How do you get 'ears' when baking bread?

When slashing bread, how can I produce crusty 'ears' on the places where the slash opens up? Most of the time they open up, but just end up flush with the rest of the crust.
Best Answer
In my somewhat limited experience you have two things that affect growth of the crispy ears. As Caleb mentions using a lame to score your bread means you can cut with a bit of an angle that will promote a little flap.
The second is ensuring a rapid oven spring, which will cause the flap to open as much as possible before the starches on the surface set. The key to good oven spring is having a hot enough oven (preheat longer than you think you need to if you are using a stone or other heat-storing vessel in the oven), and a source of steam injection. A few ways to do get some steam:
- When you put the dough in, pour a 1/2 cup of boiling water into a small cast iron skillet pre-heated in the oven.
- Spritz the walls of the oven with water when you put the dough in.
- My favorite - preheat a large dutch oven, and put the dough inside the dutch oven (lid on) to bake. For the last 10 minutes of the bake, remove the lid. The dutch oven stores some of the initial steam release and makes for much nicer spring and crusts. Of course, only round bread fits.
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How do you get an ear on bread?
If you're really struggling to get a good ear, there are two main areas to consider. Rise: You just might not be getting enough rise during the bake to get a good ear, or you might not be getting enough early rise. Ensure that your bread is not over or under-proofed to correct the first issue.Why am I not getting an ear on my sourdough?
The key factor for getting an ear on bread is to underproof the dough. The optimum proof point is when the dough stays down for 2 seconds in the poke test. More gas is created when baking under proofed dough which forces through the weakest area of the crust violently as it escapes.How to find and do work you love | Scott Dinsmore | TEDxGoldenGatePark (2D)
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Answer 2
Try slashing with a lame, which has a blade like a razor but is curved a bit so that you tend to cut under the loaf's skin rather than deeply into the loaf. Sometimes this ends up making a bit of a flap, which I suppose resembles an 'ear'.
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