3 1/2 c  Plus 1 tablespoon apple
          -cider
     2 tb Caraway seeds
 5 1/2 c  (or more) whole grain
          -(coarse) rye flour (i.e.,
          -Hodgson Mill)
     1 c  Sourdough starter (1:1 ratio
          -water:bread flour)
     1 tb Yeast
     1 ts Salt
 2 1/2 c  Bread flour
          Vegetable oil spray (Pam;
          -etc.)
OPTIONAL
     1    Egg
          Rye flakes
 Heat 3 cups apple cider and 2 tablespoons caraway seeds to boiling; pour
 over 3 cups of coarse rye flour and stir. Let mixture cool. Add 1 cup
 active sourdough starter and mix well. The mixture will resemble heavy
 porridge as the rye flour absorbs the apple cider. Sprinkle 1/2 cup coarse
 rye flour over the mixture but do not stir at this point.
 Cover your bowl with a dish towel, and then wrap the covered bowl with a
 beach towel or blanket. Put wrapped bowl in a warm spot (next to a heat
 register is good) and allow the mixture to ferment for up to 24 hours (less
 time if you think it will be too sour).
 Dissolve 1 tablespoon yeast in 1/2 cup warm (105-115 degrees Farenheit)
 apple cider. Let the yeast mixture bubble and then add it to the sourdough
 mixture. Gradually add 1 teaspoon salt, 2-1/2 cups bread flour, and 2 cups
 coarse rye flour. Knead with your heavy-duty electric mixer. If the dough
 seems too wet, add more rye flour (wet dough will result in a soggy baked
 brick). This type of bread is tricky to make, as the dough is always very
 sticky from the rye; it takes some trial and error to get a feel for the
 dough. If the dough is too wet, it becomes slack after a while; the correct
 consistency of dough remains rather firm.
 Spray a Formica countertop or a marble pastry board with vegetable cooking
 spray. Use a small plastic pan scraper or something like that to scrape
 your dough out of the bowl and onto your work surface. Using a bench
 knife/dough scraper, divide the dough into two equal chunks. Wet your hands
 with water and keep a bowl of water handy for additional dipping. Form the
 dough into two loaves on the oiled surface, using just your wet hands; do
 not add flour at this point. Place the loaves into oiled bread pans (8-1/2″
 x 4-1/2″). Cover with a dish towel and let rise in a warm place. Believe it
 or not, this very heavy dough WILL rise. OPTIONAL (not a traditional
 method): Brush on glaze made with 1 egg that’s been mixed with 1 tablespoon
 of apple cider; sprinkle with rye flakes (obtainable from a food co-op).
 Bake for 15 minutes at 400 degrees Farenheit; then turn heat down to 350
 degrees Farenheit and continue to bake for an additional hour. Don’t
 underbake. Remove loaves from pans and allow to cool on a rack.
 POSTSCRIPT: When measuring flour, I do not fluff and scoop into separate
 measuring cups; rather I just use my measuring cup to do the scooping and
 then level it off with a spatula. My resulting “cups” are probably somewhat
 on the dense side as a result of this.
 If anyone is interested in a “true sourdough” Latvian rye bread (using only
 sourdough starter but no additional yeast), I can post a recipe for it
 later on. The recipe differs from the one here in several ways: by
 including water and sugar, rather than apple cider; it uses a different
 (coffee flavored) glaze; it’s a one-day process, rather than two-day like
 the recipe posted here; it uses a different type of sourdough starter.
                 
                 Yields       
                1 Servings                
