Home

overleavened

Overleavened refers to dough or batter that contains more leavening agent than appropriate or has fermented longer than intended, resulting in excessive gas production and weakened structure. In baking, the term describes a stage where the dough has risen beyond a workable point, leading to a coarse crumb, large irregular holes, and a tendency to collapse during or after baking. Causes include excessive yeast or sourdough starter, overly warm temperatures, long or bulk fermentation, high hydration, or improper timing between fermentation and shaping.

Symptoms and effects include a crumb with large, uneven holes, a pale or gummy crust, and an

Prevention and handling involve using the recommended amount of leavening for the flour, monitoring dough volume,

See also: leavening, fermentation, overproofing, underleavened.

overly
airy
texture
that
lacks
chew.
Flavor
may
be
overly
yeasty
or
sour,
depending
on
the
microorganisms
and
duration
of
fermentation;
in
extreme
cases
the
dough
may
collapse
or
lose
its
shape.
and
using
cues
such
as
doubling
in
size
or
a
poke
test
to
assess
readiness.
Control
temperature
and
fermentation
time,
punch
down
or
degas
if
signs
of
overfermentation
appear,
and
refrigerate
to
slow
the
process
or
employ
cold
fermentation
to
extend
the
timeline.
If
overleavening
occurs
during
proofing,
a
gentle
reshape
and
shorter
final
proof
can
help
restore
structure
before
baking.