Top of Dough "Cracked" During Cold Rise - is it bad?

Top of Dough "Cracked" During Cold Rise - is it bad? - Black and Teal Mountain

I made a brioche/sweet dough and did a cold rise overnight. The risen dough had cracks at the top of it. See:

enter image description here

Is this normal? Or symptomatic of a problem?

I used a glass bowl and covered it with plastic wrap. The bowl was oiled, and I also oiled the outside of the dough. When the dough was done kneading, it was very elastic (passed window pane); it also was a bit on the wetter side, I think -- it was hard to ball it up as it didn't want to hold its shape.



Best Answer

You can certainly try baking it, but that dough looks quite overleavened to me. You might end up with no body, bad crumb, and/or terribly sour taste. Still, at that point, baking it is a better thing than throwing it out outright - there is a good chance the result will be okayish/edible, if not great. Also, I might be wrong in my diagnosis, since I am basing it on a single picture and cannot touch and smell the dough.

To make it clear, I am not saying "overleavened" because of the mere description of "cracks", it is that the picture looks like the dough rose a lot and then slumped. You can get cracks from other processes too, but they don't usually look like in your picture.

To prevent overleavening, take care to not proof for very long times, unless the recipe was specifically designed for it. Also, never use more yeast than the recipe suggests.




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Should dough be left to rise in a cool place?

Dough that's left to rise at room temperature typically takes between two and four hours to double in size. If left overnight, dough rises so high forcing it will likely collapse on the weight of itself, making the dough deflate. For best results always keep dough in the refrigerator when leaving to rise overnight.

Does dough have to be warm to rise?

Nail the sweet spot \u2014 warm enough to rise at a decent rate, yet cool enough to develop flavor \u2014 and you're golden. Studies have shown that the optimum temperature for yeast to grow and flavor to develop is 75\xb0F to 78\xb0F.

Does cold weather affect dough rising?

Does Dough Rise in the Cold? In short, dough will rise in the cold. However, it will rise much more slowly and it will create a slightly different texture in the bread.

Can dough over rise in the fridge?

Your yeast won't give you much love if it's asked to do both rises in the fridge, so it's best to do one or the other at room temperature. One of Clara's favorite recipes to make with a cold ferment is Vermont Sourdough.



HOW TO NEVER MAKE CRACKED MACARON SHELLS AGAIN




More answers regarding top of Dough "Cracked" During Cold Rise - is it bad?

Answer 2

It happens to me occasionally.I'm not sure why it does that, but I suspect, it's the over proofing!When that happens, I work on the surface tension, after which, I turn the dough upside down and start folding as if shapping a baguette.I let it rest for about 45 minutes, slash and bake in the oven with a tray of hot water in the bottom shelf to create steam.

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