Every homemade bread starts with inspiration. I liked the idea of the popular Jewish Rye bread, which combines white and rye flour with caraway seeds. Traditional Jewish Rye bread has about 30% of rye flour. My bread has higher rye content, and it is sourdough bread.
Ingredients
- White sourdough — 200 grams
- Water, room temperature – 750 grams
- Bread flour (or all-purpose flour), unbleached – 500 grams
- White rye flour – 500 grams
- Salt (sea salt) – 20 grams
- Caraway seeds – 30 grams
The night before, I refreshed my sourdough, as I described in my post about my new sourdough:
“If, like me, you like sourdough bread that is not too sour, then your sourdough feeding schedule will roughly be 1: 3. That is 1 part sourdough to 1.5 parts flour and 1.5 parts water. The acidity of the starter will be about 4.2-4.5 pH. The leaven can increase in volume by three or more times. This largely depends on the individual qualities of your flour and the sourdough itself. Gradually, you will develop your own schedule for feeding and working with your starter culture.
If I need 200 grams sourdough in the morning, then I take 60 grams sourdough from the refrigerator and refresh it with 90 grams of water and 90 grams of flour in the evening before mixing your dough. That way I will have 200 grams of active sourdough in the morning and extra sourdough to keep in the refrigerator for future use. This is what ratio 1:3 means for sourdough feeding.
I would feed this extra sourdough with 1 teaspoon of water and 1 teaspoon of flour and put it into the refrigerator until my next baking session. I bake 2-3 times a week. My sourdough does not get too inactive.
If you do not bake that often, start refreshing your sourdough a day or two before mixing the dough by refreshing it every 12 hours using the same 1:3 ratio. If your sourdough is very dormant, you can use 1 part sourdough, 1 part water, and 1 part flour to start up the refreshing schedule. For the next feeding, you will get to a 1:3 ratio (1 part sourdough for 1.5 parts water and 1.5 parts flour).“
This is what I got the next morning.
Mixing the dough
- Pour 750 grams of water into a mixing bowl of your stand mixer. Add all your bread or all-purpose flour and start mixing at a low speed.
- When all the white flour is incorporated, gradually start adding white rye flour.
- When all flour is mixed with water, stop mixing, cover your dough with a clean kitchen towel to prevent it from drying, and let it rest for about 20 minutes.
- Add salt and mix the dough at low speed for 5 minutes. During the last 2 minutes of mixing, gradually add caraway seeds.
- Let your dough rest for another 20 minutes.
At this point, the dough is ready for the structure strengthening technique, which I call stretching and folding in the mixing bowl. You can see how runny and sticky the dough looks before I proceeded with this technique.
Stretching and Folding
I have explained how to perform this technique in the post about my basic sourdough bread.
After every round, my dough gets stronger. It means that gluten molecules build stronger bonds. Many bakers rely on the so-called windowpane test, to determine how well gluten has developed.
Usually, a baker cuts a small piece of dough and gently stretches it to see if the dough can be stretched to a paper-thin, translucent membrane. Bakers do it with both hands on the dough.
I wanted to take a picture of the translucent membrane, so I had to stretch my dough with one hand and hold my phone with another. Here is what I managed to do.
I gave my dough another 20-minute rest. Then I performed the 3rd round of stretching and folding, followed by another 20-minute rest. Now, the dough is ready for dividing and shaping.
Dividing and Shaping
I described how to shape the bread in the post about my basic sourdough bread.
After shaping, the bread goes to the refrigerator for the long final fermentation. I keep bread in the refrigerator from 12 to 48 hours (rarely 72 hours). This is how I do it.
Baking in a Dutch Oven
On my baking day, I take my large cast-iron Dutch oven and pre-heat it in the oven with a closed lid to 250 C (485 F).
Meanwhile, I take the bread out of the refrigerator and gently place it on parchment paper a little larger than my bread in width, but with long enough ends so I can put the bread into the Dutch oven holding the ends of the parchment paper without burning myself.
I take the Dutch oven out of the oven and put it on a heatproof stand. I also have a stand for the Dutch oven lid nearby.
Now, I make cuts in the bread with a sharp razor on a wooden kebab skewer. You may use a special lame for bread.
After that, I open the Dutch oven and put the bread on parchment directly into the heated Dutch oven.
After that, I cover it with the lid as quickly as possible and put it back in the oven for 27 minutes.
After 27 minutes, I remove the lid from the Dutch oven and turn the temperature down to 230 C (450 F).
I bake the bread for another 5-7 minutes. Then, I take the Dutch oven with the bread out of the oven, put the bread on a baking sheet, and return it back to the oven for another 5-7 minutes to finish baking.
After 5-7 minutes, I turn the oven off, briefly open the oven door to let some hot air and leftover steam out, and leave the bread in the oven for another 5 minutes.
For some bread, it is a requirement in order to avoid a sharp change in temperature, which might cause the crust to crack.
Another 20 minutes of cooling time on the wire rack and the bread is ready to be enjoyed.
20 minutes is the absolute minimum that the French bakers regard as a law for selling fresh bread. Of course, it is better to let the bread cool completely if time permits and your family members are patient enough.
It is a relatively simple and amazing method of making delicious and healthy homemade sourdough bread.
Baking on Ceramic Tiles
You can also bake this bread directly on a baking stone or ceramic tiles.
You should place a couple of half-sheet aluminum pans on the lower rack of the oven (one inside the other) in order to use ice cubes to create steam during the first 10 minutes of baking.
I usually slide the bread onto the ceramic tiles and immediately put 5-6 ice cubes into the preheated aluminum pans.
I lower the temperature of the oven to 218 C (425 F) after the first 15 minutes of baking and bake for another 20 minutes.
If the bread looks ready at that point, I turn the oven off, briefly oven the oven door to let leftover steam escape, and leave the bread in the oven for another 5 minutes to finish hardening the crust.
Happy creative baking to you!