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How to Bake: How Long Should My Bread Rise?
By Dennis R Weaver
It depends. The best way to tell if the dough has risen
enough is not by time—though it helps to set the timer so
you don't forget about your dough—but by look and feel. It
will look soft and bloated. When you touch the dough, it
will be soft and your finger will leave an indentation when
lightly pressed against the dough. If it is not ripe, the
dough will tend to slowly spring back.
If you want light, fluffy bread, the dough should rise until
it is puffy. The more gas incorporated in the dough, the
lighter it will be. Of course, if too much gas is captured
in the dough, it may collapse. The trick is to let it rise
until you get just to the edge and then bake it. In most
cases, that means that the dough will double—or more—in
volume. With a free-standing loaf, since the pan can't
support the loaf, you cannot let the bread rise as much.
How long should it take? A lean, moist dough in a warm
kitchen will probably rise in 45 minutes or less. A firmer
dough with less moisture will take longer to rise. Yeast is
very sensitive to temperature; even a few degrees less in
the kitchen can extend the rise time significantly. A change
of 17 degrees will cut the rise time in half.
It doesn't hurt to let dough rise slowly. Bread that has
risen slowly has a different flavor than fast risers, a more
acidic flavor—hence the sourdough flavors in slow rising
breads. Professional bakers use refrigeration to “retard”
the rise. You can use a cool spot in the house or even a
refrigerator to slow the rise. (The bread in the spotlight
product picture-New England Herb-was placed under an open
window on a cool day to deliberately slow the rise. Total
rise time, first and second rising combined, was about five
hours.)
While lean breads are deliberately retarded to enhance the
flavors, rich doughs or doughs with ample sweeteners or
flavors will gain little with an extend rise since the
flavors and sugars tend to mask the natural flavors of the
yeast.
©
The Prepared Pantry
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