Baking bread with steam (2024)

Have you ever loaded your perfectly risen artisan bread into the oven, only to discover a dull, constricted loaf at the end of the bake? How do artisan bakeries achieve that lovely golden, crisp, shiny crust? Baking bread with steam is the key.

Why it's important to bake bread with steam

Steam is critical for achieving crusty loaves of bread, for reasons both functional and aesthetic. If you bake bread in a dry oven, the crust quickly sets and dries, impeding the ability of the dough to expand to its full potential, leading to loaves with a denser crumb. But if you were to bake an identical loaf, introducing steam at the start of the bake, the crust remains moist, and the loaf is able to stretch and expand before the crust sets, resulting in a better crumb structure. Additionally, even if you score your bread properly, those cuts will not expand in a dry oven; you need steam for that.

Besides functionality, there are aesthetic reasons to add steam to the oven when baking. Steam helps gelatinize sugars on the exterior of the loaf, resulting in better browning, and a shinier (and also thinner and crispier) crust.

How can we get results like this at home?

Bakeries have steam-injected ovens that handle this easily; in a home oven, it's not so simple, requiring a more DIY approach.

Today we're going to test different home methods of adding steam in bread baking. Our test bread is the Pain Au Levain recipe used in ourBaking School. This lovely sourdough bread has a mild flavor and a wonderfully open crumb.

Pain Au Levain is the perfect guinea pig for our steam tests. We can first admire the loaves baked in class, utilizing a professional steam injection oven. Next, we'll use the same recipe at home to test various baking and steaming methods.Which home steaming method will bring us closest to professional oven results?

Baking bread with steam (1)

Here's a beautiful loaf straight from the school's steam-injected oven. See what we're aiming for here?

If you want to follow along with our tests and bake the Pain Au Levain bread, you can find the recipe and directions here. If not, these steaming methods will work with any artisan bread recipe.

Time to bake

We'll bake this bread at 450°F for 35 to 40 minutes. If you plan to use a baking stone and a cast iron frying pan (for steam), preheat both of these for 60 minutes before baking.

A brief note about scoring (aka "slashing")

Before we get too steamy, let's take a moment to consider the importance of scoring your bread before baking. Those cuts in your bread aren't just decorative! Scoring the loaf provides a strategic vent to release fermentation gases during baking. Good scoring, along with proper steaming, allows your loaf to open up fully. Without scoring your loaf is likely to burst open at weak spots and end up oddly shaped and constricted.

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The Pain Au Levain bread requires one long "ear" or "lip" cut down the center of the loaf. Notice how the blade is angled, and only one corner of the blade touches the loaf.

For more tips on scoring, check out this blog postandhelpful video.

Ways to bake bread with steam at home

Before we get started, please remember to suit yourself up with good oven mitts whenever you're working with steam!

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Method #1: Baking bread with steam using a spray bottle

The simplest method of adding steam to your oven is to spray the loaf with warm water prior to putting it into the oven. Spray the oven once the bread is loaded, and then again about 5 minutes into the bake.

Unfortunately, this method doesn’t offer much moisture, and the effects on the bread are minimal.

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Method #2: Baking bread with steam using a cast iron pan

In class, our instructor illustrated method #2. She loaded the loaf onto the preheated stone and then poured about 1 cup of boiling water into a preheated cast iron frying pan on the shelf below. This method works quite well, as you can see from the resulting loaf on the right, above.

(I tried the same method at home with the addition of preheated lava rocks in the frying pan, and my loaf looked great, too.)

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Method #3: Baking bread with steam using a metal bowl

If you want to enhance the effect of method #2, a large metal bowl can be placed over the loaf to trap the steam and keep it close to the surface of the bread during the oven-spring period.

This is part of the reason steam injection ovens get such great results; the individual "decks" of the oven aren't very high, keeping the steam where it's needed — on the surface of the loaf.

Load your loaf onto the preheated stone and then place the bowl over the loaf, with the front of the bowl overhanging the stone and leaving a gap that lines up with the preheated cast iron frying pan below.

Pour about 1/2 cup boiling water into the frying pan and shut the door. Remove the bowl 15 minutes later and allow the bread to finish baking in a dry oven. A butter knife comes in handy to lift the hot bowl, which will be hard to grab with oven mitts.

If steam is so great, why finish in a dry oven?

Steam is vital during the oven-spring period so that the surface of the loaf remains moist and expands easily. However, once the yeast has died and the loaf is set, moisture is no longer a friend to your bread. Too much moisture throughout the bake can lead to a thick, rubbery crust.

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Method #4: Baking bread with steam using a Dutch oven

A Dutch oven or cloche also works to keep the moisture given off by the bread during baking close to the surface of the loaf, allowing for the same kind of expansion and shiny, golden crust.

Although we don't generally recommend preheating empty any of the baking pots we sell (a method popularized by Jim Lahey and Mark Bittman about a decade ago), Emile Henry's 4.2-quart Dutch ovencan be preheated empty, as can theirpotato and bread pot. These pots heat up more quickly than cast iron, so 30 minutes of preheating should be sufficient. Remove the lid after 20 minutes of baking.

Never fear, though, if you don't have a pot suitable for preheating empty (or don't like messing with a very hot pot), you can still get great results baking in your Dutch oven. In the photos above, I put the Staub Dutch oven with its cargo of risen bread into a preheated oven; but if you prefer a cold start, that works great too. Again, it’s important to remove the lid and allow the bread to continue baking in a dry oven after the loaf is set (remove the lid after 25 minutes in a preheated oven, after 30 minutes when baking from a cold start). Overall baking time will be a little longer when baking from a cold start.

See more here: Bread baking in a Dutch oven

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Let's compare our results

The loaf on the left was steamed with method #1 (spray bottle).This loaf failed to open properly where I scored it, and the crust is dull in color. Notice how the crumb structure is relatively dense, in comparison with the other loaves? It will still be a delicious loaf of bread, but more steam would have made it even better.

The loaf in the center was steamed with method #2 (cast iron pan). It opened up beautifully and has a lovely brown crust, although not quite as shiny as loaf #3.

The last loaf was baked with method #3 (cast iron pan + metal bowl). See how shiny and blistery the crust is, and how open the crumb?

Both this loaf and the loaf baked in the Dutch oven were refrigerated overnight in their shaped form before being baked the next day. This added step contributes to a more blistery crust, as well as more sour flavor.

What happens when you over-proof your bread?

Have you ever wondered what effect allowing your dough to rise too long in the shaped form has on the final outcome of your bread?

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Notice there are lots of large gas bubbles right under the surface of the loaf above. This is a sign that the loaf has been allowed to rise too long before going into the oven. I deliberately over-proofed this loaf as an added experiment, and baked it using the bowl method of steaming (#3).

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The loaf on the right is my over-proofed loaf, and the loaf on the left is loaf #3. While my over-proofed loaf didn't open up quite as much as loaf #3 and has a slightly denser crumb structure, it still rose well and colored up nicely.

Steam saves the day!

If we compare the crumb of my over-proofed loaf (right) to the relatively closed crumb of loaf #1 (left), we can see how even an over-proofed loaf will fare better with steam than a loaf that doesn't get enough steam.

Keep in mind that not all breads will endure as well as this one did when allowed to rise too long. Have you ever scored your loaf, only to see it deflate like a poked balloon? Or has your lofty loaf collapsed in the oven? These are sure signs that you've let your bread rise too much before baking.

I hope you'll give our Pain Au Levain recipe a try and test out some of these steaming methods as well. Steam really does make the difference!

You can view the Pain Au Levain recipe here.

Big thanks go out to Lee Clark for taking these beautiful photos during class, so I could get down and dirty with the dough.

And if you ever get a chance to take a class at one of our baking schools, I guarantee you'll have a great time, and go home with a wealth of baking knowledge and techniques.

Baking bread with steam (2024)

FAQs

What does it mean to bake bread with steam? ›

Steam gives bread dough time to expand: the added moisture keeps the dough from drying out before it has time to rise. Steam also produces bread with a thin, chewy crust and seductive shine, what you see in the loaf of country wheat bread pictured here.

How long to bake bread with steam? ›

You place the roasting tray in the bottom of the oven and as you load your loaf you pour in a cup of hot water into the roasting tray. This can produce a lot of hot steam so be careful to stay well away to avoid burns. Don't put too much water in. You only want enough for the first 10-20 minutes of the bake.

What are the main effects of baking with steam on baked products? ›

► Amount of steam affects crust colour, glossiness and mechanical properties. ► Increase in steam reduces water vapour transfer rate and permeability of crust. ► Steam affected the surface starch gelatinization and the protein-starch network.

What is the meaning of steam in baking? ›

What is steam-baking? It's simultaneously steaming AND baking, or just baking in a moist oven environment. This is one of the coolest cooking methods out there, and this particular combination benefits pretty much everything in your diet, even desserts.

Can you bake bread without steam? ›

If a loaf starts baking in a dry oven, the crust dries prematurely and can't optimally expand, resulting in less rise and a dull crust. So there's a balance: ample steam at the beginning (usually about 20 minutes in a home oven) and then finish baking in a dry oven.

How do you know when bread is done baking? ›

Inserting a toothpick into the center of a baked good is a tried and true method to test for doneness. If the toothpick comes out clean, your bread is likely fully baked. It needs a bit more time if it comes out wet with dough or crumbs.

Can bread be steamed instead of baked? ›

Steaming the bread makes it flavorful and ultramoist without being gummy or packed with fat. In early American days, ovens were uncommon. Even in some parts of the world today, steaming the breads in hot water is the only way some people are able to get their daily bread.

Does steaming cook faster than baking? ›

Steamers are ideal for cooking large batches of food quickly without over cooking or drying the food. Steam cooks at 212 degrees while an oven cooks at higher temperatures however a steamer will cook faster because steam transfers heat 100 times more efficiently than air.

How do you keep bread moist when baking? ›

For example, fats like butter or oil can help keep moisture in, while sugars will help to caramelize on the outside and create a golden crust. These ingredients can also play an essential role in keeping your bread moist when added in smaller quantities.

Why spray water on bread before baking? ›

Wetting the dough causes the surface to steam. Covering it traps the moisture. This partnership stops the bread from drying out on the surface in the hot air of the oven and forming a premature crust. Your bread rises more and produces a richer colour, becoming glossy on the surface.

Why bake bread with steam? ›

For your bread to rise to its potential, that outer, taut skin on your loaf needs to be able to expand and stretch before hardening off. Steam in the oven and subsequently on the surface of your loaves helps keep that skin pliable and stretchy during baking.

Is steam good for baking? ›

Steam is vital during the oven-spring period so that the surface of the loaf remains moist and expands easily. However, once the yeast has died and the loaf is set, moisture is no longer a friend to your bread. Too much moisture throughout the bake can lead to a thick, rubbery crust.

What are the disadvantages of steaming cooking methods? ›

Disadvantages of steaming
  1. Food may not be as flavoursome as roasted or fried food.
  2. Gentle cooking method - not good for tough foods (meats).

What is the difference between bake and steam bake? ›

Steaming is particularly well-suited for vegetables, seafood, and delicate proteins. On the other hand, if the aim is to create a dish with a rich flavor profile, varied textures, and an appealing golden-brown crust, baking is the preferred method.

Is steamed bread healthier than baked bread? ›

Asian-style steamed bread has a lower glycemic index (GI) than western-style baked bread, A*STAR researchers have found1.

What role does steam play in baking bread? ›

Since steam prevents the surface temperature from getting this high too early on in the baking process, the inside of the loaf has time to cook through without risk of the crust becoming too dark. With crust formation delayed, the end result is also thinner than it would be if there was no steam.

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