Once
each week, most weeks, anyway, I manage to bake a loaf of sandwich bread,
usually this one. Once in a while, I’ll make a rye sandwich loaf instead. I’m
quite a fan of rye bread, actually, and always have been. I have lovely
memories of warm sandwiches made with rye toast and slices of cheddar cheese
just getting soft from the residual heat from the toaster. That childhood rye was
most likely store-bought (although my mom is a good baker). Now, I take a
surprising amount of pleasure (and a small amount of pride, I must admit) in
making my own rye bread, which I make with a somewhat coarse stone-ground rye
flour and a flavorful dose of caraway seeds.
I’m
sure I made rye bread years ago with a soft rye flour that was easy to acquire
from any grocery store. I can’t seem to find such a thing anymore, but the
stone-ground flour I can find (marketed by Hodgson Mill) is so fragrant and
delicious, that I don’t really miss the more refined stuff. Rye flour is short
of gluten compared to wheat flour and those bits of bran and other good stuff
in the stone-ground flour can slice through strands of gluten as they form. For
those reasons, I use a 1-to-2 ratio of rye flour to bread flour to give my
sandwich bread the desirable texture and loft, and I add a tablespoon of vital
gluten flour.
I
find that it is easy to let this dough get too stiff and leaden so that the
loaf ends up like a doorstop. To prevent this, I like to hold back enough flour
to allow the dough to stay a little bit sticky and wet. It’s a little bit
harder to handle and shape this way, but the dough rises nicely, given time,
and makes a fairly soft loaf with a nice, brown and crisp crust.
This
is a delicious bread suitable for just about any deli sandwich. I don’t find
the caraway flavor to go quite as well with something like a peanut butter sandwich,
but I do like slices of this bread toasted and spread with jam, or, even
better, with a good ricotta cheese and jam. Of course, a just-beginning-to-melt
slice of sharp cheddar is still rather good. And you can't go wrong with a nice swipe of butter. Not at all.
Caraway Rye
Sandwich Bread
I like to use a
Kitchen Aid stand mixer to mix and knead bread dough, but you can mix and knead
the dough by hand if you prefer.
If you do not care
for caraway, you could leave it out of this recipe.
1
cup warm water (100-110 F)
2
¼ teaspoon active dry yeast (1 envelope)
1
tablespoon sugar
1
tablespoon soft butter
1
cup rye flour
2
cups bread flour, divided
1
tablespoon vital gluten flour
1
tablespoon caraway seeds
1
teaspoon fine salt
1.
Combine the water, yeast and sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer (or in a large
bowl if mixing and kneading your dough by hand). Let stand about 5 minutes or
until the yeast is foamy.
2.
Add the butter, rye flour, 1 cup bread flour, gluten and caraway seeds. Stir
with the paddle attachment on low speed until a wet batter is formed. Cover the
bowl with a towel and let stand 15-30 minutes.
3.
After the batter has rested, it should have risen noticeably and appear
slightly foamy. Sprinkle the salt over the dough. Add about half of the remaining
bread flour. Using the dough hook knead the dough, adding as much of the
remaining flour as possible while creating a slightly wet and sticky dough.
Knead for a total of about 10 minutes. (I use setting #2 on my Kitchen Aid
mixer to knead.) Alternatively, mix in some of the bread flour with a spoon and
knead in the rest by hand.
4.
Shape the kneaded dough into a smooth ball. Spray a large bowl with cooking
spray and place the dough ball in it. Spray the dough with more cooking spray
and place a sheet of plastic wrap directly on top. Cover the bowl with a towel
and let the dough rise about 1 hour or until double in size.
5.
Gently deflate the risen dough and form it into a new ball. Let stand about 5
minutes. Spray an 8-inch loaf pan with nonstick cooking spray. Shape the dough
into a loaf and place in the prepared loaf pan. Cover with a towel and let
stand about 1 hour or until double in size.
6.
Preheat the oven to 375 F. Bake the dough in the pan for 35 minutes or until
the bread tests done (sounds hollow when tapped or reads about 200 F in the
center on an instant-read thermometer). Remove the bread from the pan and cool
completely on a wire rack.
Makes
a 1 ½ pound loaf.
Other
recipes like this one: Beer and Onion Rye Bread, Dark Rye Bread, Wheat Sandwich Bread
One
year ago: Irish Cream Brownies
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