

200

20

Water

660

67

Leaven

250

26

Salt

30

3

Rye berries, sprouted

250

26

Sunflower seeds, raw or toasted

85

9

Flax seeds, raw

80

8

Cornmeal

80

8

Water

460

47

As you can see, this is a very well hydrated loaf, with total water coming in at 114%. The process goes like this: make leaven with regular sourdough starter, rye flour, and water. I use 25/280/265 or so. Scale up or down as needed. The leaven ferments for 12 hours, and the final dough is retarded in the refrigerator for about 16. The "soaker" is just the mix of the sprouted rye, seeds, cornmeal, and water. This sits along with the leaven to allow all the water to be soaked in, particularly by the flax. 

 

Step

Time

Preferment

9:00am

Soaker

9:00am

Mix

9:00pm

Retard

10:00

Divide

2:30pm

Proof

3:00

Bake

4:30

 

Loaves are divided at about 1.1kg each, dusted with cornmeal, proofed until slightly risen and cracks can be seen in the cornmeal coating (1-4 hours). To score, I push into the loaf quickly with a plastic dough scraper at 5 places to give a diagonal pattern and prevent flying roof. The loaves are then baked at 450 for a half hour, rotated, and finished at 400 for about another hour. The loaves are done when they pull slightly from the pans and are colored to your preference. I like mine quite dark. The flavor of these is deep rye with a good amount of sweetness from the sprouted grain. After fighting through the dark, crisp crust, your reward is an intensely moist crumb with bursts of sweet, crunch, seed, and malt.

Here is a picture of a bunch of loaves baked for the lunch service. 

Happy baking,

Bradley

Comments

cranbo's picture
cranbo

Beautiful! Looks really hearty and delicious. 

Mini Oven's picture
Mini Oven

Making me drool here!

What's the temp in the refrigerator?  A 16 hour retard?  Amazing!

dabrownman's picture
dabrownman

in this one.  Josey Baker is my favorite celeb baker because he does so many different whole grain breads.  Your take on his Mountain Rye came out very well indeed.  I too like to long retards with rye bread but 16 hours is out there.  Well done and

Happy baking 

bmeilinger's picture
bmeilinger

Refrigerator is right around 40 degrees F. The 16 hours came not by choice but by necessity: I have sleeping to do and classes to attend between the mix and the dividing! Josey doesn't retard this dough, but I think it is probably more nutritious and flavorful for it.

supermonster's picture
supermonster

I've got several questions:

1. the mix time is one hour. mixing takes just a couple minutes. what does it do for 1 hour?

2. what temperature do you proof at? 1 and 4 hr proof is a huge difference. is that because of different temperatures?

3. do you bake with steam?

4. josey says to leave it for 24 hrs before cutting. is that what you suggest?

thanks

bmeilinger's picture
bmeilinger

1. After mixing, I let the dough rest to hydrate fully. Basically the flour and seeds and whatnot take a little while to absorb the full amount of water. 

2. Room temperature; so yes, the range of temperature gives the range of times. Usually my kithen is somewhere in the 70s Fahrenheit. 

3. No

4. Yes, or at least 12. 

Thanks! 

supermonster's picture
supermonster

Thanks for the replies.

Do you find that the amount of salt is a tad high? % wise it's higher than your usual wholewheat loaf recipes.

Also I don't add rye berries, should I adjust the amount of soaker liquid because of it?

bmeilinger's picture
bmeilinger

I think this loaf needs as much salt for proper seasoning. Consider that you are seasoning both the dough and all the additions, which are all unsalted to start. I would adjust liquid down a touch if anything, but you may not need to adjust, since the rye berries are pretty much fully hydrated once I add them in. 

minichau1's picture
minichau1

hello!  I was wondering if you did any stretch and folds for this recipe? And any tips you have for dealing with rye flour?  Also how was the inside texture?