A very seedy bread

This is my latest obsession - bread filled to the brim with seeds and whole grains. A bit like the danish rugbrød and I bet the Germans have something similar too.

Method (1 loaf)

The only things I measure is the water and seeds, the rest I find no use in measuring. Whole flour coarsely ground can have such varying absorption rates depending on age and storage. Going by feel is mandatory.

  • 500g water
  • Some yeast (or sourdough). Use a quantity that makes the bake fit into your schedule. I used about 8-10g fresh yeast.
  • Dissolve yeast into water with your preferred method.
  • Add seeds. I used 2dl in total split between 1dl sunflower, 1/2dl flax and 1/2dl psyllium seeds
  • Begin adding flour. I used a mix of coarse ground whole rye (1/3) and graham flour (2/3). This is a tricky part to describe as I go by feel. At this point I want a “sloppy batter”. It will stiffen as the flour absorbs water. My desired final texture is a “shapeable batter”, something that holds a shape for a little while but is very much squishable. Adjust water/flour if needed. Look at this consistency as a reference.
  • Let rest until risen to at least half again size (150%), for me it took about 2 hours. Adjust time as needed.
  • After it has risen give it a light work, you won’t get any gluten development with all those additions.
  • Put dough in tin, I prefer to bake in parchment paper to get it out easier. I took the dough directly from the bowl into the tin, just spread it evenly.
  • Let rest again, I gave it another 2 hours. You decide. Let the bake fit into your schedule.
  • Preheat oven to 250C.
  • Put tin in oven, lower to 200C and bake for 30 minutes
  • (optional) Remove bread from tin and put on grate. Have nothing to back it up but I feel I get better crust all around, less moisture trapped in tin.
  • Heat oven to 225C then turn it off. Let bread rest in cooling oven until room temperature.
  • Let bread rest for at least 24 hours
  • Devour. This bread has a lot of flavour and is paired really well with strongly flavoured condiments such as gravlax, matjes herring or just butter.
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