I managed to find some of Cedar Mountain's recipes on Tapatalk and since hubby had requested a rye loaf for this week, I thought I would give it a shot. It didn't get the oven spring that Cedar Mountain gets but it sure smells wonderful. Crumb shot will be forthcoming once we cut into it.
As to the method, I changed a couple of things. I included the add-ins in the autolyse, I subbed out the red fife for local partially sifted wheat flour and I sprinkled the loaves with rye flakes just before putting in the oven. I sprayed the loaves with water to get the flakes to stick.
Cedar Mountain's Sprouted Rye Sourdough
A few days before:
Sprout - 215 g rye berries
Method and quantities
Toast - 15 g black sesame seeds
Chop/grind - 150 g of the rye sprouts
Autolyse - 150 g ground sprouted rye, 150 g rye sprouts, 15 g toasted bl sesame seeds, 700 g water, 300 g local dark rye, 100 g partially sifted local flour, 50 g Kamut flour, 550 g all purpose flour. - Let sit for one hour. Next time , let autolyse longer to help develop gluten.
Mix - 22 g salt, 220 g young levain (100% hydration 50%rye/50% AP), 30 g water - Pinch and fold to incorporate and develop gluten. Next time I think slaps and folds would be helpful.
Ferment - Do 4 sets of stretch and folds a half hour apart and let rise till just past double. That took about 1:15 minutes.
Divide and rest - The dough was sticky and soft but it shaped nicely with minimal handling. I let rest maybe 10-15 minutes before shaping.
Shaping - I used the envelope fold method and popped the dough into baskets seam side down. I really did not get a tight skin in these at all.
Proofing - The loaves went into plastic bags and then into the fridge for 14 hours.
Baking: I spritzed the loaves with water and sprinkled rye flakes on the loaves before putting them in the Dutch ovens lined with parchment paper. Baking was done as usual with 20 min at 500 F, 10 min at 450 F and 30 minutes uncoverse at 450 F.
Spritzing the loaves got the mix of rice/AP flour wet and I ended up with a nice sheen on the crust.