Recipe Rye
Bread
The more I make
bread, the more I am convinced of the importance of the kitchen being
in the best position in the house. When we designed and built our
house, I was determined that the kitchen should have a view and be on
the front of the house.
Now that
it’s six-fifteen of a summer morning and I’m up
early, kneading bread, because we’ve run out again,
I’m especially happy to be looking out over a sun-soaked
landscape to the distant mountains.
Every time you make
bread you’re guaranteed a good ten minutes of contemplation
as you knead it, the mechanical rhythmic activity frees the mind to
wander or switch off…very therapeutic. Having a view thrown
in as well is just an added bonus. I haven’t always made
bread.
It is a
comparatively recent development. Making jam was the first breakthrough
into self-sufficiency, then came the day when our local supplier of rye
bread, who made a loaf that (miracle of miracles), all the children
would eat, decided to switch recipes and use caraway in
it…instant rejection by the whole family.
We’d
stopped the wheat bread to try and help my son’s allergies
and found it helped most of us, so apart from the occasional indulgence
of fluffy white bread, I wanted to stay off it. There was no
alternative; I would have to take the leap into bread making. The main
reason that I’d resisted was that it seemed to take so long.
First the mixing and kneading, then the rising, then knocking down and
forming loaves, a second rising and finally the baking.
Who could keep
track of all that in the chaotic life of a three-child family? So
eventually I take the plunge, turn to my friend Nigel (Slater, not
namedropping but he and Nigella (Lawson) are ever-present in my
kitchen, in book format of course) and find a foolproof recipe
for a white loaf, simpler to start off with white I think.
Well the first try
produced a reasonable, if huge, loaf, and though my son still remembers
that it was a bit doughy in the middle. Second try, I got two pretty
perfect loaves and I was on a roll. Now to find a recipe for rye bread.
It seems that 100% rye is usually made by the sour dough method and I
couldn’t see my family going for that, so settle for a half
and half recipe rye bread/whole-wheat… triumph.
Ok, my son the food
connoisseur complained it was a bit too sweet, so next time round I
reduced the amount of honey, but this recipe
has been our staple diet ever since, and I am now truly ensconced in my
kitchen, looking at the view, every other day, while I endeavour to
keep the supply level with the ever increasing demand.
Any
way, finally to the recipe Rye Bread:
500g rye flour
450g whole-wheat
flour plus more for kneading
50g plain flour
1 tablespoon salt
1 10g sachet of
instant yeast
1 tablespoon honey
3 tablespoons oil
670 ml milk
125 ml water
Warm the milk to
lukewarm. Mix the flours and salt in a large bowl. Make a well in the
middle and put in the yeast, then honey, then oil, pour on the warmed
milk and water and mix.
When it gets doughy
turn out on to a well floured surface (it will be extremely sticky) and
knead for 10 minutes. You will need to keep adding flour as you knead.
It is better for it to be too sticky than too dry – you can
always add more flour, but too dry will make a dry, hard loaf.
After 10 minutes,
put it back into the bowl with a plastic bag over it and leave in a
warmish place for two hours or so. Then knock down, firmly pressing out
the air, but not over kneading, then form into two or three loaves on a
baking sheet, cover again and leave to rise for another hour.
Then bake for 30
minutes at 190C until they sound hollow when you tap on the bottom of
the loaf. Cool on a wire rack.
So how do I keep
track of the bread making, in between school runs, mealtimes and the
rest? Well I don’t always. There are times when I
optimistically start the bread off, leave it to rise and four hours
later remember about it, knock it down, forget to switch on the oven so
it has had an extra day or so in rising time by the time it gets
cooked.
It does seem to be
very forgiving though – whatever you do to it, you do
generally get bread out at the end, it may not always be the perfect
loaf, but then variety is the spice of life after all. There was one
time it hadn’t quite finished cooking
by the time I had to do the school run, so I asked my husband to take
it out in ten minutes….. By the time I got back we had a
very useful weapon against intruders. We didn’t eat that
one…I think it was ryvita for lunch…!