Rustic Kibbled Wheat Rye Loaves 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.

RUSTIC KIBBLED WHEAT & RYE LOAVES



Rustic Kibbled Wheat & Rye Loaves image

I used half of Mean Chef's biga (81918) for this recipe. I also used Allinson's (which is a British brand) white bread flour with kibbled grains of wheat & rye, although if you do not have this available you may wish to use 3 & 1/2c of strong white bread flour & add 1/2c of grains. Using biga gives a lovely textured loaf with a tangy taste, it seems a bit time consuming but I actually spent less time in the kitchen than if I had baked a cake. Time includes proving time.

Provided by LilKiwiChicken

Categories     Yeast Breads

Time 6h

Yield 3 loaves

Number Of Ingredients 8

1 cup water, tepid
1/2 cup milk or 1/2 cup water
1/2 teaspoon yeast
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 teaspoons salt
1 tablespoon brown sugar, scant
2 cups active starter (biga)
4 cups white bread flour, with kibbled grains

Steps:

  • Put the water, milk & yeast into a small container & mix. Leave for 10 minutes.
  • Put the oil, salt, brown sugar, biga & flour into a large bowl. Add the yeast/water mixture and stir with a wooden spoon for 1 minute.
  • Using a mixer with a dough hook (I have hand mixer with two dough hooks), mix for 8-10 minutes. The dough will be very sticky & is not suitable for kneading by hand (I thought about it but don't be silly like me!).
  • Cover & leave in a warm place until nearly doubled (this took me about 1 & 1/2 hours).
  • Scrape out of the bowl onto a very well floured bench & gently split into 3 equal portions (I used a very sharp knife). Gently fold into loose rounds & leave to rest for about 1 hour. You need to be gentle as you don't want to knock the air out of the mixture.
  • Gently shape into the form you want, being careful not to knock the air out of the dough. I gently stretched two of these into slipper shapes, and cut the other into 6 rolls, and rested each of the three portions on separate pieces of parchment paper. Being careful, put small dimples on the tops of the loaves & leave until doubled (about 1 & 1/2 hours for me).
  • Just after doing this heat your oven & baking stone to 240 degrees Celsius.
  • Once the loaves have doubled, bake as many as your stone can handle (mine was one portion at a time) for 5 minutes on 240 degrees Celsius. Lower the temperature to 200 degrees Celsius & bake until the base sounds hollow when tapped (about 30 minutes in total for a loaf, 20-25 minutes for the rolls).
  • To get a nice crust spray the oven (taking care not to get the bread in the process) with water once or twice during baking.
  • Once cooled these loaves freeze easily - I normally put them into a freezer bag with a twist tie & pop them in the fast freeze section of my freezer. I then let them defrost on the bench, or if you make rolls you can let them defrost & pop them into the oven on 200 degrees to warm them through.
  • For Vegan use only the water.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 731.6, Fat 12.2, SaturatedFat 2.4, Cholesterol 5.7, Sodium 1577.5, Carbohydrate 133.8, Fiber 4.6, Sugar 4.9, Protein 18.8

NORDIC WHOLE-GRAIN RYE BREAD



Nordic Whole-Grain Rye Bread image

Scandinavian rye breads look nothing like the slices that clamp together the sandwiches at your neighborhood deli in New York. Made from whole grains and naturally risen, they are chewy, fragrant and deliciously dark. With butter and cheese, or as the base for avocado toast, they are amazingly satisfying. The taste and texture are addictive, and many enthusiasts also appreciate that rye bread contains more fiber and less gluten than wheat. This recipe, with a small amount of yeast, is quicker than the truly ancient version, which takes at least three days. Don't worry if the dough seems runny and sticky: That is typical of rye bread, which needs lots of water to soften the grain.

Provided by Julia Moskin

Categories     breads

Yield 2 large or 3 medium loaves

Number Of Ingredients 9

1/3 cup/85 grams buttermilk, skyr or yogurt, at room temperature
2 cups/250 grams medium rye flour
½ teaspoon/2 grams active dry yeast
2 cups/340 grams cracked rye berries or coarse rye meal
1 cup/170 grams sunflower seeds
4 cups/400 grams medium rye flour
4 teaspoons/20 grams kosher or coarse sea salt
3 tablespoons/40 grams malt syrup or molasses (not blackstrap)
½ teaspoon/2 grams active dry yeast

Steps:

  • On Day 1, make the starter: In a medium-size bowl, mix 3/4 cup warm water with the buttermilk or yogurt. Whisk flour and yeast together, add to the buttermilk mixture and use your hands to mix together until sticky and moist; add more warm water as needed. Cover tightly and set aside at cool room temperature overnight, or up to 24 hours.
  • Also on Day 1, soak the grains: Mix 4 cups cold water with the rye berries (or meal) and sunflower seeds. Cover and set aside at cool room temperature overnight, or up to 24 hours.
  • On Day 2, make the bread: Drain the soaked grains in a colander. Measure 35 ounces/1,000 grams of the grains and place in a deep bowl. Add 14 ounces/400 grams of the starter and mix well. (Any remaining starter can be saved to use with other bread recipes.) Add the flour, salt, malt (or molasses), yeast and 2 cups water. Mix dough firmly by hand to combine. The dough should be grainy, but quite runny and wet, almost like a thick batter. To achieve that texture, add cold water, 1/4 cup at a time, mixing after each addition. To test: When a walnut-size piece of dough smeared on the rim of the bowl slides slowly and smoothly down the inside, like a snail leaving a trail, the dough it is wet enough.
  • Thickly butter 3 medium or 2 standard-size loaf pans. Divide the dough evenly among the pans, filling them about half full. Cover and let rise at room temperature until dough almost fills pans, about 2 hours. (Dough will not rise more during baking.)
  • Heat oven to 450 degrees. Bake loaves for 10 minutes, then reduce heat to 360 and bake until firm and glossy brown, 80 minutes to 2 hours more depending on size and moisture content of loaves. Let cool completely in the pans before turning out. Bread freezes well, and lasts for at least a week at room temperature, wrapped in paper.

RUSTIC RYE BREAD



Rustic Rye Bread image

This gorgeous rye bread has just a touch of sweetness and the perfect amount of caraway seeds. With a crusty top and firm texture, it holds up well to sandwiches, but a pat of butter will do the job, too. -Holly Wade, Harrisonburg, Virginia

Provided by Taste of Home

Time 55m

Yield 2 loaves (12 pieces each).

Number Of Ingredients 10

1 package (1/4 ounce) active dry yeast
1-3/4 cups warm water (110° to 115°), divided
1/4 cup packed brown sugar
1/4 cup light molasses
3 tablespoons caraway seeds
2 tablespoons canola oil
1 tablespoon salt
1-3/4 cups rye flour
3/4 cup whole wheat flour
2-1/2 to 3 cups all-purpose flour

Steps:

  • In a large bowl, dissolve yeast in 1/4 cup warm water. Stir in brown sugar, molasses, caraway seeds, oil, salt and remaining water. Add rye flour, whole wheat flour and 1 cup all-purpose flour; beat on medium speed until smooth. Stir in enough remaining all-purpose flour to form a firm dough. , Turn dough onto a floured surface; knead until smooth and elastic, 6-8 minutes. Place in a greased bowl, turning once to grease the top. Cover and let rise in a warm place until doubled, about 1-1/2 hours. , Punch down dough. Turn onto a lightly floured surface; divide in half. Shape each into a round loaf; place on a baking sheet coated with cooking spray. Cover with kitchen towels; let rise in a warm place until almost doubled, about 1-1/2 hours. Preheat oven to 350°., Bake until golden brown, 30-35 minutes. Remove from pan to wire racks to cool.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 118 calories, Fat 2g fat (0 saturated fat), Cholesterol 0 cholesterol, Sodium 298mg sodium, Carbohydrate 24g carbohydrate (5g sugars, Fiber 2g fiber), Protein 3g protein.

More about "rustic kibbled wheat rye loaves recipes"

A SIMPLE, RUSTIC LOAF RECIPE | KING ARTHUR BAKING
Web Prep. 20 mins. Bake. 30 to 35 mins. Total. 7 hrs 5 mins. Yield. 1 loaf. Save Recipe. Ingredients. Sponge. *Also known as whole rye flour. Dough. …
From kingarthurbaking.com
4.7/5 (63)
Calories 120 per serving
Total Time 7 hrs 5 mins
  • To make the sponge: Weigh your flour; or measure it by gently spooning it into a cup, then sweeping off any excess.
  • Mix the sponge ingredients together, and let rest at room temperature, covered, for 3 to 4 hours, or overnight., To make the dough: Stir down the sponge, and add the salt and flour.
See details


MOM'S RYE AND WHOLE WHEAT BREAD RECIPE - NATASHA'S …
Web Apr 22, 2013 How to Make Rye and Whole Wheat Bread: 1. In a large kitchen aid mixer bowl, combine 2 1/4 cups warm water (about 100˚F), 1 1/2 Tbsp sugar and 1/2 Tbsp salt; stir to dissolve. 2. Sift the 3/4 cup wheat …
From natashaskitchen.com
See details


THE EASIEST RYE BREAD EVER RECIPE | KING ARTHUR BAKING
Web Bread. Rye. The Easiest Rye Bread Ever. 70 Reviews 4.1 out of 5 stars. This no-knead rye dough bakes up in a crock to make a wonderful, moist sandwich rye bread. Prep. 15 mins. Bake. 30 to 40 mins. Total. 21 hrs. …
From kingarthurbaking.com
See details


NO-KNEAD RUSTIC RYE BREAD — BUTTERYUM — A TASTY LITTLE FOOD BLOG
Web Mar 23, 2020 No-Knead Rustic Rye Bread. makes 1 round loaf or boule. Printable Recipe. Ingredients. 2 cups stone ground whole grain rye flour. 2 cups bread flour . 3 …
From butteryum.org
See details


RUSTIC KIBBLED WHEAT & RYE LOAVES | BOTTOMLESS BITES
Web Ingredients. 1 cup water, tepid; 1 tablespoon brown sugar, scant; 1/2 cup milk or 1/2 cup water; 1/2 teaspoon yeast; 2 cups active starter (biga) 2 tablespoons olive oil
From bottomlessbites.com
See details


LEARNING TO BAKE WITH RYE | THE FRESH LOAF
Web Sep 10, 2018 480 ml cold water. The recipe directed me to soak the cracked rye and seeds with 300 ml of the water, and the rye flour with the rest of the water and the yeast, …
From thefreshloaf.com
See details


FLOORMAN'S BLOG | THE FRESH LOAF
Web 150g white starter, 50g rye starter ( both 100%), 450g water, 20g salt, 200g wholemeal rye, 500g strong wheat flour, 150g kibbled wheat, good sprinkle of caraway seeds (probably …
From thefreshloaf.com
See details


EASY RYE BREAD RECIPE - HOUSE OF NASH EATS
Web Oct 4, 2018 Amy. Published Oct 4, 2018 Modified Aug 11, 2023. This post may contain affiliate links. This Easy Homemade Rye Bread made with caraway seeds tastes delicious and is a wonderful, wholesome change …
From houseofnasheats.com
See details


RYE SANDWICH BREAD - BAKE FROM SCRATCH
Web Instructions. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the dough hook attachment, combine all-purpose flour, rye flour, warm milk, molasses, butter, caraway seeds, salt, and yeast until moistened. Let stand for 20 …
From bakefromscratch.com
See details


RUSTIC KIBBLED WHEAT & RYE LOAVES RECIPE
Web Ingredients. 4 cups white bread flour; 1 tablespoon brown sugar; 2 tablespoons olive oil; 2 cups active starter (biga) 1/2 teaspoon yeast; 1/2 cup milk or water
From familyoven.com
See details


RUSTIC RYE LOAF RECIPE - TWIGG STUDIOS
Web roll into a oval shape. prove for 1 or 2 hours. than normal bread to rise as rye flour has a lower protein level. dish at the bottom of the oven to heat up. with a sharp knife cut a …
From twiggstudios.com
See details


WHOLEMEAL RYE/ WHEAT WITH KIBBLED WHEAT AND CARRAWAY. - THE …
Web 150g white starter, 50g rye starter ( both 100%), 450g water, 20g salt, 200g wholemeal rye, 500g strong wheat flour, 150g kibbled wheat, good sprinkle of caraway seeds (probably …
From thefreshloaf.com
See details


CLASSIC RYE SANDWICH BREAD RECIPE | KING ARTHUR BAKING
Web Bread. Rye. Classic Rye Sandwich Bread. Recipe by Jonathan Brasil. 62 Reviews 3.6 out of 5 stars. Here's the bread you know and love if you grew up enjoying deli-style sandwiches on rye. The familiar caraway and …
From kingarthurbaking.com
See details


BAKE YOUR OWN RUSTIC LOAF AT HOME SAVE $$$ - YEYFOOD.COM
Web All you need is a bowl, a spoon, and four ingredients to make the dough. While you are doing dishes or before you go to bed, stir up a batch. Once you’ve mixed up the …
From yeyfood.com
See details


NO-KNEAD RUSTIC RYE BREAD | TASTY KITCHEN: A HAPPY …
Web Ingredients. 2 cups Stone Ground Whole Grain Rye Flour. 2 cups Bread Flour. 3 Tablespoons Caraway Seeds. 1-½ Tablespoon Vital Wheat Gluten (see Note Below) 2 …
From tastykitchen.com
See details


FINAL BAKE FOR 2020 | THE FRESH LOAF
Web Dec 31, 2020 December 30, 2020 - 3:08pm. leslieruf. Final bake for 2020. Lately I have been concentrating on using up grains and flours stored in my freezer so for the last few …
From thefreshloaf.com
See details


RUSTIC BREAD | THE FRESH LOAF
Web Aug 10, 2011 1/2 tablespoon salt. 1/8 teaspoon instant yeast. Final dough: 10 oz. bread flour (2 1/2 cups) 6 oz. whole wheat or rye flour or a mixture of them (around 1 1/2 cups) 12.5 oz. water (1 1/2 cups) 1/2 tablespoon salt. …
From thefreshloaf.com
See details


HOW TO USE UP THAT BAG OF RYE—OR ANY OTHER WHOLE GRAIN FLOUR
Web Mar 24, 2021 Keep it fresh. The first step on your journey towards Total Flour Usage is to make sure the flour is still good. “There is fat in the germ of whole grain flour,” explains …
From epicurious.com
See details


OUR BEST RYE BREAD RECIPES | TASTE OF HOME
Web Dec 2, 2019 1 / 5. Rustic Rye Bread. This gorgeous rye bread has just a touch of sweetness and the perfect amount of caraway seeds. With a crusty top and firm texture, …
From tasteofhome.com
See details


Related Search