AT-10 · Rise Problems · The Sourdough Database Trouble Atlas

UnderproofedDough.

The loaf baked but the crumb is tight and dense. The crust may have large irregular tears where the loaf burst along the sides rather than the score. It has no volume.

How common
Very common
Severity
Edible but structurally poor
Visible when
When sliced, or during baking (side bursts)
Atlas entry
AT-10
§ 01 — what you're seeing The symptom.

In the oven: the score may close up and the loaf bursts along the sides or base. After baking: a dense, tight crumb with few holes. A gummy, slightly wet interior. Large, uneven tears in the crust where the bread burst where it wasn't supposed to. The loaf may look fine on the outside but be dense inside.

§ 02 — root causes Why it happened.

Ranked by likelihood. Start at the top before assuming something exotic.

  1. most common
    Not enough bulk fermentation time
    Cutting bulk fermentation short is the most common beginner mistake. The instructions say '4 hours' and you assumed that was exact. It's not — it's a guideline. Cold kitchens need 6–8 hours; warm kitchens might need only 3.
  2. very common
    Cold kitchen slowing fermentation
    Below 68°F, fermentation slows significantly. A 70°F recipe running in a 64°F kitchen will need 40–50% more time to reach the same level of fermentation. Time guidance in recipes almost always assumes 72–75°F.
  3. common
    Weak or immature starter
    A starter that's not at peak activity produces gas slowly. Even with adequate time, a weak starter produces an underproofed result because it doesn't generate enough gas.
  4. occasional
    Skipped or rushed final proof
    After shaping, the dough needs time to recover and continue fermenting. Rushing from shape to oven — especially without a cold retard — can leave the dough underproofed regardless of how the bulk went.
§ 03 — fix this bake What you can do right now.
  1. Nothing — this bake is done
    An underproofed loaf can't be fixed after baking. The crumb is set. It's still bread — just dense bread. Slice it thin and toast it.
  2. Note exactly what you did
    How long was bulk? What temperature? This is the data you need to adjust next time. Write it down now before you forget.
§ 04 — next bake How to prevent it.
  1. Trust the dough, not the clock
    Use the poke test: a gentle indent should spring back slowly — 2–3 seconds — not immediately (underproofed) and not stay (overproofed). This is more reliable than any time estimate.
  2. Add 1–2 hours to bulk fermentation
    If you consistently get underproofed results, your baseline timing is just too short for your kitchen conditions. Add time incrementally until you find the sweet spot.
  3. Check kitchen temperature and adjust
    If your kitchen runs cold (under 70°F), expect fermentation to take significantly longer. Find a warmer spot — top of the refrigerator, inside a warm oven with the light on, or in a proofing box.
  4. Look for the right visual cues
    At the end of bulk, the dough should have grown 50–75%, feel airy and jiggly when you shake the bowl, show bubbles visible through the sides, and have a domed surface. These visual cues are more reliable than time.
  5. Use your starter at true peak
    Feed 4–6 hours before mixing and use the starter when it's just reached its maximum dome — not before, not after it's started deflating. Peak activity = maximum gas production.

Before next bake — check these

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