mixing dry yeast, water, salt and flour
When aging pizza dough in the refrigerator for 1-2 days, I mix the salt and "Saf-Instant Dry Baker's Yeast" (a Japanese brand) with the flour and add room-temperature or cold water. I always get lots of yeast bubbles within hours in the fridge, and lots of rise when par-baking, so I know the yeast is happy.
When I tried making same-day dough, I fell back to habits I learned as a kid, to mix the yeast with water as hot as I could stand my finger in. I mixed salt in that water too, and that was the only time in years of weekly baking I got no rise. Question part 1: Does salt kill the yeast??
Question part 2: Is there any reason to even use hot water if room-temp water works fine with this brand of yeast?
Question part 3: is there any reason not to simply use the mix of dry ingredients that I have success with with refrigerated doughs? If not, why do books/recipes/relatives insist on the hot water dissolve-the-yeast step, which means you have a couple more utensils to wash?
Best Answer
The answer is, as you suspected, you killed your yeast.
If you look at your original description of the process, you add the yeast to flour, along with salt and then add hot water, the flour is presumably room temperature, so it acts as a cooling agent and spreads the heat out so that most of the yeast survives and the final mixture is about body temp (37 C, or 98.6 F), which happens to be about the best temperature for yeast to grow. You do however need a little warmer to activate dried yeast, but this will be only a matter of 40 C/105 F
When you do this with just the yeast and water: You say that you use water that is as hot as your finger can stand. This happens to be about 55-60 C/130-140 F, yeast are killed by water hotter than about 45 C/120 F. To determine the tmperature, do not use your finger, these tend to be less heat sensitive than other body parts, instead drop a little on your wrist, if it feels comfortable, then it is good to go. If it feels hot the water may be too hot.
You can indeed just mix the flour, yeast, salt and add warm water for an instant dough, there is often no need to proof the yeast (this is the water step). The proofing step does lower the risk of your dough not rising because the yeast were inactive though, and then you have wasted ingredients...
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Quick Answer about "mixing dry yeast, water, salt and flour"
With instant, dried yeast, add this to one side of the bowl and the salt to the other. With dried yeast, mix it separately with the water and then add this into the flour and salt mixture. With fresh yeast, rub it well into the flour, as you would with butter when making pastry, before adding the salt and water.What happens if you mix yeast and salt?
Salt can kill yeast, but only in significant amounts. Small amounts of salt will not kill yeast, but it will slow its growth, leading to a slower rise in the dough. Salt pulls moisture from yeast, so if it's left for too long it can cause stress on the yeast cells and cause them to break down.How do you mix salt and yeast in flour?
Without salt present to rein in its activity, the yeast will go wild eating all of the sugar available in the dough from enzymatic activity, like an overactive Pac-Man machine. Adding salt prevents the yeast from reproducing too quickly, thus allowing you to control the rate at which the dough ferments.Should you add salt to yeast water?
Compressed or fresh yeast can be crumbled onto the flour\u2014it does not need to be suspended in the water. Instant dry yeast (IDY) is best added without prehydrating. To do this, just add it in dry form directly to the flour in the mixing bowl.Yeast/water mixed with flour
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Answer 2
You need a thermometer to make sure your yeast is not killed by water over 120 degrees. You might learn that your hand is not as heat sensitive as when you were doing this before.
Sometimes it is a great idea to prove the yeast works by putting in your water and making sure it bubbles and foams before use. If you bake very often, like me, you know your yeast is good to go without proof. Remember, when you buy new granulated yeast, freeze it for a much longer future using it. Also yeast just needs water and flour to activate. Warm water makes it rise quickly so you don't have to wait for your dough to rise.
The salt is added for flavor. Salt soaks up water. Yeast needs water to react. The salt actually competes with the yeast. But the yeast reaction is slowed down.
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