When making bread, should I add salt early or late? Pros and cons

When making bread, should I add salt early or late? Pros and cons - Concentrated middle aged ethnic male in casual clothes and apron adding salt while preparing delicious dish in kitchen at home

A friend and I was to make bread together. We quickly found that we had been taught differently on how to make the dough.

I had learned to first just mix flour, yeast and water evenly. Let them sit quietly for half an hour to allow the flour to absorb the fluids. Then add salt and knead the dough.

He had learned to mix everything, knead fully then for the last minute add salt.

Can someone suggest the pros and cons of the two tactics?



Best Answer

Salt has an effect on the enzymes in flour, as well as how the water affects gluten development and yeast activity. Generally when salt is added later in the mixing process, it is to allow more time for enzymatic processes to happen before the salt inhibits them. (Alternately, you can add salt at the very beginning with all the other ingredients as long as it doesn't come in contact with fresh yeast.)

Kneading dough without salt can help the gluten to develop faster, and give you a very smooth, extensible dough. The problem is that then you have to knead dry salt into a developed dough, which can be pretty hard to do.

Letting the dough sit without salt (called an autolyse) allows for enzymes to do most of the gluten development work before you start actually kneading it, letting it form a developed dough very quickly. The advantage of this is that the dough is not yet fully developed when you add the salt, so it's a lot easier to get it incorporated.




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When should I add salt to my bread dough?

For this reason it is preferable to add salt at the beginning of the mix. In this way, salt benefits the eventual flavor of the bread by helping to preserve the carotenoids during the mixing of the dough.

What is a benefit of adding the salt late in the mixing process?

Delayed salt allows natural, or biological, development of a part of the amino acids in gluten, called cystein, to occur, which can't happen in the presence of salt. It's a very simple way to improve your breadmaking, no matter how you choose to make bread.

When should the salt be added to dough and why?

When added to bread dough, salt works to tighten the gluten strands that are formed, which makes them stronger. By strengthening these gluten strands, salt enables the dough to hold carbon dioxide more efficiently.

Can you add salt late to dough?

If you forget to add the salt but don't remember until AFTER the dough has its first rise. There's not much you can do. Laurie explains, \u201cWaiting until the dough is fully risen and then trying to add salt won't work in your favor.



The 7 Most Common Breadmaking Mistakes You’re Probably Making




More answers regarding when making bread, should I add salt early or late? Pros and cons

Answer 2

The main challenge with adding salt in a bread recipe is:

  • Getting it distributed evenly throughout the dough
  • Not inhibiting yeast growth

Most recipes are 2% salt or less, which does not have a huge effect on yeast growth so that is not the primary concern.

Therefore, the easiest way to do it is to mix it with the flour, or with the wet ingredients early, so that it will be well distributed. That is much harder to do once a dough has formed and started to develop structure.

However, if you are using a preferment (also called a biga, paloush or several other things) where you start fermenting some of the flour and water with the yeast early, you don't want to put salt in the preferment, as it would be much more concentrated, and the only purpose of the preferment is yeast development.

Answer 3

Does not matter- salt will not damage yeast, at least at normal baking concentrations. See my experiments at:

http://www.genuineideas.com/ArticlesIndex/saltyeast.html

In others, ok to add salt and yeast and water together in the wet mix. Improves uniformity and bread texture. Adding salt to flour creates a slightly different texture of nooks and crannies, due to bonding effect on proteins. But not due to changing yeast viability.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Gary Barnes, Svetlana Ponomareva, Acharaporn Kamornboonyarush, Flora Westbrook