The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

final proofing, time, temps and humidity

amber108's picture
amber108

final proofing, time, temps and humidity

Hi, this is my first post here just curious if there are any nerdy well experienced bakers here? :) ---Im thinking to start a little micro bakery, sourdough, not commercial yeast assisted. Once I get my ideal dough temp sorted I will need a proofing cupboard/retarder, yes? And so I was wondering if getting a big fridge with controlled temp would do the job, or do I need the proofer to control humidity as well? ....

Next question; If I want an 8 - 10hr rise, do you think 10 degrees celsius is right, to then go straight into the oven?? Any help would be much appreciated, thanks.

Great site btw!

drogon's picture
drogon

I run a microbakery - my suggestion would be to concentrate on making bread and wory about fridges, proofers, etc. later. That's my plan, anyway... Got all the bits for my proofer/retarder, just need to build it now!

You need to control humidity - unless you keep all your dough fermenters/proving baskets covered.

I currently have a process that has an 8-10 hour ferment at about 24C then shaping & rising for another 1-2 hours, also at 24C, although the temperature is rising by then as the ovens are on. It got to 31C this morning...

And don't discount yeasted breads - one day you might want to make hot cross buns, stolen, or even something like this:

which was an overnight ferment with commercial yeast, but only 0.3% yeast...

-Gordon

amber108's picture
amber108
amber108's picture
amber108

not sure where my pics went?

amber108's picture
amber108