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Slow Dough, Real Bread

By Chris J L Young

Published 2016

  • About

As well as looking pretty, at one time acting as a baker’s (or dough owner’s, in the case of communal ovens) signature and helping to distinguish between different types of bread baked in the same shape, scoring the dough serves technical functions. One is to control where the dough bursts (splits) during the rapid expansion in the first stage of baking. Encouraging and controlling this burst also leads to a better, less tight, texture of the finished loaf.

Slashing should be done in a swift, clean, decisive stroke with a very sharp blade, just before you put a loaf into the oven. Using a blunt knife, sawing back and forth, snagging the dough, stabbing away aggressively, having multiple attempts, barely breaking the surface, or doing any of this before the end of the final proof won’t get you anywhere.

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