AT-04 · Crumb Problems · The Sourdough Database Trouble Atlas
DenseCrumb.
The loaf slices heavy. The crumb is tight with almost no visible holes. It's not gummy — it's just a brick. Edible, but not what sourdough should be.
How common
Very common
Severity
Edible, texturally unsatisfying
Visible when
When sliced
Atlas entry
AT-04
The cross-section reveals a tight, uniform crumb with few or no holes. The slice feels heavy. It doesn't tear open in long strands — it breaks off in chunks. This is the most common result from beginner bakes, and the most improvable.
Ranked by likelihood. Start at the top before assuming something exotic.
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most commonUnderproofedNot enough fermentation time means not enough gas production. The yeast simply hasn't had enough time to produce the carbon dioxide that creates holes in the crumb. This is almost always the cause of a dense loaf with no holes.
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very commonWeak or inactive starterA starter that's not at peak activity when you use it can't generate enough gas. The starter should be at its maximum dome — ideally used just before it starts to fall — for maximum gas production in the dough.
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commonToo much whole grain flour without water adjustmentWhole wheat, rye, and spelt absorb more water than white flour. If you added whole grains without increasing hydration, the resulting dough is effectively drier than intended — dense by design.
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occasionalSalt touched the starterSalt inhibits yeast activity. If salt and starter come into direct contact during mixing before they're diluted by the rest of the dough, the yeast can be damaged enough to produce a weak, dense loaf.
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occasionalDegassed during shapingRough handling during shaping — pressing too hard, overworking the dough — deflates the gas that built up during bulk fermentation. You lose the structural holes before they make it to the oven.
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Nothing — this bake is doneA dense crumb that's fully baked is what it is. It's still bread. Use it for toast, French toast, or ribollita. Move on and improve the next one.
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Toast thick slicesDense sourdough makes excellent toast. The bread is structurally sound — just texturally not what you wanted. Toast until very crispy, eat with generous butter.
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Extend bulk fermentation significantlyGive it more time. An extra hour. Watch the dough, not the clock — look for 50–75% volume increase, bubbles visible through the bowl sides, and a domed, jiggly surface.
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Use starter at peakFeed your starter 4–6 hours before mixing (at 75°F). Use it when it's domed and just starting to show signs of falling. This is maximum activity.
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If adding whole grains, add water tooFor every 10% of whole grain flour added, increase hydration by roughly 2–3%. If you're baking 80% white / 20% whole wheat, you need more water than an all-white recipe.
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Add salt after mixing starter and waterMix flour and water first (autolyse). Add starter, mix well. Add salt last, dissolved in a splash of water. Never let salt contact starter directly.
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Handle gently during shapingThe gas built during bulk is fragile. Use a light touch during shaping — stretch and fold, don't press and squash. The holes should survive to the oven.
Before next bake — check these
- Is my starter doubling reliably and at peak when I use it?
- Did bulk fermentation go long enough — 50–75% volume increase?
- Did I add extra hydration when adding whole grain flour?
- Was salt added separately from the starter?
- Was shaping gentle — no excessive degassing?
- Did the dough pass the poke test before baking?