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Chocolate cherry rye bread

KitchenAid Chef

The chocolate and dried cherries come perfectly together to provide a rich and comforting bread perfect for breakfast or as a midday energy boost with a cup of tea.

Import-Recipe - Chocolate Cherry Rye Bread

Chocolate cherry rye bread

KitchenAid Chef

The chocolate and dried cherries come perfectly together to provide a rich and comforting bread perfect for breakfast or as a midday energy boost with a cup of tea.

Tools

StandMixer
BreadBowl
Prep
2h5
Cooking
40min
Total
2h45
Difficulty
Intermediate

Ingredients

275 g all purpose flour

80 g dark rye flour

6 g dry yeast

1 tsp (8g) salt

15 g cocoa powder

25 g sugar

350 ml warm water

120 g dried cherries, roughly chopped

130 g dark chocolate chips

Step by step

  1. Prepare all your ingredients at your workstation. Warm the Bread Bowl by filling it with hot water - then, pour out the water and pat dry. Add the flours, yeast, salt, cocoa powder, sugar and water into the Bread Bowl. Use a pastry spatula or wooden spoon and stir ingredients together until all are moistened. Affix the dough hook to your KitchenAid Artisan Stand Mixer and turn the mixer to speed 2. After about 30 seconds, add in the chopped dried cherries and chocolate chips; and, allow to knead for another 30 seconds - or, until the dough starts to pull away from the sides of the bowl, but is still wet. Do not over knead. Remove the dough from the hook and then remove the bowl from the stand mixer. Generously flour the bowl and the top of the dough with all purpose flour, and use your hands (or pastry spatula) to gather the dough and turn it in the flour so it is fully coated. Sprinkle a bit more flour on the top, then cover the bowl with the lid. Allow the dough to rise in a warm area for 1 ½ - 2 hours, or until it has reached close to the top proofing line.

  2. Uncover the bowl and, with floured hands, gently pull the dough from the sides of the bowl into a ball, and then place the ball onto a floured surface. With dough in a rough round in front of you, pinch the top of the dough, stretch it away from you, then fold it into the center of the dough like you are folding an envelope. Give the dough a slight twist and do the same thing to the portion now at the top. Continue turning, stretching and folding the dough into the center for three to four full circles. (You will notice it gets harder to stretch the dough as you work.) After the final stretch and fold, flip the dough over, fold side down. Gently place both hands on each side of the round and gently curl your right palm around the right edge while using your left hand to rotate the round on the surface. This action will smooth the dough into a round mound.

  3. Let the dough sit in place while you quickly wash out the bread bowl and dry it thoroughly. Generously flour the clean inside of the Bread Bowl and return the dough, seam side down, to the Bread Bowl. Cover the bowl with the lid and allow it to rise for 30 more minutes. (Dough should feel marshmallowy when gently pressed with a finger.)

  4. While dough is on second rise, preheat the oven to 230°C. (NOTE: Set your rack as close to the center of the oven as possible while still leaving enough height for the lidded Bread Bowl to fit.) When ready to bake, remove the lid from the Bread Bowl and line the inside of the lid with a round of parchment paper. Carefully invert the dough from the Bread Bowl onto the parchment covered surface (so the fold side is now facing up), being careful not to deflate it or disturb the shape. Dust out the excess flour from the Bread Bowl, then cover the dough with the Bread Bowl and place in the oven. Bake for 30 minutes. Then, remove the Bread Bowl to expose the bread and finish baking for 10-12 more minutes, or until the crust is crispy and hollow when you knock on it. Remove to a cooling rack and let cool before slicing.

  5. It’s always best to weigh the flour when making bread. If you don’t have a kitchen scale, do not pack the flour when measuring. Simply ‘fluff’ the flour before filling your measuring cup, then use the back of a kitchen knife to push off any excess above the rim. There is no need to score the top of this bread when baking. When the dough is inverted onto the lid after the second rise, there are natural cracks (from the stretch and fold process) that will expand and give this bread the perfect artisan loaf look.