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| Image Courtesy and Property of ColourBox |
Making your own bread only seems like some sort of alchemy - it is not magic: It just comes down to understanding one basic principle about how yeast - your essential partner in this process- behaves. Yeast is more active when it’s warm, and less active when it’s cold. The more active it is, the faster your dough rises. A slight increase in temperature can have an exponential effect on yeast’s activity: raising the dough’s temperature by a few degrees can have a dramatic effect.
So, if your dough is rising too slowly, warm it up. If your dough threatens to growtake over your kitchen before you can even pre-heat the oven, cool it down.
Putting the brakes on a rapidly expanding dough couldn’t be easier–just pop it in the refrigerator or some other cool place. If, on the other hand, your dough is too sluggish (“It’s been over two hours and it just won’t rise!”) you have a few options. If you’ve got a nice warm spot in your house, you can set the it there. Or you can simulate what bakers call a “proofing box”–a warm “microclimate” that will gently warm your bread-to-be and get those yeast going. Set the dough in the oven and turn on the oven light. Alternatively, preheat the oven to 200 (or its lowest setting) and hold for five to ten minutes, then turn it off and put your dough inside. Finally, my ultimate standby, from a fellow blogger: heat a jar of water in the microwave until it boils, set the dough inside (microwave off) next to the hot water. The humidity effectively transfers the heat to the dough. I think of this process as taking my dough to the spa.
Once you understand this principle, you can use it offensively as well as defensively to speed along what is called the “fermentation” process.
If you know your house runs cool, you can plan to use one of the methods above to make sure you aren’t waiting around forever for your dough to rise. Baking books often assume you are in a warm kitchen (because, after all, that’s the environment bakers operate in), and their rising times can therefore be much faster than you’d get at home. In other words, if your dough isn’t rising, it’s probably needs more time or more warmth.
Homemade bread is far better than than anything you can buy in the grocery store. It is healthy and free from additives and everything else you find in store bought bread.
Enjoy filing your home with the comforting aroma of fresh baked bread!
Thanks to C for inspiring today's post!




