WHY DOES MY BREAD SPLIT? (2024)

Baking can sometimes be challenging but that is half the fun. How boring it would be if we didn’t keep it interesting by having something knock us from the left field!

Bread splitting and bursting in the wrong places can happen to all of us, and probably have over the course of our baking, even experienced bakers can have this issue. There are numerous factors that can cause this.

Some of the reasons are listed below:

  • Dry or Wet Dough
  • The crust has formed and gone hard too soon, or:
  • Too much pressure has built up in the dough;
  • The dough was either too wet or too dry,
  • The slashing of the dough wasn’t sufficient or you didn’t do it,
  • Under proofing,
  • Shaping and the skin tension.

DRY DOUGH

If the dough was too dry it can form a crust too early before it’s had time to rise, then when it begins to rise it forms cracks which then burst in odd places when the pressure builds up. Steam is important in this stage of baking of some breads like sourdoughs so it’s a good thing to try and use steam.

There are numerous ways to incorporate steam in your baking. If you are lucky enough to have an oven with a steam function then use that during the 1st 10min of baking, then let the steam out and bake dry.

If you are like the rest of us and not have the steam function, when you turn your oven on to heat up put a pan of hot water in the oven to heat up together with the oven so when you load your bread there is steam in the oven.

You can also pour a bit of hot water into the base of your oven when you load your bread but BE CAREFUL OF THE STEAM IT PRODUCES -IT CAN SPLASH BACK AND BURN.

If you bake your bread in a Dutch oven, once you have loaded your dough on the baking paper & into the Dutch oven place a couple of blocks of ice between the paper and the pot, quickly close the lid and bake as normal.

WET DOUGH

If the dough is too wet it can create extra steam in the bread and add to the pressure that is already building up in the bread by the gases produced by yeast. This will cause your bread to burst in odd spots and not where you have slashed it. Try reducing the hydration of your bread dough.

SHAPING AND TENSION

This can have an effect on your bread too, now don’t get this confused with sourdough. When you are shaping a yeasted (not sourdough) bread you need to make sure you don’t leave air pockets in it. What you are doing is creating an outer skin of dough around the mass when you shape your bread and if you leave air pockets these will push their way to the surface of the bread upon baking and create bursts and splits in the bread.

On the other hand, you also need to make sure you don’t make the skin too thin and too tight because if you do that when the bread rises the skin won’t be thick or strong enough and it will rip If this happens then it means your tension was too tight, so there is a fine balance.

The seams of your bread need to be hidden so make sure they are at the bottom of the bread when you put them in the loaf pan to do the final proof (although for sourdough’s in a banneton the seam needs to be on the top so when you tip it out the seam is then on the bottom.)

To create a good seam in a round loaf once you have gathered the dough into the centre of the round with a combination of the side of your hand by your baby finger edge and your bench scraper, move your hand under the loaf creating tension on the opposite side and move it 90deg, do this a few times until you have created some tension.

When creating tension in a rectangular loaf once you have folded the edges in do the same thing as above but instead of turning the dough by 90 deg pull it towards you to create the tension. Then pinch the edges closed or even roll them with your fingers to close the edge. Lift the dough up and place it in the greased loaf tin seam side down.

PROOFING

What does proofing have anything to do with your dough splitting? – well if it is under proofed it will do more proofing in the oven and behave like a volcano and the gasses will build up and burst out anywhere they can find space to.

How do you know if your bread is over proofed, under proofed or just right?

If you poke your bread and it doesn’t bounce back and the whole remains its over proofed and won’t have much rise - its exhausted!

On the other hand if you poke the loaf and it springs back like a tramp then it has way too much energy still and is under proofed and can be left a little longer.

Now, if you poke your bread and it springs back a bit but leaves a pock mark (indentation) then its just perfect! So quickly put it in the oven to bake. (hopefully by this stage you have already had your oven on heating up.

How long does it take to proof a loaf? – well that will vary according to where you live, how hot it is or cold it is or how humid it is so I can’t actually answer that question categorically, but a loaf can take anything from 30min to 1 hour at room temp to proof – a fridge will slow it down a bit and is excellent for sourdough breads.

For standard yeasted breads it will still proof rather faster than sourdough so don’t think you can set and forget unless you are doing a slow rise and have used a teeny amount of yeast – but then remember to follow your recipe.

I hope this has helped you a little, please feel free to get in touch with me if you have any other questions.

WHY DOES MY BREAD SPLIT? (2024)

FAQs

WHY DOES MY BREAD SPLIT? ›

When the dough isn't given enough time to rise, the uneven heat from the oven can cause the process to happen unevenly by speeding it up in some parts of the dough more than others. This is what creates the lid-lifting effect and results in a loaf with a split along one side and some of the middle splurging out.

Why does my bread keep splitting? ›

If the dough is too wet it can create extra steam in the bread and add to the pressure that is already building up in the bread by the gases produced by yeast. This will cause your bread to burst in odd spots and not where you have slashed it. Try reducing the hydration of your bread dough.

Why does my bread tear when slicing? ›

When we bake too soon after shaping (i.e. under-proof our loaf), our gluten network has not had sufficient time to relax. As a result, rather than stretch as its internal gases expand, the gluten simply tears.

Why does my homemade bread break apart? ›

Your Bread Was Not Kneaded Enough

Kneading mixes the dough's ingredients and creates a good gluten structure for the bread. It is one of the trickiest parts of learning to bake bread because it's hard to tell if you've kneaded too much or not enough. Bread that is under-kneaded will have more crumbs.

How do you fix tearing bread dough? ›

If tearing is a frequent problem, Chef Felice suggests :
  1. Add a bit of extra-virgin olive oil to the dough to make it more elastic. ...
  2. Be sure to check out Chef Felice's techniques here to ensure the dough itself is made properly.
  3. Knead the dough a little bit longer than normal to improve the gluten structure.
Feb 26, 2021

Why do quick breads split? ›

But pound cakes and quick breads break the rules — they look better with a craggy crack running symmetrically down the center. First, why the crack occurs: Since quick breads and pound cake batters tend to be thick and dense, the exterior bakes first.

Why does my dough split when I knead? ›

Cracking is caused by insufficient elasticity, which is usually caused by insufficient moisture. Adding more moisture into the recipe would almost certainly help you out there. You can go with a 70% dough hydration for example, utilizing the stretch and fold technique to achieve stability.

How to fix cracks in dough? ›

I recommend:
  1. putting it back in the fridge, if you haven't already. ...
  2. if it's really cracked from being rolled out, smush it all back together into a ball/ circle shape, cover it in plastic wrapping and pound it with your rolling pin so it's flatter. ...
  3. find a cold place to roll out, if you can.
Jan 4, 2021

How to make dough not crack? ›

Here then, in brief, are the 5 things you can do to help prevent your pie dough from cracking.
  1. Make sure you cut the fat in enough. ...
  2. Add the water all at once. ...
  3. Knead the dough once. ...
  4. Put the dough in a plastic freezer bag and roll it out to about 8 inches in diameter.
Nov 8, 2013

What happens if you don't slit bread? ›

"In the heat of the oven the loaf wants to expand; that expansion is also known as oven spring. If you don't cut the dough, the loaf will stay smaller but still have a blowout somewhere on its side," Tartine baker Chad Robertson explained in an interview he did with Food & Wine in 2017.

How do you cut bread without tearing it? ›

To prevent squishing a fluffy, fresh loaf of bread, flip the loaf upside down before you cut into it. The theory is simple: Slicing through the tougher, sturdier heel of the bread first makes it a lot easier to maintain its shape; you pierce through the hard part and then glide through the rest like butter.

Why is my bread ripping? ›

Because the yeast still has too much fuel when it hits the oven, the loaf will continue to rise once the crust has already begun to form, which causes ripping and bursting in the sides from the excess CO2 escaping from the loaf.

How to stop bread splitting? ›

  1. Make sure the bread is adequately proofed (the rise after you shape it). If you poke it, the indentation should fill slowly and incompletely.
  2. Make sure you are getting a good tight seam when you shape it. ...
  3. Make sure you slash the top deep enough.
Jan 18, 2009

Why is bread not baked on Wednesday? ›

The color indicates the day of the week the bread was baked. Typically, commercial bread is baked and delivered to grocery stores five days a week. This gives bakeries two days off–Wednesdays and Sundays. The color system helps the store staff as they rotate in the freshest bread and remove the older loaves.

How to stop bread cracking? ›

  1. Make sure the bread is adequately proofed (the rise after you shape it). If you poke it, the indentation should fill slowly and incompletely.
  2. Make sure you are getting a good tight seam when you shape it. ...
  3. Make sure you slash the top deep enough.
Jan 18, 2009

Why is my bread cracking as it cools? ›

crackling sound you hear as the bread cools is an. indicator of how perfecty thin and crisp the crust is.

What happens to overproofed bread? ›

underproof dough will spring back completely correctly, proof will spring back slowly and only halfway, and overproof dough won't spring back at all. after baking, the underproof dough will be dense and deformed. while the dough that was ready will be fluffy and light. and the overproof dough will be flat and deflated.

Why is my bread starter separating? ›

Many new bakers see a clear liquid forming on their starter and they assume it is hooch, or alcohol, which typically means your starter is starving. However, water separation can easily be mistaken for hooch, and it means the opposite — your starter is weak.

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