LET’S SOLVE YOUR
BAKING CHALLENGES

Crust not coming out the way you want? Bread loaves browning unevenly? We’ve got your back, bakers. From conventional-oven obstacles to bread-machine missteps, we’ve got all your easy-to-implement solutions right here.

BAKING WITH A CONVENTIONAL OVEN

Problem

Solution

Strong yeast odor

Avoid over-fermentation and be sure that dough is doubled in size.


Sour taste

Avoid adding too much salt and make sure yeast used is fresh.


Odd or uneven shape

Let dough rest for 10 minutes for easier handling/shaping. Ensure that the bread pan is the correct size for the recipe.


Cracked crust on top

Reduce flour used in kneading and shaping.


Collapsed bread

Don’t let dough continue to rise beyond the time called for in the recipe. Avoid too-high temperature for the dough-rising period.


Flat top

Knead as directed in recipe. Avoid too-short kneading period. Do not allow dough to rise too long before baking.


Wrinkled crust

Pull dough firmly when shaping.


Soggy crust

Do not keep bread in the pan after baking. Remove promptly and let cool on a wire rack.


Crust separating from bread

Grease the surface and cover the dough when rising.


Thick crust

Do not over-bake. Bake in the correct oven temperature and keep dough ‘tacky’, not dry.


Tough crust

Be sure to use all-purpose flour or bread flour.


Bread not browning on sides

Use glass pans, as shiny pans reflect heat, causing insufficient browning.

Problem

Solution

Short loaf

Dough too dry. Adjust dough consistency, check expiration date on yeast and be sure to use room temperature water (70°–80°F).


No rise

Use fresh yeast only. Add ingredients in recommended order.


Underbaked, gummy core

Dough too wet. Adjust dough consistency. Wait to cut until cooled.


Collapsed loaf

Adjust dough consistency. Use room-temperature water.


Collapsed bread

Don’t let dough continue to rise beyond time called for in recipe. Avoid too-high temperature for dough-rising period.


Open texture

Dough too wet. Adjust dough consistency.


Wrinkled crust

Pull dough firmly when shaping.


“Mushroom” bread

Water too warm; gauge temperature correctly. Dough too wet; adjust dough consistency.


Heavy, dense texture

Dough too dry. Adjust dough consistency.

Crust not coming out the way you want? Bread loaves browning unevenly? We’ve got your back, bakers. From conventional-oven obstacles to bread-machine missteps, we’ve got all your easy-to-implement solutions right here.


BAKING WITH A CONVENTIONAL OVEN


problem & solution


Strong yeast odor

Avoid over-fermentation and be sure that dough is doubled in size.


Sour taste

Avoid adding too much salt and make sure yeast used is fresh.


Odd or uneven shape

Let dough rest for 10 minutes for easier handling/shaping. Ensure that bread pan is the correct size for the recipe.


Cracked crust on top

Reduce flour used in kneading and shaping.


Collapsed bread

Don’t let dough continue to rise beyond time called for in recipe. Avoid too-high temperature for dough-rising period.


Flat top

Knead as directed in recipe. Avoid too-short kneading period. Do not allow dough to rise too long before baking.


Wrinkled crust

Pull dough firmly when shaping.


Soggy crust

Do not keep bread in pan after baking. Remove promptly and let cool on wire rack.


Crust separating from bread

Grease surface and cover dough when rising.


Thick crust

Do not over-bake. Bake in correct oven temperature and keep dough ‘tacky’, not dry.


Tough crust

Be sure to use all-purpose flour or bread flour.


Bread not browning on sides

Use glass pans, as shiny pans reflect heat, causing insufficient browning.


Baking with a Bread Machine


problem & solution


Short loaf

Dough too dry. Adjust dough consistency, check expiration date on yeast and be sure to use room temperature water (70°–80°F).


No rise

Use fresh yeast only. Add ingredients in recommended order.


Underbaked, gummy core

Dough too wet. Adjust dough consistency. Wait to cut until cooled.


Collapsed loaf

Adjust dough consistency. Use room-temperature water.


Open texture

Dough too wet. Adjust dough consistency.


“Mushroom” bread

Water too warm; gauge temperature correctly. Dough too wet; adjust dough consistency.


Heavy, dense texture

Dough too dry. Adjust dough consistency.