Ingredients
Method
The Yeast Configurations
- Option A: Active Dry Yeast (The Chef's Choice): Requires "blooming" to wake up the larger granules. This method gives the bread a deeper, more classic fermented flavor.To Bloom: In a small bowl, combine ½ cup of your warm water (taken from the total 1 ¾ cups) with the ½ tbsp of honey. Sprinkle the 2 tsp of active dry yeast on top, give it a quick stir, and let it sit for 8 to 10 minutes until it forms a thick, billowy foam.
- Option B: Quick-Rise / Instant Yeast: Engineered with a highly soluble coating. It does not require separate blooming and can be mixed right into the dry ingredients or layered directly into a bread machine.
Method 1: The Manual Artisan Workflow
- Mix the Base: In a large bowl, whisk together all three flours (all-purpose, rye, whole wheat), salt, caraway, whole flax, and ground flax. Drop the warm, finely mashed potato into the flour and use a fork or your fingers to break it up and loosely distribute it.
- Make the "Vel": Using your hand, push the flour mixture firmly against the sides of the bowl, leaving a deep, distinct well (hole) in the very center.
- Hydrate: * If using Active Dry Yeast: Pour your foamy, bloomed yeast/honey mixture into the well, followed by the remaining 1 ¼ cups of warm water and the 1 tbsp of melted lard.If using Quick-Rise Yeast: Whisk the honey directly into your 1 ¾ cups of warm water until dissolved, then pour the water, yeast, and melted lard straight into the well.
- Knead ("Need"): Use a sturdy wooden spoon to gradually draw the inner walls of flour into the liquid center. Stir until a shaggy, sticky dough forms. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured surface and knead vigorously for 10 minutes. Note: The potato and rye will naturally make the dough tacky; resist adding too much extra flour so the bread stays soft. Knead until it is completely smooth and elastic.
- First Rise ("To Rise Dough"): Shape into a ball, place in a lightly greased bowl, and turn it over to coat the top. Cover with a damp cloth or wrap, and let it rise in a warm spot for 1 to 1.5 hours (Active Dry yeast may take slightly longer) until it has doubled in size.
- Shape & Second Rise: Gently punch down the dough to deflate it. Shape it into an oblong log and place it into a greased standard loaf pan. Cover loosely and let it rise a second time for 30 to 45 minutes, until the dough crowns about an inch above the rim of the pan. Preheat your oven to 400°F (200°C) during this time.
- Bake: Bake at 400°F (200°C) for 35 to 45 minutes until the crust is deep golden-brown and the bottom sounds hollow when tapped. Let cool on a wire rack completely before slicing.
The traditional, tactile methodology using your mother's custom flour well ("vel") to control hydration.
Method 2: The Automated Bread Machine Workflow
Using a modern machine to master the intensive 10-minute kneading cycle automatically.
Option A: The Hybrid Route (Highly Recommended)
- Load the Pan:For Active Dry Yeast: Pour ½ cup of the warm water and all the honey into the bottom of the machine pan. Sprinkle the yeast on top and let it sit undisturbed inside the machine for 10 minutes to foam up. Then add the remaining water, melted lard, and mashed potato.For Quick-Rise Yeast: Add all liquids and fats first (water, honey, melted lard, mashed potato), then cover completely with the flours and seasonings. Poke a small hole in the top of the dry flour and add the yeast.
- The Kneading Cycle: Select the "Dough" setting on your machine and press start. Chef's Tip: Peek into the pan during the first 5–8 minutes of mixing. Because mashed potato moisture varies, if the dough looks like a loose batter, drop in 1 tablespoon of flour. It should form a clean, tacky, rolling ball.
- The Kneading Cycle: Select the "Dough" setting on your machine and press start. Chef's Tip: Peek into the pan during the first 5–8 minutes of mixing. Because mashed potato moisture varies, if the dough looks like a loose batter, drop in 1 tablespoon of flour. It should form a clean, tacky, rolling ball.
This gives you the ease of machine mixing, but the beautiful look and texture of a traditional oven-baked loaf pan.
Option B: The Express Route (Fully Automated)
- Load the ingredients into the machine pan using the same sequence detailed above.
- Select the "Basic" or "White Bread" cycle.
- Set your preferred crust color to "Medium" (the honey naturally helps the crust brown beautifully, so avoid "Dark").
- Press start and let the machine handle everything from mixing to the final bake automatically.