How to Make Homemade Rye Bread
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Made with a mixture of bread and rye flours, a small amount of honey, and a few teaspoons of caraway seeds, this simple no-knead rye bread tastes beautifully tangy with a hearty, chewy texture perfect for sandwiches or toast. It comes together in no time and bakes in a single loaf pan, but the recipe can be doubled, and the baked bread freezes very well.
Rye bread has a reputation of being dense and heavy as well as aggressively sour in flavor. While some people love these qualities, others, understandably, do not. I love a rye bread with a subtle tang and a hearty but not leaden texture.
This no-knead rye bread is just that: made with a mixture of bread and rye flours, the texture of the finished loaf is light enough for a sandwich but makes excellent toast as well. A small amount of honey balances out the sourness and lends a nice chew, while caraway seeds, which can be left out, impart subtle notes of citrus and anise.
This recipe calls for 1 cup of rye flour and 3 cups of bread flour, and while you could play around with increasing the proportion of rye in this recipe (which is roughly 20% by weight), keep in mind that the more rye flour you use, the denser your bread will be. Why? Because rye flour is different than wheat flour in a number of ways, namely:
- Higher in Bran and Minerals: Flour with a high amount of bran and minerals will produce bread that is lower in volume because the sharp shape of the bran cuts the gluten network.
- Different Proteins + High in Pentosans: Wheat flour contains two gluten-forming proteins: glutenin (which promotes elasticity) and gliadin (which promotes extensibility). When these proteins mix with water, gluten begins forming. Rye flour on the other hand contains gliadin and a protein called glutelin (similar to glutenin). It also is high in pentosans (a polysaccharide composed of carbon sugars). The pentosans absorb water and compete with the gliadin and glutelin for moisture, which inhibits the development of gluten in rye breads.
Got all that? I’m still processing it. It comes from Jeffrey Hamelman’s Bread, which is a great resource if you like to understand the science behind bread baking. I have to confess I have never made a recipe from the book, and I pull it out seldomly but when I do, I always find the answer I am looking for (and more!).
Homemade Rye Bread, Step by Step
This recipe calls for a mix of rye flour and bread or all-purpose flour.
The Importance of Using a Scale
I was curious as to how much 1 cup of this particular rye flour would weigh, so I set my measuring cup on the scale and spooned in as much flour as I could without it spilling out.
I was able to get 96 grams of flour in without spilling, then I gently shook the cup…
… which brought the flour down to just below the rim of the measuring cup. This is an example of why it is so important to use a scale. Depending on how we measure, 1 cup of flour can vary dramatically in weight.
Once you have your ingredients measured accurately…
whisk together the flours, salt, instant yeast, and caraway seeds, if using.
Whisk together the water and honey until the honey dissolves, then add the mixture to the bowl, followed by the oil.
Stir with a spatula until you have a sticky dough ball.
Cover the bowl and let rise until doubled, 2 to 3 hours.
Rub the surface of the dough with a tablespoon of oil, then deflate the dough.
Turn the loaf over, then roll into a loaf shape.
This video may help:
Transfer to a buttered 8.5×4.5-inch or 9×5-inch loaf pan.
Let rise until the dough crowns the rim of the pan by about an inch.
Bake for 45 minutes at 375ºF.
Let cool for at least 30 minutes before slicing. I like to slice it, then freeze it in bundles of 3 to 4 slices.
Like the maple-oat bread and the three-seed bread, this one makes great toast:
How to Make Homemade Rye Bread
- Total Time: 5 hours 45 minutes
- Yield: 1 loaf
- Diet: Vegetarian
Description
Adapted from my cookbook, Bread Toast Crumbs.
Changes from the original recipe include:
- The vessel: This one is baked in a single loaf pan as opposed to two 1-quart Pyrex bowls. You can use an 8.5×4.5-inch pan or a 9×5-inch pan. And 8.5×4.5 -inch will produce a slightly taller loaf.
- Weight of the rye flour: I find a cup of rye weighs roughly 96 grams, whereas in the book I was using 128 grams for a cup of rye. See post above for more details.
- Added an additional tablespoon of honey.
- Reduced the oil to 1 tablespoon.
- Reduced the water by 1/4 cup.
Notes:
Salt: I always use Diamond Crystal kosher salt. If you are using Morton’s kosher salt or fine sea salt use half the amount by volume or the same amount by weight.
Yeast: If using active dry yeast, sprinkle the yeast over the lukewarm water-honey mixture and let stand for 10 minutes; then proceed with the recipe.
Caraway: If you don’t like the flavor of caraway, simply omit the seeds or use less: 1 to 2 teaspoons or to taste.
Ingredients
- 3 cups (384 g) bread or all-purpose flour
- 1 cup (96 g) rye flour, see note
- 2 teaspoons (10 g) kosher salt, see note
- 2 teaspoons (10 g) instant yeast, see note
- 1 tablespoon (9 g) caraway seeds, see note
- 1.75 cups (395 g) lukewarm water
- 2 tablespoons (42 g) honey or maple syrup
- 2 tablespoons (28 g) extra-virgin olive oil, divided
- Softened unsalted butter, for greasing
Instructions
- In a large bowl, whisk together the flours, salt, instant yeast, and caraway seeds, if using. In a medium bowl, whisk together the water and the honey until the honey is dissolved. Add to the flour, followed by 1 tablespoon of the oil. Using a rubber spatula, mix until the liquid is absorbed and the ingredients form a sticky dough ball.
- Cover the bowl with a damp tea towel or a cloth bowl cover or plastic wrap and set aside in a warm spot to rise for 2 to 3 hours, until the dough has doubled in volume.
- Preheat the oven to 375ºF. Grease an 8.5×4.5-inch (or 9×5-inch) loaf pan generously with softened butter.
- When the dough has doubled, drizzle the remaining tablespoon of olive oil over the top and use your hand to rub the oil over the surface to coat. Use your hand again to release the dough from the sides of the bowl, then flip the ball over so that the oil side is down. Roll the dough into a coil or into a loaf shape, then transfer to your prepared pan seam side down. Watch this video for guidance.
- Let the dough rise on the countertop (preferably in a warm, draft-free spot) for 45 minutes to an hour or until the dough has risen significantly in the pan — it should be doming above the rim of the pan by about one inch. See photos for reference.
- Transfer the pan to the oven and bake for 45 minutes, or until the top is evenly browned. Remove the pan from the oven and turn the loaf out onto a cooling rack. Let the loaf cool for at least 30 minutes before slicing.
- Prep Time: 5 hours
- Cook Time: 45 minutes
- Category: Bread
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: American
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280 Comments on “How to Make Homemade Rye Bread”
This is a wonderful and delicious recipe, making it for the second time this week because my family loved it. I am using a combination of King Arthur keto flour and bread flour to total the 384 g and Bob’s red Mill dark rye flour. I also use date syrup as the sweetener and the recipe comes out perfectly. Thanks again!
Great to hear, Evelyn! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes — so interesting and helpful for others 🙂
Another great recipe Ali! My dough was a bit sticky, I added 30 extra grams of rye flour.
Came out just perfect! Thank you, Ali! 5 stars!
Great to hear, Glenn! Thanks for writing 🙂
Absolutely delicious! Omitted the caraway seeds, cause hubby fussy. Delicious.
Great to hear, Janet! Thanks for writing 🙂
I have coarse kosher salt – will that work?
That should be fine.
Wow! This is the easiest rye bread I have ever made.
Excellent texture, fantastic accurate ingredients and yes, always try to weigh your flour!
Great to hear, Cindy! Thanks for writing 🙂
Thank you soooo much. I followed every step and bread came out so delish, so soft and fluffy, I replaced caraway seeds with fennel because I did not have any. I m having it with some fried eggplants 🤭
Yum! Great to hear. Thanks for writing 🙂
Recipe is a bomb. Simple, yet delicious bread. I use Italian flour and raw honey. I follow the recipe precisely. Thank you
Great to hear, Gene! Thanks for writing 🙂 🙂
This was very good! I followed the recipe exactly and it came out delicious and very soft. I wouldn’t change anything. I used King Arthur Unbleached AP flour and Anden Mills heirloom rye.
Great to hear, Kate! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
Made this recipe using the maple syrup option. Tastes good and texture turned out well, however, I suggest playing with reducing salt to personal taste (I used Morton’s and followed the recipe’s note to half by volume) and perhaps adding 3 tbs maple syrup rather than just the recommended two. It was just a bit on the saltier side still for my personal taste.
Thank you for the great recipe!
Apologies if this has already been asked, but I quick question on the pan used. I LOVE this bread and the only downside is I want bigger slices! I thought of baking it in a pullman pan (9 x 4 x 4). I know in the instructions you say it can be baked in a 9 x 5 pan but it just won’t be as tall, but anything you think I should change doing it in a pullman pan? Should I increase the ingredients at all if my goal is to have a taller loaf? Thanks!
You could try 1.25 x or 1.5 x the recipe … it’s hard to know how it will bake up with the scaled-up version until you give it a shot. But you’ll definitely want a scaled-up version for a taller loaf.
Came out beautifully! Though I did adjust the recipe a bit. Instead of 1.75 cups (395g) of water, I used 1 cup (240g). Then I added instant yeast and honey and let it sit for 10 minutes. After that I added the water to the dough and kneaded it with my hands until it came together. Then I measured out another 90g of water and gradually added that until the dough came together into a sticky ball. I kneaded it over the bowl, adding water a splash at a time until it became close to the consistency in the photos (4-5 minutes). I found that kneading it lightly made the dough come together better and I didn’t have to wait as long for the bread to rise (only about 1hr and 45 minutes). Great recipe!!
Great to hear, Emi! Thanks so much for writing and sharing all of these notes 🙂
Any suggestion for method/baking time if splitting into smaller “cocktail” rye loaves? Thanks!
Hi! I would just fill the pans 3/4 full; let rise until the dough crowns the rim; then bake as directed keeping a closer watch… I’d start checking after 25-30 minutes. If you have an instant-read thermometer, the center of the dough should register roughly 207ºF.
The best loaf of rye I ever made. I left out the butter and oil because I don’t like very soft bread but I should have buttered the pan to reduce sticking. Also used molasses for the sugar to get a darker loaf.
Great to hear, Michael! Thanks for writing and sharing your notes 🙂
Your gram amounts seem all wrong. 1 cup is = 250g or of something like flour, maybe 220g or so. You have it listed as 96g which seems wildly off to me.
Hi!
1 cup of flour typically is 120-130 grams. My standard is 128 grams for 1 cup. Rye flour weighs less, so 96 grams is accurate.
Made for the first time- Excellent. Needed to make another three days later. Second one rose much better during both rests but both were excellent made as per recipe. Thanks
Great to hear, Guy! Thanks for writing and sharing this 🙂
Making this for the first time and I am going to try making it in a cast iron pan for a round loaf. Fingers crossed!
Wow— this recipe is so easy and makes incredible bread. We can’t stop nibbling at the loaf so I actually already mixed up another batch of the dry ingredients just in case my loaf doesn’t make it through the night 🙂 for sandwiches tomorrow.
I used bread flour and then Bob’s Red Mill light rye. I took it out a bit early.
The texture allows for making thin bread slices.
Everything that Alexandra publishes or recommends is a treat.
Jennifer, you are too kind! So great to hear your loaf was a success. Thanks for writing and sharing all of this 💕
At one point in the recipe you say Drizzle the remaining olive oil onto the bread. I don’t see where you used any olive oil before that?
Hi! You use 1 tablespoon of olive oil in the dough itself 🙂
I used the cup measures and cooked it in the ninja combi at 165C for 40 mins on combi bake without the crisper tray because it had risen so nicely and I didn’t want it to touch the element. It looks and smells perfect! Love your recipes, thankyou!
So nice to hear this, Jan! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes and thank you for your kind words 🙂
I made this with active dry yeast.. put water, honey (little less- 1 1/2Tbsp) and yeast in bowl to proof about 5 mins. After that, I weighed out the flours and just incorporated everything together. I did use less salt.. 1 1/2tsp and added some dough conditioner I’ve been using for white bread (it helps the rise and helps get a soft texture). This came out nice and tasted very good. First rye bread I’ve made (been doing white bread for years and sourdough for several months). I’ll keep using this recipe. (I did less honey and salt because of husband’s health reasons.)
So nice to read all of this Lisa. Thank you for writing and sharing your notes. So helpful for others 🙂
I have never made a loaf of bread that was so easy! Not to mention delicious! Thank you! I followed all the recommendations you made. I made NO changes. Have made several times and it only tastes better each time.
Great to hear, Alice! Thanks so much for writing and sharing this 🙂
Ive been looking for an easy to make loaf rye and Ive found it. Ive made it twice and both time its turned out delish. Both times Ive found the dough quite wet and almost had to pour into my loaf pan. Next time Im going to increase the flours slightly, reduce the water by 1/2 c and reduce oil to 1 T (1/2-1/2).
Woodstock, ON
Great to hear Scott! Having troubleshooted with many Canadians over the years, I have learned that some Canadian flours do produce a much wetter dough — they simply don’t absorb the water the way US commercial flours do. Using less water from the start has been the solution for many. Hope that works for you as well!
Thank you very much for your assistance. I’ll cut back on the water as a starting point. Cheers!
This bread came together nicely and no kneading, which was a surprise! It made a perfect sandwich size loaf with fabulous flavor. Next time I’ll double it! I ended up using all purpose flour with this as I have found bread flour makes a wonderful crumb for rustic breads but all purpose works great for sandwich breads. That’s my 2 cents … now go make this bread. It’s a great recipe!
Mary, I love all of this. Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes and 2 cents 🙂 So valuable for others to hear the experiences of other bakers.
I made this bread today 1/18/2025 and it was so easy; it came out beautifully. I will be following more of your recipes; thank you 🙂
So nice to hear this, Nancy 🙂 Thanks so much for writing.
I literally just got done shoving my face with a slice of this bread!! It is amazing!!! I am no expert bread baker but this recipe was easy to follow. I used my scale and measured everything in grams. I used an amazing honey from Garden State Apiaries that was Bourbon Barrel Aged. Incredible!! Slight sweetness but still a wonderful tang. Use this recipe! You won’t regret jt!!
So happy to hear this, Lisa! Thanks so much for writing and sharing your notes. Your honey sounds divine 🙂
I absolutely LOVE this recipe!
Definitely my favorite!
Could this be used for buns as well?
Hi! Great to hear 🙂 And yes, probably, though it’s such a wet dough, the shaping process might be a little frustrating. If you give it a go, just be sure to use flour as needed while shaping.
Thank you so much! I tried it yesterday and they were delicious! Yes, the dough was a bit wet, but it worked.
Great to hear, Erna! Thanks for writing 🙂
Excellent recipe! My first attempt at making bread and it turned out delicious. Made as per instructions great texture and taste.
Thank You
Great to hear, Lyle! Thanks so much for writing 🙂
This recipe is amazing. I have never before made bread successfully like this, I am so thrilled! It really rises and is great quality 🙂 Thank you!
Great to hear, Deb! Thanks for writing 🙂
The rye flour you recommended is retired. Any other suggestions?
I like Bob’s Red Mill rye flour and I also like Anson Mills rye.
Hi Ali,
Any thoughts on baking this rye bread in a Breville Pro oven? Thanks so much.
I’m sure it would work great! Have you baked other loaves of bread in it yet? I would use the same suggested time/temperature but keep an eye on it in case it browns faster — sometimes I find this happens in smaller ovens.
I went with taring my scale after adding each ingredient. Measuring each by weight you provided worked perfectly. I also did the molasses substitute, 1 to 1 for sugar. And I split the dough to make six mini loaves. They are great for charcuterie boards.
Great to hear Michael! Thanks so much for writing and sharing all of your notes. Love the idea of mini loaves 🙂