Food Recipes Bread Scandinavian Rye Bread 5.0 (5,885) Add your rating & review Expert baker Lionel Vatinet makes this dense, super-flavorful bread with locally milled rye flour. Slideshow: How to Make Scandinavian Rye Bread By Lionel Vatinet Lionel Vatinet F&W Star Chef » See All F&W Chef Superstars Lionel Vatinet, master baker and owner of La Farm Bakery, in Cary, North Carolina, is also the author of the forthcoming A Passion For Bread: Lessons From A Master Baker — Seven Steps To Making Perfect Loaves (Little, Brown, fall 2013). Here are his top holiday tips. What are your favorite holiday gifts? I like to make a basket of fresh bread. I’ll sometimes add some charcuterie, even though I don’t make my own, or a jar of local jam. We have a jam maker I like a lot here in Cary, called Mrs. Ruth’s. If we do a jam in France, it’s going to be only strawberry or black currant or what have you. Here you can be much more creative. She doesn’t just go with one fruit, she’s going to go with raspberry and pecan, these fun, sometimes funky combinations that go well with everything. What’s your favorite holiday cocktail? I always come back to my French roots, so at the holidays I don’t think of cocktails so much as aperitifs. The classic is the anise liqueur Ricard: I cannot go without one, no matter what time of year. Then my father is from the region that makes Pineau des Charentes, a Cognac-based liqueur that’s a great aperitif for the holidays. There are two, white and red: pineau blanc and pineau rouge. They always make me think of the holidays because my mother brings me a bottle when she comes to visit, as my father did when he was still alive. It’s usually served straight up, chilled. What’s a great entertaining tip? Hire a caterer so you don’t stress out and can enjoy your guests. To organize and cook for so many of them, at least for me, you spend your time in the kitchen, and you never spend time with your family and friends. What are your 5 top places not to miss in Cary, North Carolina, and the Research Triangle?Definitely the Umstead Hotel, it’s a great luxury hotel and spa in nearby Raleigh. Its restaurant Herons is fantastic. The chef Scott Crawford is so genuine, I love his food, he definitely he brings the South to his menu with a very high quality, so people can relate to what he does. So the Umstead and Herons, those are two great stops. Escazù Artisan Chocolates is in downtown Raleigh. They make chocolate like we make bread, in an artisan way. They make bars as well as hot chocolate. And you can’t spend the holidays without chocolate. The Carolina Ballet’s “Nutcracker” is incredible. It’s been there for over 15 years, they do a fantastic job during the holidays. And we are not New York or Rockefeller Center, but we have an ice-skating rink in downtown Raleigh. I’m one of the guys skating along the wall, I never go in the middle because they go too fast, but I like it. It’s dynamic and festive, and we don’t get much cold weather here, so we can feel the cold from the ice and pretend we have all four seasons.What’s the recipe you’re most famous for? Definitely our stollen. We make the fruitcake with marzipan in the middle, but it’s very light, almost like a brioche, not dense and heavy. It’s full of flavor: orange zest, lemon peel, almonds, rum. We make it only once a year. It’s a very popular item. At our café the most popular item is a croque-madame made with our signature La Farm bread, a 5-pounder sourdough made with white and whole-wheat flour, natural starter or liquid levain. The croque-madame has sourdough, Mornay sauce, ham and two eggs on the top. What’s your favorite cookbook of all time?Alain Couet and Eric Kayser’s Pains Speciaux et Decorée, Vol. 2. This book is now out of print, but it came out in the 1980s when I was first starting as a baker. The second volume covered farm breads as well as decorative breads. It’s got a lot of pictures for the steps, so it’s not too intimidating; it was great. What’s one technique everyone should know? Mixing by hand. I believe for bakers, and even foodies, you need to use your hands. If you are cook, you want to use your hands as much as you can, no matter what you do. Your hand is your memory. And the feel of bread is the hardest thing to teach: to explain how a dough might be a little too soft, or needs a little bit more strength. By touching, you develop your skills faster and become a better baker. Food & Wine's Editorial Guidelines Updated on February 1, 2015 Save Rate PRINT Share Close Photo: © Tara Fisher Active Time: 35 mins Total Time: 5 hrs 45 mins Yield: 1 loaf Cook Mode (Keep screen awake) Ingredients 1/2 cup rye berries, rinsed and drained 5 1/4 cups warm water 1/2 cup millet, rinsed and drained 1 envelope (1/4 ounce) active dry yeast 4 cups whole-grain rye flour 1 cup bread flour 2 tablespoons fine sea salt 1 1/4 cups rolled oats Vegetable oil, for greasing Directions In a small saucepan, cover the rye berries with 2 cups of the water and bring to a boil. Simmer gently over moderately low heat until all of the water has been absorbed and the rye berries are al dente, about 40 minutes. Spread the rye berries on parchment paper and let cool completely. Meanwhile, in another small saucepan, cover the millet with 1 cup of the water and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat to moderately low and simmer until all of the water has been absorbed and the millet is halfway to tender, about 12 minutes. Spread the millet on parchment paper and let cool completely. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle, mix the yeast with the remaining 2 1/4 cups of water and let stand until foamy, 10 minutes. Add both of the flours and the salt and mix at low speed for 5 minutes. Increase the speed to medium and mix for 2 minutes. Mix in the cooled rye berries and millet along with 3/4 cup of the rolled oats. Scrape the dough into a greased large bowl and cover with plastic wrap. Let stand in a warm spot until doubled, about 2 hours. Scatter the remaining 1/2 cup of oats on a work surface and scrape the dough onto them. Roll the dough until coated with the oats, then pat into a large brick shape. Transfer the dough to a greased 9-by-5-inch loaf pan and cover with a damp kitchen towel. Let stand in a warm spot until slightly risen, about 1 1/2 hours. Preheat the oven to 450°. Bake the bread for 55 minutes to 1 hour, until lightly browned on top and an instant-read thermometer inserted in the center registers 200°. Transfer to a rack and let cool for 30 minutes. Unmold and let cool completely. Make Ahead The bread can be kept wrapped in plastic at room temperature for 5 days. Originally appeared: February 2015 Rate It Print