The next morning, however, I figured, "WTH? I'll be home from work in time to start the bread machine on a normal cycle and be there to monitor the progress if I need to add water." So, I just prepared the sponge as usual and combined it with the rest of the recipe after it had grown for 8 hours. In the end, there was enough water in the recipe so that my two-step process would have worked.
What I didn't have enough of, though, was rye flour. The recipe calls for 2 cups, and I only had about 1½ cups. I made up for the shortage with white flour. My whole recipe, then, was
Sour
Cream Rye Bread, Take 2
|
|
Remove 4 oz. of starter. Add 4 oz. of
white flour and 4 oz. of water. Set in a warm place for about 6
hours until it doubles in size. Then, add
|
|
Sour Cream
|
½
Cup
|
Vegetable Oil
|
2
Tbl
|
Sugar
|
2
Tbl
|
Salt
|
1
tsp
|
Caraway
seeds
|
1
Tbl
|
Vital
gluten
|
1
Tbl
|
Rye
flour
|
1½
Cups
|
White
bread flour
|
2
Cups
|
Water
as needed
|
5 oz.
|
Since I was home for the mixing cycle, I peeked inside. The dough formed a nice ball
It hadn't picked up every last bit from the corners, but there was still plenty of time left in the mixing cycle. The dough ball looked good, so in retrospect, I could use this recipe in a two-step processes.
The loaf rose better than I was anticipating for a recipe that has so much rye flour in it.
It had that break-away pompadour look that I am coming to expect from rye bread. It is also quite heavy. As before, it tastes great.
Next, white sourdough.