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I've tried the slow (or cold) fermentation method of baking bread at home and for the first time it turned out to be very nice. But ever since I use this method the dough just doesn't rise that much and each loaf ends up flat and not very fluffy. The method requires the dough to be leavened in the fridge for 12-24 hours. I've used hand-bake yeast that I activate before making the dough. What I have done so far:

  • add more sugar
  • make a small batch of dough with half the flour and no salt, then the next day mix it with more flour and salt
  • add less salt
  • leaven the dough for half an hour BEFORE it goes to the fridge
  • put the dough in the fridge straight away
  • leaven the dough for a few hours after it was taken out form the fridge
  • put the dough in the oven for half an hour on the lowest temp setting

None of these helped. Any ideas what have I done wrong?

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  • What is hand-bake yeast?
    – SAJ14SAJ
    Mar 6, 2014 at 19:57
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    I don't mean this sarcastically--are you using Britsh flour? You really want a quality high protein flour, such as US bread flour, for this type of application.
    – SAJ14SAJ
    Mar 6, 2014 at 20:00
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    Are you proofing your yeast to confirm its good? It sounds like dead yeast. I'm assuming this is what you mean by 'activate', but I'm not sure. Do you see bubbles?
    – rfusca
    Mar 6, 2014 at 21:07
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    I agree with rfusca here, probably dodgy yeast. I use Allinson fast-action yeast (comes in a little green tin). Keep it in the fridge and it generally behaves well. Don't worry about the 'fast action', just use less of it. As for the flour @SAJ14SAJ, every supermarket here stocks strong (12%) and very strong (14%) bread flour - it's not like the US has the monopoly on the stuff. Mar 6, 2014 at 22:17
  • The most consistent yeast is 'instant yeast' - SAF instant yeast is what I use and its recommended by many professionals.
    – rfusca
    Mar 7, 2014 at 2:24

1 Answer 1

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UPDATE: recently I started using drier starter with bread-dough like consistency and add it when it's about room temperature. Measuring the ingredients precisely also helps, provided you figured out the proper ratio of flour and water.

My solution: simply use more starter. Generally the starter is kept in the fridge in a jar. I take out the jar from the fridge, add around 150g of flour and 150ml water. After an hour or two, once there are bubbles on the surface, I just add around 300g of this mixture to the bread. The jar (with little starter left) goes back to the fridge. The

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  • It's very nice to see someone come back and share a solution they found. While we couldn't pinpoint the cause (sometimes nothing beats being there to notice where the problem may lie), your post helps the other people who will come here with a similar problem.
    – rumtscho
    Dec 26, 2014 at 16:23

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