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AV's avatar

I love this chapter, and I'll be delighted to buy the book when released. I bake in a professional capacity in France, in a rye-producing region (Auvergne). I'd venture to say that single most important thing with rye baking is getting as good and uncorrected a flour as you can afford, and not changing your flour supplier until you've mastered the basics. Buy T-135 rye to start with, leave the full T-170 experience for later (American non-classified rye flours are too confusing, sorry for this) and do NOT buy any rye flour that is supermarket-related.

Start baking in metal pans, leaving bannetons for the time being, and sprinkle your dough with a small amount of (fresh) yeast. It helps, and I don't know anyone who bakes for a, living around here who skips yeast.

While it's true you kind of need a different baker's brain for rye, once you're a capable wheat baker it will just take a few bakes to get the basics right and enter a totally different dimension.

Mix hot,always bake very hot (260C for the initial 25 minutes or so, then switch your oven off if baking on a thick stone) and don't hesitate to take your loaf out of the pan for the final 20-30 minutes of baking to dry it thoroughly, we always do.

I've loved the chapter and related to 100% of the things said. Looking forward to purchasing the book as said. Thanks again.

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Meaghin Kennedy's avatar

I'm going to be baking more rye sourdough this Fall and I plan to refer to this post constantly: thank you for your thoroughness!

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