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Rye Miche - "Bread" 3rd edition

louiscohen's picture
louiscohen

Rye Miche - "Bread" 3rd edition

I baked the Rye Miche from "Bread"  3rd edition.  100% rye, half whole rye, half medium

Rye Miche Photos

It's nothing if not hearty with a tight but not super-dense crumb. I like the flavor with smoked fish, cheese, and veg spreads. 

At the start of the sourdough rye chapter, Hamelman writes, "For small home-sized batches, increasing the percentage of mature culture in the sourdough build (by 25 to 50% or so [compared with the percentage for large commercial batches]) may be a good way to improve the ripening of the final dough, especially if there is no commercial yeast in the formula"

I forgot to try this, and just divided the metric quantities by 10 for a 1.6kg finished loaf. I've noticed a mass effect before with commercial yeast and especially sourdough before. I wonder if the additional culture would result in more volume and/or a more open crumb as well as speeding up the bulk fermentation and proofing. My dough pretty much followed the timings in the formula but I used warmer temps - 75℉ for the sourdough and 85℉ for bulk and proofing. My San Diego whole rye culture likes warmer temps.

Rye Miche Formula

squattercity's picture
squattercity

Very interesting. I'm going to try this once I get some medium (or maybe even light) rye. Thanks so much for posting. How do you think this stacks up to other 100% ryes you've made?

Rob

louiscohen's picture
louiscohen

Thanks.  I haven't made that many 100% ryes.   100% Rye Photos  I have made one from sourdough discard Bread Code Sourdough Discard Loaf Video; that one is a loaf pan brick with a nice rye flavor. I also made Cumin Rye from "The Rye Baker" book.  

The Rye Miche and Cumin Rye are pretty similar.  A great benefit of baking a 100% rye is not having to worry about the big open crumb that everyone else who posts videos and photos gets.  

The Rye Miche is a bit simpler to make: 

  1. Day 1 AM - Feed the starter and keep it warm in the proofer 75℉
  2. Day 1 PM - Mix sourdough and ripen overnight at 75℉ in the proofer
  3. Day 2 AM - Mix final dough / bulk ferment / shape / proof / bake

The hardest part is waiting 24 hrs after the loaf cools before slicing.