Swedish Rye Bread

Ingrients & Directions


2 c Milk
1 c Water
1/2 c Brown sugar
1/2 oz Dry yeast; (2 pkg)
6 c Rye flour; approx
3 c White flour; approx
1/2 c Granulated sugar
1/2 c Vegetable oil
1/4 c Dark molasses
2 ts Anise Seed; crushed
1 ts Salt

BREAD-RYE – A sweet, dark whole-grain rye bread

This recipe comes from my great-grandmother, who emigrated from Sweden and
brought this recipe with her. It makes a sweet, dark bread, and (like most
whole-grain breads) it tends to be a bit heavy.

(Makes 3 loaves)

PROCEDURE (1) Scald the milk and combine it with the water and brown sugar
in a very large bowl. (You need something that holds at least 4 or 5
quarts.) When the mixture is lukewarm, dissolve the yeast in it, then stir
in 2 cups rye flour and 1 cup white flour to make a paste.

(2) Let the mixture rise in a warm place until it is light and foamy. This
usually takes about 30 minutes to an hour. Check it frequently-it can
really make a mess if it rises enough to overflow the bowl. (I’m sure they
could

make a great horror movie about a gigantic blob of bread dough that keeps
getting bigger and bigger as it consumes everything in its path….)

(3) Stir in the granulated sugar, oil, molasses, anise seed and salt, and

enough flour to make a stiff dough, using 2 parts rye to 1 part white.
Knead the dough for about 5 minutes, or until it is smooth and elastic,
adding more flour to keep it from sticking to your hands.

(4) Clean and grease the bowl. Put the dough in the bowl, turning it to
grease all sides. Cover the bowl loosely with a clean towel and let the
dough rise until it’s doubled in bulk. Punch it down and let rise until
double again.
(5) Divide the dough into three loaves and put in greased pans. (I
usually make round loaves and bake them on cookie sheets.) Cover with the
towel and let rise until double again.

(6) Bake for about 45 minutes at 350 deg. F. Because of the high sugar
content, this bread can burn rather easily; watch it closely so it doesn’t
get too dark.

NOTES Rye flour can be a little hard to find these days. You may have to
visit a store that specializes in natural foods. Avoid the kind that is
very coarsely ground with big chunks of bran in it, though; this doesn’t
seem to have any gluten at all in it, and since the proportion of rye flour
is so high in this recipe, the texture of the bread will come out all
wrong. You need something that looks more like ordinary flour.

RATING Difficulty: moderate. Time: 30 minutes preparation, several hours
rising, 1 hour baking and cooling. Precision: measure the ingredients.

CONTRIBUTOR Sandra Loosemore Evans & Sutherland Computer Corporation, Salt
Lake City {decwrl, utah-gr!uplherc}!esunix!loosemor

USENET Cookbook Printed 2/27/91 21 May 86 1


Yields
1 Servings

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