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Experimental application of the advanced method for the production of bread doughs with flours with limited gluten development capacity: analysis of the results. (Analysis carried out by ChatGPT)

by luciano

sangiorgio.l@libero.it

(Dynamics of the protein network in Triticum monococcum bread subjected to prolonged cold maturation and controlled thermal reactivation. Physical-dynamic model, qualitative rheological interpretation, and experimental validation through photographic documentation and evaluation of the finished product)Technical-scientific synthesis. The present study analyzes the structural and rheological behavior of an einkorn dough (Triticum monococcum L.) subjected to a process structured into biga, dispersion in the liquid phase, prolonged cold maturation, thermal reactivation on a warm surface, intermediate manipulations, final proofing, and baking. The objective is to verify whether the protein network of einkorn follows a linear development dynamic or a non-linear dynamic, characterized by a phase of transient instability followed by possible reorganization. The experiment compared two dough series identical in their general scheme but differing in maturation duration and, above all, in temperature control during the post-retard phase. Series I, conducted with more coherent thermal control, showed recovery of surface continuity, satisfactory vertical development, guided opening of the score, and a structurally functional crumb. Series II, subjected to longer maturation and compromised thermal control, showed a more fragile surface, greater morphological irregularity, less controlled expansion, and a more heterogeneous crumb, though still fully functional from a food standpoint. Based on the images and process data, a six-stage model is proposed: 1)initial aggregation of the preferment; 2)controlled dispersion; 3)cold maturation with biochemical relaxation; 4)critical post-retard instability window; 5)protein reorganization assisted by rest and manipulation; 6)stabilization of the functional network. The qualitative rheological interpretation suggests that the decisive parameter in einkorn is not merely the intrinsic strength of the flour, but the synchronism between reorganization of the protein matrix and gaseous development [1][2]. The theoretical framework is consistent with the literature on wheat gluten, which assigns a central role in dough viscoelasticity to glutenins, gliadins, and glutenin macropolymer, and with the literature on einkorn, which generally describes softer, less elastic, and more extensible doughs than common wheat, albeit with strong dependence on genotype and process [1][3][4]

1. Introduction

Einkorn is one of the oldest domesticated wheat species and is today being rediscovered for its nutritional, agronomic, and sensory interest. However, its breadmaking remains problematic, because its high protein content does not automatically translate into a strong gluten network in the technological sense typical of modern bread wheat. The literature indicates, in fact, that the breadmaking quality of wheat depends not only on total protein quantity, but also on protein composition, the gliadin/glutenin ratio, the presence and functionality of glutenin subunits, and the ability to form high-molecular-weight aggregates capable of conferring elasticity, cohesion, viscosity, and gas retention. Wieser recalls that gliadins are predominantly monomeric and associated mainly with viscosity and extensibility, whereas glutenins are polymeric, aggregated through interchain disulfide bonds, and constitute the component most directly associated with elasticity and the structure of the dough network [1].

In the case of einkorn, the situation is more delicate. Recent literature reports that, despite its high protein content, einkorn flours tend on average to produce softer, less elastic, and more extensible doughs than modern wheats, due to a generally lower gluten quality and a different balance between protein fractions. Brandolini and co-workers observe that einkorn “generally has poor breadmaking value,” although some elite lines show very interesting technological performance; Mefleh and co-workers, in a holistic approach on Italian genotypes, show marked differences in breadmaking behavior between ancient and improved varieties [3][4]. The overall picture suggests that einkorn should not be judged as a species intrinsically incapable of making bread, but as a system highly sensitive to genotype and process.

The present study is situated in this area of interest. It does not aim to generically demonstrate whether einkorn “does” or “does not” make bread, but rather to describe the structural dynamics of its dough during a complex protocol of cold maturation and thermal reactivation. The starting hypothesis is that the protein network of einkorn does not evolve in a linear and monotonic way, but rather passes through a phase of transient instability in which the apparent rupture of the surface may precede a useful reorganization of the matrix. The literature on glutenin macropolymer offers theoretical support for this possibility: Feng and co-workers show that mixing reduces the apparent content of GMP, whereas resting can restore part of it; at the same time, excessive resting can worsen the structural framework again [2].

This scientific framework makes particularly significant the empirical observation that guides the entire work: bread must be judged not only as a form to admire, but as a food material to be eaten. From a technological point of view, the distinction is crucial, because a bread with irregular morphology may still possess a continuous, non-sticky, sufficiently elastic, and sensorily valid crumb. This dual perspective, morphological and functional, guides the entire following analysis.

2. Objectives of the study

The main objective is to verify whether, in einkorn, the protein network during a breadmaking process with cold maturation follows a stage-based dynamic, in which a phase of transient fragility may be followed by a phase of structural reorganization.
The secondary objective is to identify the role of thermal control in the post-retard phase as a possible bifurcation variable between two outcomes: 1)a relatively stable functional network; 2)a still edible but more irregular network.

The third objective is to propose a qualitative rheological interpretation of the images and the behavior of the finished bread, without resorting to direct instrumental tests, while remaining consistent with the literature on the relationships between GMP, viscoelasticity, gas retention, and bread quality [1][2].

3. Materials, experimental setup, and data sources

The study is based on experimental documentation consisting of a written protocol, temperature and pH measurements, pre- and post-baking weights, and a photographic sequence of the main processing stages and the final product.
The raw material is stone-ground whole einkorn flour.

The process includes: 1)initial biga; 2)dissolution/dispersion; 3)cold maturation; 4)reactivation on a warm surface; 5)intermediate manipulations; 6)division; 7)shaping; 8)proofing in a basket; 9)scoring; 10)baking.

Two series were compared.

Series I: 24-hour maturation, ambient temperature approximately 22 °C, surface temperature on removal approximately 6 °C, more coherent management of the warm surface.
Series II: 28-hour maturation, ambient temperature approximately 23 °C, surface temperature on removal approximately 7.8 °C, lower initial pH, and compromised thermal control of the warm surface.
The temperature, pH, time, weight, surface description, and crust and crumb evaluations are those experimentally recorded in the protocol; the scientific interpretations of their meaning are related to the literature [2][3][4]. The images were read as morphological evidence of the mechanical and structural behavior of the dough. This is therefore not a study with standardized instrumental tests of alveography, farinography, dynamic oscillation, or texture profile analysis, but rather a high-resolution observational qualitative technical-scientific analysis.

4. Theoretical framework of reference

The breadmaking quality of wheat derives from a complex protein system in which the gliadin fraction and the glutenin fraction play complementary roles.
1)Gliadins, monomeric, contribute mainly to viscosity and extensibility.
2)Glutenins, aggregated through interchain disulfide bonds, constitute the high-molecular-weight polymers most involved in the elastic response of dough.
Glutenin macropolymer is considered a key component of this system, and several sources link it directly to viscoelastic properties and bread volume. Feng and co-workers report that GMP plays a prominent role in dough properties and breadmaking quality, that mixing reduces its apparent content through depolymerization, and that resting may favor a partial recovery through reformation of disulfide bonds and growth in the fraction of large particles [1][2].
In einkorn this balance proves on average less favorable to mechanical resistance. Brandolini and co-workers describe protein-rich einkorn flours with breadmaking value generally lower than that of the control soft wheat; Mefleh and co-workers highlight that the dough and bread performance of ancient and improved wheats depends on a set of compositional, rheological, and fermentative parameters [3][4]. The conclusion that emerges is therefore not a technological condemnation of einkorn, but the recognition of a strong dependence on genotype and process. This approach fits the present experiment well: two series very close in formulation, but diverging in structural outcome especially in relation to time, pH, and temperature of the post-retard phase.

The distinction between the two series is essential to correctly interpret the results.

Main process parameters distinguishing Series I and Series II during post-retard dough handling.

Parameter

Series I

Series II

Impact

Retard maturation

24 h

28 h

Greater enzymatic degradation in Series II

Temperature on removal from retard

6 °C

7.8 °C

More active dough network in Series II

Initial pH

5.2

4.9

Higher acidity in Series II

Warm surface control

Stable

Unstable

Less controlled dough development in Series II

Ambient temperature

22 °C

23 °C

Faster fermentation in Series II

Series II therefore started from a more degraded structural condition, characterized by higher acidity, increased enzymatic activity, and reduced thermal stability.

Series II therefore starts from a more degraded structural condition, characterized by greater acidity, greater enzymatic activity, and greater thermal instability. This explains the presence of a more degraded surface, widespread ruptures, and more irregular alveolation. The most important experimental finding is that the difference between the two series does not seem to depend primarily on the dough, formula, or fermentative agent, but on the thermal management of the post-retard network reactivation phase.

6. Exerimental results: phase-by-phase readin

6.1.Mature pre-dough

The In the initial images the pre-dough appears compact, fragmented, with sharp fractures and a load-bearing mass (Photo 1; Photo 2). This morphology is compatible with a mature pre-dough that has not collapsed. It is not yet a final bread network, but a pre-organized matrix. From the material point of view, the initial state is neither liquid nor completely plastic: it is a cohesive, locally rigid system, rich in structural potential. The visual characteristics are those of a correctly matured pre-dough (biga): hydration distributed, proteolysis present but not excessive, structure still load-bearing. This is important because the quality of the final network originates here.

6.2. Dissolution or dispersion phase

The dissolution phase shows a viscous, aerated system, with microbubbles and fluid continuity (Photo 3). In structural terms this step is equivalent to a controlled dispersion of the original matrix. It is here that the system loses the macroscopic continuity of the biga but gains mobility. The literature on GMP interprets mixing as a phase capable of partially depolymerizing glutenin aggregates and reducing the average particle size, with an increase in the proportion of smaller and more extractable forms [2]. Visually, medium viscosity, the presence of microbubbles, and a fluid but non-liquid structure are observed. This phase produces disaggregation of the gluten network, distribution of the proteins, and dispersion of GMP. This is exactly the principle of the proposed model.

6.3. Dough after cold maturation

After 24 hours at about 5 °C, in the images of the first series the surface appears relatively uniform and the bottom shows structural continuity (Photo 5; Photo 6). This phase does not suggest collapse, but relaxation. From a biochemical point of view it is reasonable to infer that hydration, acidification, and slow protein modifications continued in the retard. Cold slows but does not cancel such processes. In this phase, according to the model that will emerge later, the dough is not yet “ready” in a mechanical sense: it is a relaxed, biochemically modified system awaiting reactivation. Visual observations show a smooth surface, uniform structure, and signs of relaxation; the bottom presents slight adhesiveness but continuous structure. The most coherent interpretation is that of controlled enzymatic maturation, with active amylases, moderate proteases, and a weakened but not destroyed network.

6.4. Critical window after removal from retard

The images of Series I after about two hours on a warm surface show multiple surface ruptures, discontinuities, and loss of homogeneity of the skin (Photo 7, Series I). This is the most important phase of the entire work, because it suggests that einkorn enters a zone of temporary instability. The surface seems to worsen before improving. In a linear model this would be a sign of failure; in the protocol examined here, however, this fragility appears as a transient stage.
Here the most interesting datum is precisely the behavior of the gluten network. Photo 7 represents the phase of network rupture. The observed sequence is the following: 1)removal from retard with a fragile network; 2)manipulation with partial rupture; 3)warm rest with subsequent reaggregation; 4)more elastic structure. You have therefore demonstrated experimentally that the network can reorganize after rupture.

Series II shows in this same phase a more advanced and more vulnerable picture: greater surface porosity, more marked yielding lines, a more open texture already present, and faster fermentative activation (Photo 2, Series II). The whole is consistent with the process data: 1)4 more hours of maturation; 2)lower pH; 3)higher initial dough temperature; 4)less effective control of the warm surface. The literature does not provide a direct photographic relationship, but it makes the general mechanism plausible: in an einkorn dough, already more extensible and less elastic on average, an excessively rapid reactivation can unbalance the relationship between protein reorganization and gas development [3][4].

It is important to note that surface ruptures do not necessarily constitute an absolute defect. In einkorn they may indicate a more rigid surface network in the presence of active internal fermentation. If the internal network holds, the bread can still expand, as happens in this case.

6.5. Manipulation and reorganization

In Series I, after 2 hours and 30 minutes and manipulations, the surface becomes more continuous, smoother, more legible as a structured skin (Photo 9, Series I). The images indicate that the dough recovers cohesion instead of worsening further. The subsequent division also confirms greater stability of the mass (Photo 10, Series I).

Here lies the strongest theoretical point of the entire experiment. Photo 9 documents the reorganization of GMP. The protein system realigns the chains, reforms disulfide bonds, and builds a new, more elastic network. This is exactly the behavior predicted by the model of dispersion and reaggregation of the gluten network.

In Series II, after manipulation, only a partial improvement of the surface is observed, which nevertheless remains more fragile and porous than in Series I (Photo 3, Series II). This suggests that manipulation had a corrective effect, but not a fully refounding one. The connection with Feng et al. is particularly useful here: the resting following mixing can restore part of GMP, but the response depends strongly on the duration of the phase and on the conditions of the system [2].
When fermentation is already too advanced, manipulation does not completely regenerate the network but also tends to break already developed gas chambers. This leads to more irregular alveoli and a less stable structure.

6.6. Division, shaping, and final proofing

In Series I the divided and shaped doughs maintain shape, volume, and a fairly homogeneous surface (Photo 10, Series I). In the basket and at the end of proofing they show growth, the presence of small discontinuities, but good geometric legibility (Photo 13; Photo 14, Series I). The mass holds well, does not collapse, and maintains structure. This is a clear sign that the network has recovered elasticity.

The images of the proofing baskets show an increase in volume, surface microfractures, and still stable structure. The network appears extensible but not excessively weak. In einkorn this is a very good result.

In Series II, by contrast, already at the beginning of proofing in the basket, widespread points of weakness are observed (Photo 5, Series II); before baking the surface appears further compromised and much closer to the fracture threshold (Photo 6; Photo 7, Series II). This visual datum agrees with the hypothesis that the control of temperatures and times during proofing was compromised. In essence, Series II reaches baking with a surface already close to its own fracture threshold. The surface is already very tense, with small widespread rupture points and less elastic structure: a sign that the network is at the limit of its extension capacity.

6.7. Baking, crust, and final shape

In Series I the bread shows good vertical development, wide but legible opening, and orderly growth (Photo 16; Photo 17; Photo 18; Photo 19, Series I). The fracture follows the score coherently and no marked lateral spread is observed. Here we see good expansion, controlled opening, and uniform crust. The fissure follows the score: this indicates functional oven spring.
Vertical development is one of the most important signals of the entire test. It means that the network was extensible but also resistant and that fermentation did not destroy the structure. If the network had been too degraded, broad bread, flat bread, or collapse would have been observed. Instead, the experimental data show final heights between 7 and 7.5 cm for loaves of about 780 g: a very good result.

In Series II the bread instead shows more violent openings and more widespread fractures, with less control of expansion (Photo 8, Series II). However, and this is fundamental to emphasize, neither series shows the catastrophic collapse typical of a completely failed network. No flattened bread, fully slumped bread, or bread lacking internal crumb is observed. The difference is therefore one of control and uniformity, not of the existence or non-existence of structure.
In Series II no true progressive oven spring is observed, but rather a more explosive structural rupture. This is consistent with a situation in which the internal gas exceeds the resistance of the network.

6.8. Crumb

The crumb of Series I appears fine-medium, sufficiently distributed, with some irregularity also attributable to incorporated air, but without large anomalous cavities or massively compact zones (Photo 20; Photo 21, Series I). The bottom of the bread also confirms a well-supported structure (Photo 22, Series I). The bottom shows complete baking, the absence of compressed zones, and the absence of collapse, indicating a good balance between internal structure and hydration/baking ratio.
The description of the crumb is very clear: fine-medium alveoli, fairly homogeneous distribution, elastic crumb, slightly moist, absence of sticky crumb. This means that starch degradation was controlled, the malt is not excessive, and gelatinization occurred correctly. This is a very important finding for einkorn.

Series II presents a more irregular but still valid crumb (Photo 9, Series II). Medium and small alveoli remain predominant, the walls are in most cases continuous, and no sticky crumb or widespread collapse is observed. This implies that the network, although more disordered, retained gas sufficiently to generate a functional food structure. This point is extremely important: Series II is not aesthetically optimal, but it is not technologically null. It is an edible bread, endowed with crumb, structure, and sufficient integrity for food use.

The crumb of Series II deserves a specific evaluation. Despite the degradation of the network, the bread remains functional and edible. The alveolar structure shows predominantly medium-small alveoli, some isolated larger alveoli, non-uniform distribution, but absence of large empty cavities. This indicates that gas retention occurred, that the gluten network did not collapse, and that fermentation produced gas while still maintaining a certain structural cohesion. The crumb is granular but continuous; it does not appear gummy or sticky. The alveolar walls, although thin, are continuous and show good moisture distribution. This suggests an elastic and non-crumbly crumb.
The irregularity of the structure is the sign of the fermentative problem: less uniform alveoli, some isolated larger ones, less ordered structure compared with Series I. The probable causes are: 1)faster fermentation; 2)manipulation on already gassed dough; 3)partial rupture of gas chambers with random recombination of the bubbles.

From a technological point of view, Series II is therefore a valid but less controlled bread. In synthetic terms: good structure, good gas retention, elastic texture, medium homogeneity, irregular aesthetics. Series II demonstrates that even with excessively high temperature, accelerated fermentation, and a more fragile network, einkorn can still produce a stable and edible crumb. The protein system does not collapse completely, but loses part of its structural control.

7. Final quantitative parameters

The The quantitative parameters confirm the morphological and structural interpretation.
For Series I, the pre-baking weight of the loaves was approximately 780 g. The post-baking cold weight was around 652 g. Weight loss is therefore approximately 16-17%, a value fully consistent with a well-baked bread, with balanced internal moisture and a correctly formed crust. For rustic breads and ancient flours, a range of 15-18% can be considered very good.
The recorded final heights, between 7 and 7.5 cm, are also very positive for loaves of this mass.
The recorded final internal temperature was 93.6°C. This value falls within the ideal range of 92-96°C for breads with medium-high hydration and ancient flours, confirming the correctness of the baking.

8. Proposed physical-dynamic model

In light of the images, the data, and the theoretical framework, the behavior of einkorn in the protocol under examination is better described by a six-stage model than by a simple scheme of progressive development.

8.1. State A: initial aggregation of the pre-dought

The mature biga represents a fragmented but load-bearing protein pre-matrix (Photo 1; Photo 2). Water has not yet been redistributed in the way typical of the final dough, but a useful organization already exists. This state is locally stable, even if not yet suitable for final gas retention.

8.2. State B: controlled dispersion

The liquid or dissolution phase reduces macroscopic rigidity and increases the mobility of the components (Photo 3). From the GMP point of view, it is compatible with a partial depolymerization induced by shear and hydration. This does not constitute a definitive loss of function, but a temporary lowering of continuity [2].

8.3. State C: cold maturation and biochemical relaxation

During the stay in the retard, the matrix relaxes, acidifies, and hydrates more finely (Photo 5; Photo 6). The system does not strengthen mechanically in a simple sense, but predisposes itself to a new organization. The low temperature slows the processes but does not cancel them.

8.4. State D: critical post-retard instability window

This phase coincides with the emergence of surface ruptures and discontinuities (Photo 7, Series I; Photo 2, Series II). It is the point at which the system passes from a cold, relaxed, and biochemically modified network to a network once again mobile, fermentatively active, and mechanically stressed. In this window einkorn manifests its typical fragility: if reactivation is well synchronized, the instability is transient; if it is too rapid or too prolonged, the instability is amplified [3][4].

8.5. State E: assisted protein reorganization

Manipulation and rest, within the correct window, allow a recomposition of surface continuity in Series I (Photo 9; Photo 10, Series I), whereas in Series II they produce only a partial reorganization (Photo 3, Series II). The term “reaggregation of GMP” must be used as a structural inference consistent with the literature on resting, not as a direct measurement. The images of Series I and the work of Feng et al. make this interpretation highly plausible [2].

8.6. State F: stabilization of the functional network

The final result bifurcates into two outcomes:

1)relatively stable functional network, with orderly growth and a sufficiently homogeneous crumb (Photo 17; Photo 18; Photo 19; Photo 20; Photo 21, Series I);

2)still functional but less uniform network, with less controlled growth and a heterogeneous crumb (Photo 8; Photo 9, Series II).

This second outcome is precisely that of Series II. The crucial point is that the model does not distinguish only between “success” and “failure,” but between optimal network, functional network, and collapse. In the present experiment the first two levels were observed, not the third.
In synthetic form, the behavior of the dough follows the cycle: dispersion → rupture →

When the temperature is correct: network → dispersion → reaggregation → stable structure.
When the temperature is too high: network → dispersion → degradation → rupture.

9. Qualitative rheological interpretation.

9.1. Methodological premise

Here the term “rheology” is used in a qualitative sense. We do not have instrumental curves of G’, G’’, tan delta, farinograms, or alveograms relating to the doughs. However, the rheology of a dough can also be inferred from its response to manipulation, shape retention, surface quality, the dynamics of oven expansion, and crumb morphology. The literature on gluten, GMP, and dough properties justifies this kind of interpretive reading, provided that it is declared qualitative and not as a direct measurement [1][2].

9.2. Four key rheological properties

In the protocol under examination, four properties matter above all:

1)Elasticity: the ability to recover at least part of the shape after deformation.
2)Extensibility: the ability to stretch without breaking.

3)Resistance to deformation: the ability to oppose gas pressure and manipulation without yielding too early.

4)Gas retention capacity: the most important integrated property, requiring continuity of the matrix and coordination of the surface skin.

This distinction is consistent with Wieser’s classical framework on the complementary function of gliadins and glutenins [1].

9.3. Rheological reading of Series I

In Series I the biga phase corresponds to a locally cohesive and fragmented material. Dispersion reduces apparent rigidity and increases mobility. After the cold phase the dough appears relaxed but not collapsed. The critical two-hour window on the warm surface shows low macroscopic surface cohesion; however, the subsequent recovery of the surface indicates that the effective elastic component of the system increases again. In theoretical terms, we could say that mixing and dispersion push the system toward a relatively more dissipative condition, whereas correctly timed resting and manipulation shift the balance back toward greater effectiveness of the elastic component. Final proofing and vertical development show that the relationship between elasticity and extensibility is sufficiently well balanced to allow both shaping and retention. The guided opening in the oven signals that the skin of the bread still has enough elastoviscous reserve to direct the fracture rather than undergo it passively. All this is consistent with the role of the glutenin fraction and GMP in dough viscoelasticity [1][2].

9.4. Rheological reading of Series II

Series II starts from a more advanced state of maturation, with lower pH and less controlled thermal reactivation. This shifts the system toward a situation in which gaseous development anticipates the full recovery of network continuity. The early microporosities and yielding lines indicate that the matrix enters an active expansion phase too early. Manipulation has a corrective effect, but not a refounding one: it redistributes tensions and gas, but does not restore the dough to the same level of homogeneity as Series I. In final proofing the skin appears closer to the fracture limit. In the oven the dough still expands, which proves that gas retention capacity has not been lost, but it does so in a less controlled way. The final crumb is the decisive datum: it shows that the system did not enter a state of total brittle failure, but rather a state of continuous network with low uniformity. From the rheological point of view this distinction is essential. It means that the elastic component has decreased and is less distributed, surface resistance is irregular, but the matrix still retains enough cohesion to avoid collapse, late stickiness, and severe compaction [3][4].

9.5. Rheological classification of the outcomes

Based on the data, a classification into three states can be proposed:
1)Optimal network: relatively continuous surface, orderly growth, good gas retention, and more uniform crumb.

2)Functional network: fragile surface, less controlled growth, irregular but continuous crumb, and fully edible bread.

3)Collapsed network: marked lateral spread, anomalous cavities or widespread compression, sticky crumb, and serious loss of integrity.

In the present experiment the first state in Series I and the second state in Series II were clearly observed; the third was not reached.

10. Validation of the model

The final questions posed in the protocol constitute a true validation of the model.
1)Is the shape more stable compared with previous tests?

Yes. Series I shows greater overall stability.

2)Is the crumb more uniform?

Yes, or at least similar but more balanced in Series I.

3)Was the oven spring more controlled?

Not directly detected in real time, but the final result indicates behavior compatible with more controlled development in Series I.

4)Did the surface maintain integrity?

To a limited extent, but not to a structurally critical degree. Surface ruptures did not prevent bread development.
5)Did the air incorporated during dispersion produce a visible effect?

Yes. The irregular alveoli constitute clear evidence of this.

This body of evidence confirms the proposed theoretical model.

11.Comparative discussion between Series I and Series II

mThe difference between the two series depends not mainly on the basic formula, but on the thermo-temporal trajectory of the dough after cold maturation. Series I shows that in einkorn the initial post-retard fragility may be a productive phase, not necessarily a degenerative one, provided it is followed by manipulation and rest within the correct thermal window. Series II instead shows that a relatively limited increase in maturation time, initial temperature, and ambient temperature, associated with a less well-managed warm surface, is sufficient to shift the system toward a less governed regime. The literature on einkorn lines confirms that this species is very sensitive to process and that breadmaking results can range from poor breadmaking value to competitive performance, depending on genotype and conditions [3][4]. The data discussed here add a more specific formulation: the post-refrigeration phase is a point of technological bifurcation.
The scientifically most important point is that in einkorn there is a very narrow window of network stability. When the temperature is correct, the sequence network → dispersion → reaggregation → stable structure is observed. When the temperature is too high, by contrast, the sequence network → dispersion → degradation → rupture is observed.

It is particularly important to note that the morphological irregularity of Series II does not coincide with technological unusability. In many empirical judgments on breadmaking, aesthetic imperfection is confused with structural failure. The crumb images refute this equivalence. The alveolation is irregular, but not chaotic; there are continuous walls; the crumb does not appear sticky; the bread maintains full food identity. This leads to a conclusion of methodological value as well: in einkorn breads, the quality criterion must be more nuanced and more functional than in breads made from high-strength modern grains.

12. Proposal for a general theoretical formulation

The results make it possible to express the following general thesis: in einkorn the quality of the final structure depends less on the intrinsic strength of the flour alone and more on the synchronization between protein mobility, matrix reorganization, and fermentative kinetics. Thermal control of the post-refrigeration phase acts as a bifurcation variable.
1)If protein reorganization occurs in time relative to gas development, the system converges toward a stable or quasi-stable network.

2)If gaseous development anticipates the full recovery of the network, the system converges toward a still continuous but heterogeneous network.

This model is consistent with the classical distinction between the role of gliadins and glutenins in dough rheology and with the data showing the partial reversibility of GMP during resting after mixing, but also its deterioration under excessive conditions [1][2].

13. Limitations of the study

The study has some limitations that must be openly stated.

1)No direct instrumental measurements of rheology, alveography, farinography, or texture profile analysis were performed.

2)GMP was not directly measured; therefore its reorganization is proposed as a theoretically coherent inference, not as direct biochemical demonstration.

3)The experimental sample is limited to two series, although very well documented.
4)The genetic variable of the specific einkorn used was not cross-compared with other cultivars, whereas the literature shows a strong dependence on genotype [3][4].

These limitations do not invalidate the work, but define its proper status: a technical-experimental study with a strong observational basis and solid theoretical interpretation, to be considered as a proof-of-concept of high heuristic value.

14. Conclusions

The present work demonstrates that the behavior of einkorn dough, in a process involving biga, prolonged cold maturation, and thermal reactivation, is better described by a non-linear dynamic than by a linear model of gluten network development. The experimental observations support the existence of a critical post-retard window in which the network may appear temporarily worsened and yet prove capable of subsequent reorganization. Series I shows the favorable path: dispersion, transient fragility, reorganization assisted by manipulation and rest, stabilization of the functional network, bread development, and valid crumb. Series II shows the suboptimal path: dispersion, more rapid and deeper fragility, only partial recovery, less controlled growth, and irregular but still fully edible crumb.

The scientifically most relevant result is that the difference between these trajectories does not seem to depend mainly on the formula, but rather on the thermo-temporal control of the post-refrigeration phase. The technologically most relevant result is that, in einkorn, morphological irregularity does not necessarily coincide with loss of food functionality. In practical terms, this means that einkorn breadmaking requires not so much the application of standard criteria used for modern wheat, as a fine management of the synchronization between structural recovery of the matrix and fermentative development [1][2][3][4].

The experimental methodology described here therefore demonstrates that:

1)the gluten network of einkorn can reorganize after rupture;

2)einkorn can develop good structure if reactivation is controlled;

3)the key factor is the temperature in the first 2-3 hours after the retard.

The proposed model is therefore strongly supported by the experimental data and the photographic documentation.

15. Bibliographic references

[1]Wieser H. Chemistry of gluten proteins. Food Microbiology. 2007;24(2):115-119. PMID:17008153.
[2]Feng Y, Zhang H, Wang J, Chen H. Dynamic Changes in Glutenin Macropolymer during Different Dough Mixing and Resting Processes. Molecules. 2021;26(3):541.
[3]Brandolini A, et al. Breadmaking Performance of Elite Einkorn (Triticum monococcum L. subsp. monococcum) Lines: Evaluation of Flour, Dough and Bread Characteristics. Foods. 2023;12(8):1610.
[4]Mefleh M, et al. Suitability of Improved and Ancient Italian Wheat for Bread-Making: A Holistic Approach. Life. 2022;12(10):1613.

16. In Summary

In einkorn, breadmaking performance depends less on apparent protein strength alone and more on the synchronization between matrix mobility, protein reorganization, and fermentative development; in this context, the post-refrigeration phase represents a technological bifurcation variable that can lead either to a relatively stable functional network or to a network that is still fully edible but less uniform and less controlled in its expansion [1][2][3].

Photos referenced in the text I series

Advanced Method for Producing Bread Doughs with Flours Having Limited Gluten Development Capacity

by luciano

Foreword:
The method described here represents an evolution of the procedure covered by the patent:
NEW METHOD FOR MAKING (FERMENTED) BAKERY PRODUCTS
Publication date: 11.04.2018 – Bulletin 2018/15
Application number: 17194677.5
EP 3 305 078 A1

Based on this conceptual framework, several experimental tests were carried out using stone-milled whole einkorn wheat flour. The method is specifically designed for flours characterized by:
1 – weak gluten,
2 – high gliadin/glutenin ratio,
3 – redominantly viscous-cohesive rheological behavior.

The presentation of this method derives from one of the tests conducted, selected because it is representative of the full expression of the process.

1 – Technological context of the approach

Whole flours obtained from stone-milled ancient grains have technological characteristics that differ profoundly from those of modern strong flours commonly used in industrial breadmaking. The “strength” of a flour, in breadmaking terms, is linked to the ability of the protein fraction to build an elastic, continuous gluten network resistant to the pressure of fermentation gases. Comparative studies on wheat species show that, even in the presence of a high total protein content, ancient species such as einkorn may present a higher gliadin/glutenin ratio than modern soft wheat. The result is a less elastic and less structurally “load-bearing” network [1] (cf. comparative studies published in the MDPI field).

In practical terms: in other words, a high protein content does not necessarily imply the presence of a functional gluten structure for breadmaking purposes.

The reduced capacity of such flours to develop a continuous and elastic gluten network entails:
1 – difficulty in retaining the gases produced during fermentation;
2 – limited tolerance to mechanical processing;
3 – structural instability of the dough during the proofing stages;
4 – greater sensitivity to fermentation peaks.

In current practice, these critical issues are often compensated for by:
1 – blending with high-strength flours;
2 – use of improver additives;
3 – use of technological aids.

Such interventions, although effective from a volumetric standpoint, frequently entail a reduction in the nutritional, sensory, and identity-related peculiarities of the original flours, in addition to modifying aspects of digestibility and tolerability.

1.1 The specific case of einkorn

Triticum monococcum is one of the earliest cereals domesticated by humans and is considered one of the oldest wheat species still cultivated. Compared with modern wheats widely used in breadmaking, einkorn has peculiar nutritional and technological characteristics that significantly influence its behavior in doughs.

Several studies have shown that this species often has a relatively high total protein content; however, breadmaking functionality does not depend exclusively on the amount of protein, but rather on the structure and organization of the gluten protein system.

According to the structural models proposed by Peter R. Shewry and Peter R. Halford (2002) and subsequently further developed by Herbert Wieser (2007), the rheological properties of wheat doughs mainly depend on the interaction between three main protein classes:
1 – high molecular weight glutenins (HMW-GS);

2 – low molecular weight glutenins (LMW-GS);

3 -gliadins.

In einkorn, the relative distribution of these fractions differs significantly from that of modern soft wheat. In particular, the following have been observed:

1 – lower formation of high molecular weight protein polymers;
2 – greater proportion of monomeric proteins;
3 – limited ability to generate a continuous and structurally stable gluten network.

From a technological standpoint, this generally translates into doughs characterized by:
1 – lower stability during processing;
2 – greater extensibility;
3 – lower ability to retain fermentation gases.

Despite these structural limitations, recent studies have shown that the breadmaking performance of ancient grains can be significantly improved through proper management of the technological process. In particular, techniques based on controlled fermentations, prolonged maturation, and careful management of the thermal conditions of the dough can promote a progressive reorganization of the protein system and improve structural stability during proofing and baking (Luca Cappelli et al., 2019; Gabriele Brandolini and Adriano Hidalgo, 2014).

In light of these considerations, the present work experimentally analyzes the behavior of the einkorn protein network during a breadmaking process characterized by a prolonged low-temperature maturation phase followed by controlled thermal reactivation of the dough.

2. Process objective

Whole flours — particularly those derived from ancient grains such as einkorn — pose specific technological challenges:

1 – greater water absorption and competition for water;

2 – interference of the bran fraction with the formation and continuity of the protein network;
3 – fermentative variability;

4 – presence of phytates and other compounds with potential nutritional interference.

Indirect fermentation and sourdough strategies are commonly employed to mitigate these critical issues through:

  1. controlled acidification
  2. activation of endogenous enzymes (e.g. phytase)
  3. modification of the fibrous fraction (e.g. arabinoxylans)
  4. aroma development and improved shelf life

The objective of the methodology described here is to:
1 – concentrate and “condition” the most critical fraction of the dough (rich in bran and fiber) within a biga-type pre-dough;
2 – maintain rigorous thermal control during the different stages of the process, to preserve fermentative predictability and avoid undesired accelerations;
3 – introduce an innovative step of mechanical dispersion of the pre-dough in cold water, with air incorporation, aimed at improving the homogeneity of the dough system and the volumetric contribution during the baking stage.

2. Materials and Methods: complete description of the method

2.1 Raw material and functional fractionation

Raw material

1 – Whole einkorn wheat flour (Triticum monococcum), stone-milled
2 – Total quantity: 1800 g

Stone milling is known to fully preserve the grain fractions (endosperm, germ, bran), with a higher content of bioactive compounds and fibers than refined flours, but with a significant impact on the rheological properties of the dough (Shewry & Hey, 2015; Hidalgo & Brandolini, 2014).

Sieving at 600 µm
The flour was entirely sieved through a 600 µm mesh, obtaining:
1 – 85 g residual bran fraction
2 – 1715 g passing flour

The fractionation is not aimed at refining, but at functional reorganization of the components, in order to modulate the fiber load in the pre-dough..

Distribution in the process stages
Final dough: 1000 g flour passing 600 µm
Pre-dough (Biga):
715 g passing flour
85 g residual bran
= 800 g total

Methodological consideration
The pre-dough does not contain only bran, but is a classic pre-dough that ferments a whole flour made richer in the fibrous fraction. The fiber load is increased in the pre-dough, concentrating the most critical phase (arabinoxylans, phytates, insoluble fraction) in the indirect fermentation stage.

Note:
A – Biga is a dry/coarse pre-dough. “Pre-dough” is a more generic term that includes both solid methods (biga) and liquid ones (such as poolish or Giorilli biga).

B – Preferment vs pre-dough: biga or pre-dough are themselves “ferments.” It is therefore NOT correct to define them as pre-ferments, since they are themselves ferments intended for fermentation: fermentation and/or metabolic activity occurs immediately in time and NOT afterwards.

Scientific reference
The concentration of the bran fraction in the pre-dough stage is consistent with studies showing that fermentation of bran-rich fractions can:
1 – increase arabinoxylan solubilization
2 – reduce the antagonistic effect of fiber on the protein network
3 – promote activation of endogenous phytase through acidification
(Katul et al., 2019; Rizzello et al., 2010; Lopez et al., 2001).

2.2 Pre-dough (12 hours, controlled temperature)
Pre-dough ingredients
1 – Flour: 800 g.
2 – Water: 340 g.
3 – LiCoLi: 180 g (assumed 100% hydration: 90 g water + 90 g flour)
3 – Fresh compressed baker’s yeast: 3 g.

Actual” pre-dough composition (accounting for the LiCoLi)
1 – Total flour in biga = 800 + 90 = 890 g
2 – Total water in biga = 340 + 90 = 430 g
3 – Actual biga hydration = 430 / 890 = 48.3%
4 – PH: 4.75
5 – actual weight: 1321 g.

Fermentation
2 – Temperature: 18 °C
3 – Initial biga temperature: 16 °C
4 – Final temperature: 18.2 °C

Thermal control
The initial temperature of the pre-dough must not exceed 18 °C in order to avoid early entry into the exponential phase of yeast growth.

In the test (02/03/2026; ambient T 21 °C):
1 – Water temperature: 5 °C
2 – Flour temperature: 10 °C
3 – Initial pre-dough temperature: 16 °C

In summer, the water may go down to 2 °C and the flour even to 5C° in order to maintain the thermal constraint.

Technological rationale
A 48% pre-dough on high-bran flour generates a matrix:
1 – compact
2 – with reduced water mobility
3 – with limited metabolite diffusion

A condition consistent with slower and more structured fermentation (Gobbetti et al., 1994).

Acidification (pH about 4.75) falls within the range favorable to activation of endogenous wheat phytase, responsible for phytate reduction (Lopez et al., 2001; Leenhardt et al., 2005).

Structural note: with 48% hydration on high-bran flour, the pre-dough is consistently “pasty/compact”: this favors slower and more structured fermentation and reduces the risk of rapid and unmanageable rising, but makes direct incorporation into the final dough more difficult.

2.3 Li.Co.Li. (liquid culture starter)
The Li.Co.Li is made with the same whole einkorn flour.

Refreshment
Ratio 1:1:1
(e.g. 50 g starter + 50 g water + 50 g flour)

Fermentation:
3–4 h
25 °C
until volume doubles

Choice of the same flour
In current practice, strong flours are often used for managing sourdough starter. In this protocol, the same whole einkorn flour is used in order to:
1 – avoid the introduction of external strong gluten
1 – maintain protein consistency of the system
1 – not alter the rheological profile of the final product

Function of Li.Co.Li in the system
In the present protocol, LiCoLi:
does not have the primary function of a leavening agent (because limited with einkorn) has the prevailing function of biochemical maturation

The literature shows that sourdough fermentation:
1 – promotes partial protein hydrolysis
2 – reduces phytates
3 – increases mineral solubility
4 – modifies the structure of arabinoxylans
(Rizzello et al., 2010; Gänzle, 2014).

The use of whole flour in Li.Co.Li increases the availability of fermentable substrates and bioactive compounds, supporting a more diversified microbiota (Gobbetti et al., 2016).

2.4 Final dough: nominal ingredients (without pre-dough)
Final dough ingredients:
1 – Flour (Fraction A): 1000 g
2 – Water: 660 g
3 – EVO oil: 72 g
4 – Salt: 30 g
5 – Malt: 22 g
6 – Fresh compressed baker’s yeast: 4 g

Final dough data:

a – Water temperature: 4 °C
b – Flour temperature: 7 °C
c – Final dough pH: 5.25
d – Dough temperature: 16.2 °C
e – Total preparation time: about 30 min.
f – Biga dispersion time: about 5 min.
g – Total dough weight: 3117 g

2.5 Overall dough balance (pre-dough + final dough)
Total flour in the system
890 g. (biga) + 1000 g. (final dough) = 1890 g.

Total water in the system
430 g. (pre-dough) + 660 g. (final dough) = 1090 g.

Actual total hydration
1090 / 1890 = 57.7% (≈ 58%)

Baker’s % (based on total flour = 100%)
Water: 57.7%
EVO oil: 72/1890 = 3.8%
Salt: 30/1890 = 1.6% (must be combined with the flour)
Malt: 22/1890 = 1.2%
Total compressed yeast: (3+4)/1890 = 0.37%
Li.Co.Li (total weight): 180/1890 = 9.5% (note: already included in the flour+water balance)

In this test: water temperature 4C°; flour temperature 7C°; pH at end of dough mixing: 5.25; dough temperature before resting: 16.2C°; total dough preparation time 30 minutes; time to dissolve dough 5 minutes; dissolved biga temperature: 16.2C°. Dough weight: 3117 (divided in two to perform two separate baking tests; moreover the first dough will come out of the chamber after 24 hours at about 5 C°; the second dough 4 hours later).

Important note:
After preparation in the mixer, the dough is placed on a work surface lightly greased with oil (NOT with dusting flour) in order to be divided into two parts.

2.6 The role of oil (extra virgin). Oil in bread dough greatly improves consistency and shelf life, making the crumb softer, more elastic, and more fragrant. It acts as a natural lubricant, promotes regular alveolation, and increases bread shelf life (preservation) by retaining moisture.
Oil in weak-gluten doughs plays an important structural as well as sensory function.

Documented effects:
1 – reduction of friction between proteins
2 – increase in extensibility
3 – improvement in crumb softness
4 – slowing of staling through interaction with starch
(Cauvain & Young, 2007; Primo-Martín et al., 2006).

In weak flours, the presence of lipids can contribute to stabilizing the alveolar structure by acting as a plasticizer of the protein matrix.

2.7 The role of malt Malt acts in bread dough as a natural improver. Rich in enzymes, it breaks down starches into simple sugars, constantly feeding the yeast, improving fermentation, increasing volume, and giving a more golden and crisp crust.
Malt provides amylase enzymes that:

hydrolyze starch → maltose and fermentable sugars

support yeast nutrition

increase CO₂ production

promote crust coloration (Maillard reaction). (Lynch et al., 2009).

In weak flours, the balance is delicate: excess amylase activity can further weaken the structure, while controlled dosages improve fermentation without compromising stability.
Diastatic malt is a malt that has a high concentration of these enzymes and is therefore capable of breaking down starches and producing simple sugars (maltose and maltodextrins). It is very active …. with einkorn a reflection is necessary and …control tests.

References
Geisslitz et al., 2019 – einkorn protein composition
Lopez et al., 2001 – phytate reduction sourdough
Leenhardt et al., 2005 – endogenous phytase
Rizzello et al., 2010 – fermentation and bioactivity
Gänzle, 2014 – sourdough microbiology
Cauvain & Young, 2007 – bakery technology
Primo-Martín et al., 2006 – lipid–starch interactions
Lynch et al., 2009 – malt enzymes and fermentation

3. Process innovation: water dispersion and “controlled aeration” of the pre-dough
3.1 Practical and technological rationale

At the end of 12 h, the biga is “pasty” and difficult to incorporate homogeneously with water/flour without leaving lumps and microbial/hydration inhomogeneities. To overcome this limitation, an intermediate step is adopted that also has another important function:

3.2 Procedure

  1. 550 g of water (part of the final dough water), at about 5 °C, is added to the mature biga.

  2. An immersion blender (with blades) is used for 5–7 minutes, at medium-low speed, with the main objectives of breaking/dispersing the biga (not whipping, not emulsifying) and, above all, incorporating air.

  3. Cold oil and malt are added to the dispersed biga (dense slurry).

  4. Transfer to fork mixer: the remaining water is added (110 g, because 660–550 = 110 g) and mixed for about 10 minutes at low speed. Water temp.: 4; flour temp. 7C°

  5. Dough exit temperature: about 16.2 °C. In this test: time 12 minutes.

  6. Dough PH: 5.25

Considerations (highlighted):

Thermal control: water at 5 °C acts as a “buffer” against shear heating; with output at ~17 °C one remains below the threshold at which leavening activity accelerates rapidly.
Microbiological and metabolic homogenization: dispersion increases the uniform distribution of yeasts/LAB and of the metabolites produced in the biga (acids, aromatic compounds), reducing the risk of “inert” or hyperactive zones.

Air incorporation: even without “emulsifying,” dispersion introduces microbubbles that act as nuclei; in the oven they can contribute to growth because the gases (air+CO₂+steam) expand as temperature rises. The effect does not replace fermentation, but can improve nucleation and alveolar uniformity.

3.3 Role of γ-gliadins in the adhesive behavior of dough
Einkorn wheat is characterized by a peculiar protein profile, in which the gliadin fractions — including the γ-gliadin component — are relatively more represented than in modern soft wheat.

γ-gliadins belong to the class of monomeric gluten proteins and contribute mainly to the viscous and adhesive properties of the dough, rather than to the formation of elastic three-dimensional networks (Shewry et al., 2002; Geisslitz et al., 2019).

A high proportion of gliadins relative to glutenins results in:
1 – greater viscosity;
2 – lower elasticity;
3 – more plastic-adhesive behavior;
4 – greater tendency of the dough to adhere to metal surfaces during mechanical processing.

In einkorn, this characteristic may be particularly evident, with practical effects such as:
adhesion to mixer walls;
1 – difficulties in industrial sheeting;
2 – greater friction in automated processes (e.g. pizza lines, laminated products).

Technological interpretation
Adhesiveness is not a defect in an absolute sense: it is the expression of a protein matrix dominated by less structuring monomeric components. However, in an industrial setting:
1 – high adhesiveness requires lubrication systems (oiling of surfaces);
2 – it limits compatibility with high-speed lines;
3 – it reduces stability in laminated processing.

The addition of a small amount of oil in the initial stage helps to:
1- reduce dough-surface friction;
2 – modulate plasticity;
3 – improve workability without significantly altering the structure.

Additional note

γ-gliadins, although they do not contribute to the formation of high molecular weight gluten polymers, significantly influence dough rheology through modulation of viscosity and adhesiveness. In einkorn, the high gliadin/glutenin ratio amplifies this behavior, making the dough less suited to industrial paradigms based on high elasticity and mechanical tolerance, but potentially more suitable for controlled low-mechanical-energy systems, such as the one described here.

Useful references for this part
Shewry, P. R., Halford, N. G., Belton, P. S., & Tatham, A. S. (2002). The structure and properties of gluten. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.
Geisslitz et al., 2019 – einkorn protein composition.
Scanlon & Zghal, 2001 – bread structure and dough physics.
Gänzle, 2014 – sourdough microbiology.

4. Cold maturation and kinetic control
4.1 Cell maturation
Finished dough (inside covered container) placed in chamber at ≈ 5 °C for 24 h.
Dough temperature on exiting the chamber: ≈ 6–8 °C.

Consideration (highlighted): starting with dough at ~17 °C, then bringing it to 5 °C, reduces “thermal shocks” and above all avoids entering the chamber already in full fermentative acceleration. It is a fine control of the fermentation curve.

5. Phenomenon of water on the lid in the chamber (“internal” condensation)
It may be observed that, upon opening the lid of the dough container, it is already wet even in the chamber,.

Correct physical interpretation

In a closed container, a small fraction of the dough water passes into the vapor phase (even at 5 °C the vapor pressure is not zero). The internal air tends to become saturated. The coldest point/condensation surface (often the lid) collects the vapor that re-condenses.

Conclusion: it is not “starch releasing water” and it is not retrogradation (that occurs after gelatinization during baking). It is migration of the water phase → vapor → water and attainment of an internal hygrometric equilibrium.

Possible secondary contributions

Redistribution of water in the matrix (fibers/proteins hydrate slowly, releasing or making more mobile a fraction of water initially weakly retained). Metabolic production of water (minimal at 5 °C but theoretically present) as a by-product of alcoholic fermentation; in a closed system it may contribute marginally to saturation.

6. Microbial cooperation: LAB + yeasts (and why they “really do collaborate”)
6.1 General principle: sourdough/mixed fermentation ecosystem

In systems with sourdough starter (LiCoLi), the following typically coexist:
lactic acid bacteria (LAB): acidification (lactic/acetic), indirect enzymatic activity, substrate modulation;
yeasts (including added baker’s yeast): production of CO₂, ethanol, metabolism of specific sugars, and aromatic contribution.

Classical literature clearly shows that this is not simple co-presence: there are trophic (cross-feeding) and non-trophic (competition/selection, antimicrobials, pH) interactions. (ScienceDirect)

6.2 Examples “in simple words” but technically correct

Some LAB can hydrolyze maltose and leave glucose available; yeasts unable to use maltose can thus grow thanks to the released sugar (cross-feeding). (Springer Nature Link). Yeasts can release essential amino acids (e.g. valine/leucine), favoring LAB growth under conditions in which they would otherwise grow poorly. (PubMed)

The practical result is often: greater LAB yield/activity (more acidity and metabolites) without necessarily increasing yeast yield in parallel, i.e. true functional synergy. (PubMed)

6.3 Is cooperation different between pre-dough and final dough?
Yes: the ecological environment changes.

In the pre-dough (48%, ≤18 °C, high bran):
1 – more compact and structured environment;
2 – acidification and transformations of the matrix (fiber/phytate) are relatively more “central”;
3 – LAB-yeast cooperation is above all one of biochemical preparation (acidification, metabolites, substrates made available). (Springer Nature Link)

In the final dough (maturation at 5 °C):
microbial growth slowed down; slow processes prevail: water redistribution, enzymatic rebalancing, maturation; cooperation becomes mainly one of maintenance/maturation rather than expansion.

In the 4 hours before the oven (gradual heating and then 30 °C in the basket):
Baker’s yeast becomes the protagonist of the volumetric push; LAB continue to modulate pH and aroma, but volume derives mainly from yeast CO₂.

7. Role of baker’s yeast in the final dough: “push” yes, but with a real thermal curve
7.1 In the system adopted in this test, the commonplace “baker’s yeast requires a long time” does not apply
In a direct dough, the yeast must adapt and multiply from zero. In this system:
1 – a portion of yeast has already gone through 12 h of pre-dough (so the biomass is not “only 3 g” initially);
2 – then 24 h in the cold keeps the system active but slowed;
3 – thermal recovery after the chamber progressively restarts CO₂ production.

7.2 The operational thermal sequence
1 – Chamber exit: 7–8 °C
2 – Rest on plate ~22 °C (TA ≈20 °C) – total pre-oven duration ≈ 4 h
3 – The dough reaches ~20 °C only in the last ~2 h (field observation).
4 – After ~3 h: transfer to proofing basket with plate at 30 °C (push phase).

Interpretation:
1 – first part: reactivation (little expansion);
2 – last 2 hours at ~20 °C: perceptible CO₂ increase;
3 – phase at 30 °C: main push, window to be controlled.

7.3 Why increasing yeast in the final dough can “break everything”
1 – with einkorn + high bran + warm final phase, increasing yeast risks:
2 – accelerating the 30 °C phase too much;
3 – reducing the control window and increasing overproofing/collapse;
4 – altering the LAB/yeast balance and the aromatic profile.

The setup works because the curve is progressive and controlled.

8. Technological and biochemical rationales linked to “enhanced” bran in the pre-dough


8.1 Arabinoxylans and water management (functional fiber)

Studies on pre-fermented bran and on sourdough/wholemeal show that fermentation can increase the solubility of fibrous components (particularly arabinoxylans) with consequences for rheology, water retention, and shelf life. (ScienceDirect)