The Fresh Loaf

A Community of Amateur Bakers and Artisan Bread Enthusiasts.

Sandwich Bread with Salt-Stressed Yeast

RyeBread's picture
RyeBread

Sandwich Bread with Salt-Stressed Yeast

Hi,

I made this simple sandwich bread using salt-stressed yeast. I use this method often for softer and richer doughs. You can find the recipe below.

If you want to have a closer look, here is the link to our recipe video: 

Sandwich Bread Recipe Video

Step 1: Salt-stressed yeast

Ingredients:

13g fresh yeast

120ml water 20°C or 68°F

12g salt

Put all ingredients in a jar. Dissolve the yeast and the salt in the water. Close the jar and let it rest for at least 4 hour and up to 2 days at room temperature or in the fridge at 5°C or 40°F.

Step 2: Dough

Ingredients:

Salt stressed yeast

625g bread flour or wheat flour type 550

320ml milk 3.8% fat 5°C or 40°F

19g sugar

37g butter

Start mixing for about 4 min on low speed without butter. Continue mixing for about 10 min on medium speed without butter. Add the butter to the dough and continue mixing for about 5 min on medium speed. After mixing the dough had a temperature of 25°C or 77°F.

The dough is fermented over the next 90 min at room temperature, which was 23°C or 73°F.

After 45 min degas the dough and perform one stretch and fold to strengthen the gluten. After this, let the dough rest for another 45 min.

Step 3: Shape

After a total resting time of 90 min, divide the dough into four pieces and give them a round shape. Cover a baking pan with baking paper. Place the dough balls in the baking pan, cover it and let it rest for about 1h 45 min at room temperature.

Step 5: Bake

Preheat your oven in time for 45 mins at 240°C or 460°F

After final proofing, put the baking pan carefully in the preheated oven.

Bake for 10 min at 240°C or 460°F with steam. Release the steam after 10 min and cover the dough with aluminum foil to prevent it from getting too dark. Continue baking at 200°C or 390°F for about 40 min.

For an even color bake the bread for the last 10 min without baking pan while keeping the top of it still covered with aluminum foil.

Enjoy your bread after a total baking time of 50 min.

Alex Bois's picture
Alex Bois

What is the logic behind salt stressing commercial yeast?

RyeBread's picture
RyeBread

I quote the translated summary from the bread blog www.hefe-und-mehr.de 

"The yeast survives the salt stress to which it is subjected in the salt-yeast process. The salt stress leads to the release of glycerol into the dough, which makes the gluten network more elastic and stable, thus allowing the dough to rise higher and improving fermentation tolerance. At the same time, the production of carbon dioxide is stimulated - especially in doughs containing sugar - which causes the dough to rise faster."

Source: hefe und mehr: salt-stressed-yeast

tpassin's picture
tpassin

I found this abstract from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4357469/

Glycerol is the main compatible solute in yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. When faced with osmotic stress, for example during semi-solid state bread dough fermentation, yeast cells produce and accumulate glycerol in order to prevent dehydration by balancing the intracellular osmolarity with that of the environment. However, increased glycerol production also results in decreased CO2 production, which may reduce dough leavening. We investigated the effect of yeast glycerol production level on bread dough fermentation capacity of a commercial bakery strain and a laboratory strain. We find that Δgpd1 mutants that show decreased glycerol production show impaired dough fermentation. In contrast, overexpression of GPD1 in the laboratory strain results in increased fermentation rates in high-sugar dough and improved gas retention in the fermenting bread dough. Together, our results reveal the crucial role of glycerol production level by fermenting yeast cells in dough fermentation efficiency as well as gas retention in dough, thereby opening up new routes for the selection of improved commercial bakery yeasts.

So the effect will depend on the yeast variant involved, and apparently is helped by sugar.

tpassin's picture
tpassin

Turns out there was a TFL thread on this way back from 2009-

https://www.thefreshloaf.com/node/13848/saltstressed-yeast-increases-rise

suave's picture
suave

Why preheat oven for 45 minutes when it takes 10-15 minutes to get there without the stone?

RyeBread's picture
RyeBread

My oven is slower, it takes about 20 min to heat up to temperatures around 240°C. From there I still give extra time to make sure, that not only the air is 240°C but although the steel. But you are right, without baking stone 30 min could be enough. 10 min as you mentioned wouldn´t work with my oven.

Abe's picture
Abe

Keeping salt away from yeast until the dough is mixed is a myth. I've never done this and the yeast works just fine. Now we have purposefully salt stressed yeast helping to make better bread!  

Just did a quick read up of the study and apparently glycerol seems to be the main factor in this technique. Thank you for the interesting post and what a lovely bake. Something i'll need to experiment sometime with. 

I wonder how this would affect rye bread and heritage wheats with weaker glutens. 

The Roadside Pie King's picture
The Roadside Pi...

Thanks, for posting this interesting topic. I see many avenues and side trips to explore. In fact the possibilities seem endless.

For me the first round of experimentation will involve tailoring for use with instant yeast.

Kind regards,

will F.