What happens when you add fat and sugar to bread dough? - Veg Patch Kitchen Cookery School (2024)

Bread dough changes when you add fat or sugar to the ingredients.

Bread can be made from just four ingredients, flour, water, yeast and salt. You can use those same four ingredients and shape it differently; add different amounts of water; use a different flour; bake it in a different oven and you will get a different bread. However, you can also add a myriad of other ingredients to change your dough. You can add fat in the form of butter, lard, milk, eggs and oil. Or you can add sugar, honey or malt extract. You can also add lots of other ingredients including dried fruit, nuts, cocoa, olives, cheese, onions… the list goes on.

When you add fats and sugar you change the way the dough can behave when fermenting. Fats also change how bread should be baked and its final taste and appearance. It is helpful to understand how adding these ingredients can change your dough.

What happens when you add fat to bread dough?

You can choose to add animal or vegetable fats to your dough. You can choose to add animal fats such as butter, milk, lard and eggs. Vegetable fats include olive oil, sunflower oil, walnut oil and rapeseed oil.

Adding fat to your dough changes the gluten structure. Fat bonds to the gluten proteins preventing them from bonding with one another and forming gluten chains. This makes the final bread more tender, the cell structure tends to be smaller and the crust is softer.

If a recipe calls for a high percentage of fat, for example the butter in brioche, then it is often better to mix and develop the dough (by kneading, stand mixer or stretch and folds) before adding the fat so that the gluten can develop properly.

The inclusion of fat in your dough also slows the staling of bread, so your bread will stay softer for longer.

Butter is often used in sweet breads to give them a rich flavour, colour and taste. Butter melts at a temperature below body temperature. This contributes to the smooth texture and mouth feel of breads made with butter. Vegetable oils don’t melt below body temperature so don’t have the same mouth feel effect. A focaccia made with olive oil is a delicious treat all the same.

The coagulating properties of eggs can help breads achieve a finer, closer texture. Eggs and milk will also contribute to crust colour. If your recipe contains a high percentage of eggs or milk you will need to bake at a lower temperature than you would a bread made with water to avoid the crust browning too much before the bread is fully baked inside.

Should I include fats in the hydration ratios?

Fats such as butter, lard and eggs are not strictly included in hydration ratios. However they do all contain water in differing amounts and they will change the texture and feel of the dough as you are handling it. When mixing a dough with a high percentage of fat remember to take this into account and hold back some of the water, adding it as you need to. Milk has a high percentage of water and so is included in hydration ratios. A bread made with half milk/ half water will yield a slightly stiffer dough than the same made with all water. If you are adding a high proportion of milk to the dough you may need to add slightly more water to achieve a soft dough.

The effect of adding sugar to your bread dough

I don’t routinely add sugar to my bread dough. You will see many recipes that add a teaspoon of sugar to help the yeast to work faster. Adding up to 5% of sugar will speed up fermentation as it will feed the yeast in the initial stages before enzymes begin to break down the complex sugar molecules in the starches into simple sugars that the yeast can eat. However, it isn’t necessary to add sugar. There are plenty of sugars available for the yeast to eat in the starches*. Why add sugar when you don’t need to?

However, adding sugar, honey or malt extract can be a useful tactic in flavouring your dough, even your savoury breads. For example, a bagel tastes better with a bit of malt extract in the dough. My Oat and Honey Loaf wouldn’t be the same without 20g of honey in it. Sweet breads such as Chelsea buns and Shropshire Butter Buns require sugar to taste as delicious as they do.

Adding sugar does have an effect on the way the dough ferments and bakes. Sugar weakens the gluten network and in high percentages can slow down the yeast. Sugar is hygroscopic, which means that it absorbs water from its surroundings, and so it binds up water molecules interrupting the gluten /water network and dehydrating the yeast cells. A dough that has a high percentage of sugar (10% or more) will need more yeast than a bread made without sugar and will take a longer time to rise.

A dough with more than 5% sugar (to flour weight) will brown on the surface earlier in the baking time than a dough with no added sugar or with less than 5%. This is due to the residual sugars in the dough caramelising on the crust surface. Hence, a sweet bread should be baked at a lower temperature to avoid the crust darkening too much before the interior is fully baked.

*Take a look at Understanding the Science of Bread to help you understand more about how starch is broken down into sugar.

Want to learn more about bread?

If you would like to transform from a novice to a confident baker then my Bread Made Easy Membership is here for you. You get access to all of my online courses and join me for a monthly live demo and bread chat.

If you are already a keen bread maker but would like to expand your repertoire then my Savoury Breads online course might be your thing.

Take a look at our bread making and pastry courses at our cookery school in Ironbridge.

Check out our YouTube channel for bread tutorials.

What happens when you add fat and sugar to bread dough? - Veg Patch Kitchen Cookery School (2024)

FAQs

What happens when you add sugar to bread dough? ›

A dough that has a high percentage of sugar (10% or more) will need more yeast than a bread made without sugar and will take a longer time to rise. A dough with more than 5% sugar (to flour weight) will brown on the surface earlier in the baking time than a dough with no added sugar or with less than 5%.

What happens when you add fat to bread dough? ›

Besides flavor, fat affects the texture of the finished bread. The fat coats the gluten strands and makes the finished product more tender—both the crumb and crust—and it makes the crumb more finely grained. It also makes the loaf seem moister.

What result on the dough when adding fat eggs or sugar to bakery products? ›

When you mix up a cake batter and beat sugar into fat, eggs, and other liquid ingredients, the sugar crystals cut into the mixture, creating thousands of tiny air bubbles that lighten the batter. During baking, these bubbles expand and lift the batter, causing it to rise in the pan.

What is the role of fat in bread making? ›

Adding fat to yeast breads helps gluten spread and stretch, creating a larger loaf of bread. Shortening is a fat that shortens or delays gluten development making the texture of baked goods easier to chew, flaky, and softer. Shortening can also be generalized as any group of solid fats, typically white and tasteless.

What does fat do in rich dough? ›

Tenderizes texture

Fats are added to doughs to improve texture and eating characteristics of the finished bread. This is achieved by modifying gluten within the network, allowing the structure to expand more readily. Often, fats are advised to be added at the end of mixing, after gluten is developed.

What does fat do in quick bread? ›

In addition to adding flavor and moisture, fat combines with sugar during “creaming”, to add lightness by trapping air that expands during baking. This lightness makes the quick bread tender, forming a finer grain in the baked quick bread.

What happens if you put too much sugar in bread? ›

While sugar and other sweeteners provide "food" for yeast, too much sugar can damage yeast, drawing liquid from the yeast and hampering its growth. Too much sugar also slows down gluten development. Add extra yeast to the recipe or find a similar recipe with less sugar. Sweet yeast doughs will take longer to rise.

Why is sugar added to dough? ›

Sugar added to the dough acts as food for yeast. Yeast will consume sugar and produce C O 2 through anaerobic respiration process. This C O 2 will help in rising the dough.

What does fat do to flour? ›

Coating the flour in fat prevents the flour from absorbing water hindering the formation of gluten. If too much gluten developed, the food would be stretchy and elastic. Shortening is used in most doughs and batters, to give the baked product a crisp and crumbly texture.

Will bread rise without sugar? ›

Yes. In any of my bread recipes, you can choose to include or omit the sugar at will. Using sugar is likely to increase the activity of the yeast, helping the dough to rise faster, initially, but if you're prepared to wait a little longer, the sugar is surplus to requirements.

Can you add sugar to dough after it's mixed? ›

Wait a few minutes for the sugar to hydrate and knead it a few times more. I think it will be fine. You can make a swirl bread or a sugar-studded bread, by adding sugar in chunks. Or soak in syrup after the fact.

What happens if I use too much yeast in bread? ›

This can affect the bread by adding a "yeasty" taste if you put too much into the dough. General amounts of yeast are around 1 - 2 % of the flour, by weight. Too much yeast could cause the dough to go flat by releasing gas before the flour is ready to expand.

What does sugar do in bread? ›

Why Is Sugar Added to So Many Processed Foods? The primary reason sugar is added to so many different foods—including bread—is a combination of shelf life, texture, browning, and taste. Sugar, like salt, acts as a preservative against mold and also helps bread keep its moisture.

What does sugar do in baking? ›

Sugar easily binds with water, which accomplishes two main things. 1) It locks in moisture, keeping your baked goods from drying out; and 2) It inhibits the development of gluten which keeps your cookies, cakes and sweet breads softer.

How will the addition of fat affect the structure of dough? ›

The concept is that fat plays an important role in determining the formation of gluten in wheat flour dough. When mixed with the flour before its hydration, the fat prevents the formation of gluten network and produces less elastic dough.

Does sugar affect yeast growth? ›

The increase in sugar concentration causes declines in yeast cell growth and size.

What does putting bread in sugar do? ›

Bread contains some amount of water, and when it is placed in a container with hard sugar, the moisture from the bread can transfer to the sugar crystals. The sugar crystals will then absorb the moisture and start to dissolve slightly at the surface, which can cause the sugar to become softer.

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