Sourdough Nettle Rye Bread recipe - or let's get Medieval on Your Nettles (2024)

Yesterday I made an adaptation of an adaptation of a medieval recipe for Nettle Bread. It's exceedingly delicious, with a sweet and moist rye bread crumb. I like it sliced thin, lightly toasted and smothered in butter (homemade is best) and a few drops of honey on top.

Sourdough Nettle Rye Bread recipe - or let's get Medieval on Your Nettles (1)
Rustic nettle bread

We have the perfect growing place for stinging nettles, it's moist year round, it's acidic, it's downhill from the neighbour's manure pile so the soil is overloaded with nutrients. There is not much else that will grow there, but the nettles thrive. So I harvested a large basket full of just the leaves. My nettles are getting a bit old and scraggly, but if you have young nettles, you can use the stem as well.

Although I made a huge batch of nettle bread this time, I'm going to scale down the recipe for you. Those of you without constant access to nettles might have to wait till they are available in the shops in the spring... Far too expensive for something available free in the wild, but when that's all you have... well, you make do. The bunches sold in the store are about a cup worth - but you can use more or less depending on what you have on hand.

Sourdough Nettle Rye Bread recipe - or let's get Medieval on Your Nettles (2)
blanching nettles
(in the water I used forbrewing small ale later that day.
This should be interesting)

The recipe I used for inspiration comes from the beautiful book The Medieval Kitchen, a social history with recipes by Hannele Klemettila (the final 'a' in the name has those two little dots on top). The author uses modern yeast and caraway seeds. I hate caraway seeds, possibly more than I hate mushrooms. They disgust me.

Last year I used Klemettila's recipe and it's quite nice (without the caraway seeds). It's written in a way that assumes you are very comfortable baking bread and the recipe uses modern ingredients and methods that were not available in the middle ages. Like most of the book, it is more an attempt to introduce the modern pallet to some of the medieval flavour combinations. Combine that with the layout and gorgeous pictures, I think it's a good introduction to medieval food.

For me, it's not enough. In the middle ages a person couldn't just drive down to the supermarket and pick up a packet of yeast. They had to capture their own yeast, very much like we do with sourdough today. In fact, in some parts of Europe, it was exactly like we do with sourdough today. To keep the bread as medieval as possible, I used sourdough instead of modern yeast.

Because the nettles have so many natural sugars, I figured a heavy rye bread would do the trick. And I was right.

This bread uses a sponge so start it the evening before you plan to bake. It is also a bit different than many bread recipes in that I only rise it once. It's a trick you can use for sourdough when you can't guarantee you'll be available to shape the loaves for the second rise. This creates a more rustic texture, sometimes creating those big air pockets in the loaf. I kind of like it.

Stinging Nettle Sourdough Rye Bread

About 1 cup of fresh nettles - or a lot more if you have it
1 tsp salt
Sourdough starter
Rye flour
Wheat flour
1/2 tsp Whole fennel seeds
1 tsp honey (optional - makes it no longer vegan)
water

The night before baking day, we make a sponge:

  • Put 2 Tbs sourdough starter (from the fridge or already active is fine), 1/2 cup water, and enough rye flour to make a thin batter. Cover with a cotton or linen towel and leave on the counter overnight. This is called the sponge.
  • Feed your starter as per normal - I'm assuming you are already slightly familiar with sourdough.

Now it's baking day, let's get's medieval on your nettles

  • Toast the fennel seeds in a dry fry pan until they smell amazing then put to one side to cool. While it's toasting, you will want to shake or stir the seeds quite frequently to ensure nothing burns. When cool enough to handle, coarsely grind it with a mortar and pestle or a spice mill.
  • Bring a fairly large pot of water to the boil and dunk the nettles in the boiling water for about 3 minutes. Take the nettles out and put them in a bowl, add about a cup of cold water to the nettles. When the nettles are cool enough to touch comfortably, take them out of the cold water and strain them - keep the cold water, we're about to use it. Let's call it nettle rinse water.
  • Combine the nettle rinse water, sponge, 1 tsp salt, toasted fennel seeds, a handful of flour, and a handful of rye flour. If you are using honey, add it now too. Mix it up well and put it to one side.
  • Take the nettles that have drained, chop them up as finely or as coarsely as you like. The cooking should have neutralized the sting. Add this to the flour/sponge/fennel/water mix above. Stir vigorously, almost whisking it in as this will help to activate the gluten in the flour and ensure the nettles are well incorporated into the dough.
  • Add another three or four handfuls of rye flour, or about 1/2 a cup, and mix well.
  • Add regular flour by the handfuls, mixing between each addition, until you have a shaggy mess.
  • Put the shaggy mess onto a well floured board or counter, kneed it until no longer shaggy, but instead a lovely smooth.
  • Shape into one or two loaves, then put on a baking sheet. Cover with a towel and leave it alone until double in size. This may take an hour or it might take 8, depends on your yeast and many other factors... most of which are beyond your control. A lot of people like to leave it somewhere warm, which is okay, but for me doesn't make as nice a texture or as long keeping loaf. Just put it somewhere where it isn't in a draft.
  • When it's double in size, preheat the oven to 400 F.
  • While the oven is heating up, use a very sharp knife to carefully cut some lines in the top of the bread.
  • Bake at 400 for 35 min for the small loaves, or 40 min for one large loaf. Bread is done when it sounds hollow when you tap it on the bottom.
  • Take out of the oven, wrap the loaves in a cotton or linen towel and leave at least 12 hours to cool before storing in plastic. Or if you are hungry now, wait at least 10 min before cutting into it.
Sourdough Nettle Rye Bread recipe - or let's get Medieval on Your Nettles (3)
So beautiful, ready to rise

Affordable: Yes, if you're harvesting your own nettles and not paying grocery store prices. The nettles add a lot of nutrition and a little bit of bulk to the bread which is pretty awesome. Nettles are very healthy - just google stinging nettles to find out all the good things they do.

If you omit the honey, this is a vegan friendly bread.

Tradition and transition? It seems to have been quite common in medieval times, but the tradition has died out. As a Transition bread, however, this is going to be a good recipe to keep around. A dense nettle bread is very common during starvation times, like during World War 2 for example. Usually wheat flour is one of the first things to be rationed, so breads were made with whatever grains were on hand, and often augmented with nettles and other nutritional weeds that are usually ignored in times of plenty.

We would be foolish to think that we won't ever have a starvation time again in The West, but for now, it's actually quite a yummy bread, the nettles adding a little bit of tang, sweetness, and even help prevent the bread from going moldy.

Sourdough Nettle Rye Bread recipe - or let's get Medieval on Your Nettles (4)
nettle toast and honey, delicious.
Sourdough Nettle Rye Bread recipe - or let's get Medieval on Your Nettles (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between sourdough and sourdough with rye bread? ›

Sourdough rye bread

A concentration of β-damascenone also boosts the rye's fruity apple-like aftertaste. In comparison to wheat sourdough, which possesses only one buttery molecule, 2,3-butanedione, rye sourdough bread has an extra called 2,3-pentanedione, providing a more buttery aroma.

What does rye flour do to sourdough? ›

Rye flour is a popular choice in sourdough bread because of its unique properties, which can speed up fermentation, add a complex flavor profile, reduce density, retain moisture, and offer more nutrition than wheat flour.

How did ancient people make sourdough? ›

There are many theories as to how they first discovered it, but we can assume that it was by accident. It's thought that the Egyptian people left some out and some of the wild yeast spores in the air mixed with the dough, which caused it to rise and create sourdough bread as we know it.

Is dark rye sourdough bread good for you? ›

As long as they're made with whole grains and have limited or no added sugar, both rye bread and sourdough bread are healthy bread options. Sourdough bread may be even healthier than regular bread because the fermentation makes certain vitamins and minerals easier for our bodies to absorb.

Is sourdough rye bread anti inflammatory? ›

Refined grains, such as the grains found in white bread and white pasta, are known to increase inflammation across the whole body. Sourdough bread and rye bread are both good options for an anti-inflammatory diet. The best sourdough and rye bread varieties to reduce gut inflammation are those made from whole grains.

What is the healthiest flour for sourdough bread? ›

Compared to whole wheat flour, rye flour is said to be the most nutrient- and amylase-dense option for a sourdough starter. Overall, it has a lower gluten protein content than wheat flour, which means it produces slack, sticky, and dense doughs.

Does rye flour make sourdough more sour? ›

For more tang: Incorporate some rye flour and/or whole wheat flour early in the bread-making process, such as when feeding the mother culture and the preferment. Rye flour in particular will help your culture produce some acetic acid.

What is the oldest sourdough recipe? ›

Blackley's sourdough starter, created from 4,500 year-old yeast, is considered the oldest sourdough starter, per Oldest. Other starters like the Saint Honoratus Wheat also are quite old. A bakery called Chrissi's Farmhouse Bakery uses it and said, “This noble starter dates back 900 years.

Is sourdough medieval? ›

Sourdough remained the usual form of leavening down into the European Middle Ages until being replaced by barm from the beer brewing process, and after 1871 by purpose-cultured yeast. Bread made from 100% rye flour, popular in the northern half of Europe, is usually leavened with sourdough.

Did Vikings have sourdough bread? ›

During the Middle Ages, sourdough bread was a common food in Europe, especially in the northern regions. The Vikings, in particular, were known for their sourdough bread, which they made using a mixture of rye flour and wild yeast. This bread was an important source of nutrition for the Vikings on their long voyages.

Is it OK to eat sourdough bread everyday? ›

Can you eat sourdough bread every day? It's good news for sourdough super-fans. 'Sourdough is rich in carbohydrates which should make up around 50% of our energy intake every day, so there's no problem with eating sourdough daily,' says Tilt, who adds; 'it's delicious and I often do! '

What is the healthiest bread for seniors? ›

Whole Grain Bread

Thanks to their high fiber and nutrient content, breads made with whole grains, including whole wheat, are generally the go-to healthiest breads that dietitians recommend.

Is it OK to eat rye bread everyday? ›

The answer is yes but with conditions. Rye bread is a healthy choice for most people. It is a good source of fiber and other nutrients and has been linked to a lower risk of heart disease, cancer, and type II diabetes.

Are rye and sourdough bread the same? ›

Rye is a different grain from wheat, with a distinct flavor. It doesn't have the same proteins that wheat has to produce gluten in bread, so rye breads often don't rise as high. Sourdough bread is made at least in part with a pre-existing yeast culture, often made from wild yeasts.

Is rye sourdough better than wheat sourdough? ›

Compared to whole wheat flour, rye flour is said to be the most nutrient- and amylase-dense option for a sourdough starter. Overall, it has a lower gluten protein content than wheat flour, which means it produces slack, sticky, and dense doughs.

Is rye sourdough starter better? ›

Whole wheat and rye flours provide more nutrients for your starter and ferment more actively, but working with rye flour makes starter maintenance easier than whole wheat. Rye provides increased fiber and nutrients similar to whole wheat flour, but because of its lower gluten amount it's much easier to stir.

Is rye bread always sourdough? ›

There are three different types of rye crispbread: yeast-fermented, sourdough-fermented, and crispbread. Most of the crispbread produced in Scandinavia is baked after three to four hours of fermentation.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Patricia Veum II

Last Updated:

Views: 5322

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (64 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Patricia Veum II

Birthday: 1994-12-16

Address: 2064 Little Summit, Goldieton, MS 97651-0862

Phone: +6873952696715

Job: Principal Officer

Hobby: Rafting, Cabaret, Candle making, Jigsaw puzzles, Inline skating, Magic, Graffiti

Introduction: My name is Patricia Veum II, I am a vast, combative, smiling, famous, inexpensive, zealous, sparkling person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.