Reinhart's German Five-Kern

I baked German Five-Kern Bread from Peter Reinhart's "Crust & Crumb" a few weeks back. This has turned out to be one of my favorite breads and I wish I had discovered it sooner. The Five-Kern is made from coarse dark rye flour (20.26% - I used NYBakers Dark Rye), bread flour (KA), cooked brown rice, polenta, oats, flax seeds and honey. And water and salt, of course. I guess I turned it into a Six-Kern bread with the poppy seed embellishment.

I followed Peter's book closely, but do not feel comfortable posting his commercial formula. It does involve building a rye sponge followed by a firm rye starter over the course of a couple of days. The flavor was incredible, particularly the crust, and the crumb was much lighter than I expected. An enticing aroma filled the house during the bake.

Even with the 2 stage elaboration, the amount of pre-fermented flour was only 15.19%. The final dough hydration was 63.80%, but the crumb of the finished loaves seemed moister than that.

Submitted to [URL=http://www.wildyeastblog.com/category/yeastspotting/]YeastSpotting[/URL]

That looks really good, and I love the nice thick crust!

Looks absolutely mouthwatering!  Beautiful crumb and crust!

Sylvia

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Really nice!

Tim

I imagine it tastes as great as it looks.  There's nothing as wonderful as a well made bread with a boldy baked crust.

Many thanks to all of you, not only for the gracious comments, but for a wealth of shared knowledge and experience.

John

Hi,

As with all the good people above, I agree your bread looks wonderful.

I note you use cooked rice; this will obviously add to the overall moisture content quite significantly.   Rye flour at that level, plus all the other grains in there; beautiful looking [and tasting, I'm sure] bread!

So, to me the hydration is spot on.   The maxim "the wetter the better" does not always hold good.

Best wishes

Andy