Simple rye bread
300 grams of light rye flour
3 grams dry yeast (or 1.5 g instant yeast or 6 grams fresh yeast)
250 grams of warm water
6 grams of salt
3 grams dry yeast (or 1.5 g instant yeast or 6 grams fresh yeast)
250 grams of warm water
6 grams of salt
Put the flour in a bowl and make a well in it. Put the yeast in the well and pour on 1/2 the water. Let it rest for 15 minutes. Put the rest of the water in and the salt and mix all of this together with a wooden spoon. Give it a good stir to make sure all of the ingredients are well mixed. You won't have to knead it but give it some welly in order to ensure your yeast and salt are evenly mixed in. It will be kind of like trying to stir porridge or mud pies. Satisfying. Messy. Adjust the water (ie add more if necessary) so that you have a soft, sticky dough. It should not come away clean from the bowl, but be much softer - you can easily press your fingers into it.
Wet your hands thoroughly and scrape it all out of the bowl. Mould it into a little brick and gently place it in a greased baking tin. It can come about 2/3 of the way up the sides.
Leave it, covered with a damp tea towel or cling flim for two hours or so until it has risen visibly and come to the top of the tin. There will be little holes on top and that is normal: these are the air bubbles bursting through the top.
Dust it with flour or spray the top with a plant sprayer and sprinkle some seeds on the top.
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