Sourdough Rye

Sourdough Rye
Marcus Nilsson for The New York Times; Food stylist: Brian Preston-Campbell
Total Time
5 hours, plus 5 days' storing
Rating
4(160)
Comments
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Ingredients

Yield:2 loaves

    For the Sourdough Starter

    • 2⅔cups rye flour Pinch instant yeast

    For the Dough

    • Sourdough starter
    • 2cups rye flour
    • 2cups whole-wheat or white flour
    • 1tablespoon kosher salt
    • cups cracked rye or rye flour
Ingredient Substitution Guide

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    To make the starter: In a tall, narrow, nonmetal container (a tall, narrow bowl is fine), mix ⅔ cup rye flour with ½ cup water, along with the tiniest pinch of instant yeast — less than 1/16 teaspoon. Cover and let sit for about 24 hours, then add the same amount of both flour and water (no more yeast). Repeat twice more, at 24-hour intervals; 24 hours after the fourth addition, you have your starter. (From now on, keep it in the refrigerator; you don’t need to proceed with the recipe for a day or two if you don’t want to. Before making the dough, take a ladleful — ½ to ¾ cup — of the starter and put it in a container; stir in ½ cup rye flour and a scant ½ cup water, mix well, cover and refrigerate for future use. This starter will keep for a couple of weeks. If you don’t use it during that time and you wish to keep it alive, add ½ cup each flour and water every week or so and stir; you can discard a portion of it if it becomes too voluminous.)

  2. Step 2

    To make the dough: Combine the remaining starter in a big bowl with the rye flour, the whole-wheat or white flour and 2¼ cups water.

  3. Step 3

    Mix well, cover with plastic wrap and let sit overnight, up to 12 hours.

  4. Step 4

    The next morning, the dough should be bubbly and lovely. Add the salt, the cracked rye and 1 cup water — it will be more of a thick batter than a dough and should be pretty much pourable.

  5. Step 5

    Pour and scrape it into two 8-by-4-inch nonstick loaf pans. The batter should come to within an inch of the top, no higher.

  6. Step 6

    Cover (an improvised dome is better than plastic wrap; the dough will stick to whatever it touches) and let rest until it reaches the rim of the pans, about 2 to 3 hours, usually. Preheat the oven to 325 and bake until a skewer comes out almost clean; the internal temperature will measure between 190 and 200. This will take about 1½ hours or a little longer.

  7. Step 7

    Remove loaves from the pans and cool on a rack. Wrap in plastic and let sit for a day before slicing, if you can manage that; the texture is definitely better the next day.

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Ratings

4 out of 5
160 user ratings
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Comments

I would also like to know, how much starter that is, as I already have my own fed starter.

Everything is perfect here EXCEPT the finished loaves. Picture perfect, step-by-step process led to collapsed loaves and soggy bread. Baked for three hours and the dough was still undone. Gave up, sliced it as best I could and made rye crackers. At least I have a nice starter.... Now to find a better recipe.

What a disappointment! Frequent sourdough bread maker, always in search new recipes. Total loss in finished loaves. However, the rye starter did work beautifully for a Jewish Rye I made in recovery.

I already have starter and so this recipe just ends up confusing me about how much of it to add. Also, is this flatbread? or rye? the title/video/pictures are confused!

This is quite exquisite but you may need to add more yeast

As far as the amount of starter that I used, it was a fair bit, probably about 3/4 cup, maybe even a cup full--I hate throwing away starter!--which I stirred into the water initially called for in the recipe and then into the two flours. I used my own starter and fed it as recommended in the recipe with the rye flour and water. Also, I realized I didn't use whole wheat bread flour in this recipe (that was in the sourdough with currants and walnuts I mixed up later) but 100% whole wheat flour.

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