The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Rye flour

deni999's picture
deni999

Rye flour

I recently bought a copy of the Rye Baker and am excited about trying many of the formulas in the book.

I'm also a home miller.

Does anyone have suggestions on how to make the flours as defined in the book?

Thanks in advance

Lechem's picture
Lechem (not verified)

The book looks great and on my list to get. Hopefully the author (Elagins on TFL) will see your forum topic and offer guidance. Enjoy the recipes. 

Elagins's picture
Elagins

The only recourse you have to getting the lighter flours is bolting (sifting). A lot of home millers I've communicated with put their flour through a #40 sieve then re-mill the coarse fragments. For what it's worth, premodern millers and bakers made do with what they had -- usually stone mills and horsehair sieves. Rather than worrying about the precise ash and protein content of your flour, try adjusting the hydration of your doughs to get the consistencies I recommend in the  book. Your results won't be the same as mine, but that's the adventure of baking! PS, if you do decide to try commercial rye flour, check out my assortment at www.nybakers.com.
Stan.

Elagins's picture
Elagins

Duplicate of the above -- no way to delete

deni999's picture
deni999

Thank you very much Stan. And that's very much for the book. The first few loaves have been very good