Proofing Time Guide

Proofing is letting dough rise as the yeast ferments. The single biggest mistake is going by a fixed clock time, when proofing is really driven by temperature and yeast activity — warm dough rises fast, cool dough slow.

Two stages

Bulk fermentation is the first rise after mixing, where flavor and structure develop (often until roughly doubled). Final proof is the rise after shaping, just before baking. Both end based on the dough, not a timer.

The poke test

Lightly flour a finger and press the dough about ½ inch:

  • Springs back fully and fast → under-proofed, give it more time.
  • Springs back slowly, leaving a slight dent → ready to bake.
  • Doesn’t spring back, dent stays → over-proofed, bake now and expect less rise.

You can speed proofing up in a warm spot or slow it down in the fridge for a long, flavorful cold proof — temperature is your throttle.

Frequently asked questions

How long should dough proof? Until the poke test says so — time varies with temperature and yeast.

Bulk vs final proof? Bulk is the first rise; final proof is after shaping.

Can I proof in the fridge? Yes — a cold proof slows things down and builds flavor.

Skip the math: use the calculator to get your numbers instantly.
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