Why Bread Rises
How a flour dough transforms into soft, fluffy bread — the amazing work of yeast.
How Does Flour Become Fluffy Bread?
The key is yeast — a tiny living organism that makes bread magic happen.
What Yeast Does
Yeast eats sugar in flour and produces carbon dioxide gas. This gas gets trapped in the dough, making bread rise.
Kneading creates a gluten network — a protein web that acts like tiny balloons holding the gas.
Temperature Matters
| Temp | Yeast Activity |
|---|---|
| 0-4°C | Nearly dormant (cold fermentation) |
| 25-35°C | Most active! (optimal) |
| 40°C+ | Slowing down |
| 60°C+ | Dies |
Why Knead?
Kneading connects proteins into an elastic gluten network that can trap gas effectively.
1st Rise vs 2nd Rise
1st rise: Develops structure and flavor 2nd rise: After shaping, determines final volume
Why Cold Fermentation Tastes Better
Bakery bread tastes better partly because of cold fermentation. Slow rising at low temperatures creates more flavor compounds.
Try it: Put dough in the fridge for 12-24 hours, then bake. You'll taste the difference!