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Honey Raisin Rye Bread

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
French 3 Servings

INGREDIENTS

2 pk Quick rising dry yeast
2 1/2 c Tepid water (110 degrees)
2 c Rye flour
4 c Whole Wheat Flour
1 ts Salt — disolved in
1 ts Water
1 c Raisins
3 tb Honey
Cormeal — for
Baking-optional

INSTRUCTIONS

This recipe is based on the Basic Bread Dough recipe written in the Frugal
Gourmet's "Whole Family Cookbook" by Jeff Smith. He writes how to make rye
bread out of this recipe I tried to incorporate the changes he wrote for
the rye recipe then added several of my own, Raisins and Honey. Hope I
succeded. I made this and it tasted great. You can always refer to the book
for additional information.
Dissolve the yeast in water. (Tepid not hot, not cool, but barely warm.)
Let stand for 5 minutes. Stir to dissolve. The total weight of both flours
together should weigh 2 lbs 3 oz if you are weighing. (I didn't weigh) Make
a batter of the water and yeast together with 2 cups of rye and 2 cups of
wheat flour. Beat for 10 minutes with an electric mixer. Toss in the
raisins and honey as you are beating. The batter will pull away from the
sides of the mixing bowl. Add the salted water. Add the remaining flour and
knead for 5 minutes in a good mixer (Frugal Gourmet uses a Kitchen Aid.) or
15 minutes by hand (I did it by hand). Place on a Formica counter, or a
piece of plastic wrap, and cover with a large metal bowl. Let rise until
double the bulk, 1 to 1 1/2 hours. Punch down, and let rise for another 1
1/2 hours. Punch down again and mold into 3 or 4 loaves. Let the loaves
rise. The Frugal Gourmet uses an extra oven with a pan of hot water in the
bottom. This allows for steam heat, perfect for rising dough. Place the
loaves on a greased baking sheet. Preheat the oven to 450 degrees. When the
loaves have risen to double their original bulk, place them in the upper
one third of the oven. IMPORTANT: Place a pan of hot water on the bottom
shelf. This will assure you of a great crust. Bake for about 25 minutes, or
until the bread is nicely browned and the loaves sound hollow when you
thump their bottoms with your finger. Do not bake in bread pans. Just form
a couple of round loaves and let them rise. Be sure to mist the loaves with
water while baking. (I sprayed water every so often from a simple water
sprayer set on the mist setting) If you wish your bread to have an Old
World look, simply dust the loaves with flour before the final rising. You
can use an egg and water glaze, but the Frugal Gourmet say's he is
convinced that you will get a much better crust if you simply use flour.
The bread is so rich that you need not put butter on it. The French rarely
eat butter on bread. And if you wish to reduce or eliminate salt in the
bread, simply cut down on the amount of salt in the recipe. It is tasty
without. From The Frugal Gourmet "Whole Family Cookbook" by Jeff Smith
p286.
Recipe By     :
From: Big Flavors Of The Hot Sun By Chr
File ftp://ftp.idiscover.co.uk/pub/food/mealmaster/recipes/mmdja006.zip

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