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Word of Mouth: Oven Spring

2008_04_09_OvenSpring.jpgOven Spring noun: In bread baking, the final burst of rising just after a loaf is put in the oven and before the crust hardens.

When the dough hits the hot oven, it can puff up to as much as a third of its size in a matter of a few minutes. This oven spring is a good indicator of the crumb of your bread: more oven spring means a light and airy interior and little oven spring indicates a dense, compact crumb.

More on how oven spring works after the jump!

During those first few minutes as the dough starts to heat up, the yeast go into a feeding frenzy, converting the sugars in the dough into carbon dioxide and alcohol. Water in the dough is simultaneously turning into steam and pushing its way out of the dough.

This steam and the carbon dioxide from the yeast work together to inflate the dough like a balloon. Once the internal temperature of the bread reaches about 120-degrees, the yeast stop reproducing and the crust begins to solidify, curtailing the rise of the dough.

Here are a few of our favorite bread recipes:
No-Time Bread
Houska
No-Knead Challah

(Image Credit: Emma Christensen for the Kitchn)

Comments (3)

Did you bake that bread?

Or is it from Bay Bread?

It's purty.

posted by art on 2008-04-09 09:35:40
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i recently bought the "artisan bread in 5 minutes a day" and it's great!

posted by amysahba on 2008-04-09 11:42:37
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would the oven not being hot enough explain why my beer bread is always dense and undone in the middle and not at all like the pictures i see accompanying my recipe?

posted by lindsey kathlene on 2008-04-09 16:41:31
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