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High-Hydration Bread Tips for Beginners

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What Is High-Hydration Bread?

High-hydration bread is dough with 75% or more water relative to flour weight. At these hydration levels, the dough is noticeably wetter and stickier than typical bread dough โ€” it won't hold a ball shape and will spread if left unsupported. This is normal and not a sign of a mistake.

The reward for working with this challenging dough is significant: high-hydration loaves develop the open, irregular crumb with large air holes that characterizes artisan sourdough, ciabatta, and rustic European breads. The extra water creates steam inside the loaf during baking, pushing apart gluten strands and creating those characteristic holes. Use the hydration calculator to calculate your recipe's hydration before you start.

Start Lower Than You Think

Every sourdough book and blog seems to feature 78โ€“80% hydration as if it's a beginner recipe. It isn't. High-hydration dough requires developed intuition for how properly fermented dough feels, shaping skills that only come with repetition, and a confident hand at scoring.

Start at 70โ€“72% hydration. At this hydration, the dough is still moist enough to develop an open crumb but manageable enough to shape without frustration. Once you've baked three or four successful loaves at 70โ€“72%, bump up to 75%. Then 78%. This incremental approach teaches you what each hydration level looks and feels like โ€” knowledge that makes higher hydration manageable rather than chaotic.

Stretch and Fold: The Technique That Makes It Work

High-hydration dough cannot be kneaded like a lower-hydration dough โ€” it's too sticky to work on a counter without incorporating excessive flour. The solution is stretch and fold, performed in the bowl during bulk fermentation:

Standard Stretch and Fold

With wet hands, reach under the dough on one side, stretch it upward until resistance is felt, then fold it over the top of the dough. Rotate the bowl 90ยฐ and repeat. Complete four folds (one full rotation) = one set. Perform 3โ€“4 sets during the first 2 hours of bulk fermentation, spaced 30 minutes apart. Rest the dough undisturbed for the remaining bulk time.

Lamination (for advanced shaping)

After 30 minutes of bulk fermentation, pour the dough onto a lightly wet (not floured) counter. Using wet hands, stretch the dough out as far as possible into a thin sheet without tearing. Fold it back over itself like a letter (thirds). Fold in the other direction. Gently roll into a rough ball and return to the bowl. This technique develops structure in very wet doughs and helps with shaping later.

The goal of stretch and fold is to develop gluten strength without degassing the dough. After several sets, you'll feel the dough becoming noticeably more elastic and resistant โ€” this is the gluten network forming.

Shaping High-Hydration Dough

Shaping wet dough intimidates beginners more than any other step โ€” but it becomes intuitive with practice. The key differences from lower-hydration shaping:

Flour Selection Matters

High-protein flour absorbs more water and develops stronger gluten โ€” essential for high-hydration doughs. For 75%+ hydration bread:

If you're using all-purpose flour and struggling with a wet dough, consider switching to bread flour before adjusting hydration downward โ€” the higher protein often solves the structural problem without sacrificing the open crumb you're targeting.

The Most Important Tip

Take notes every time you bake. Date, hydration percentage, fermentation time, temperature, and your observation of how the dough looked and felt at each stage. After 5โ€“10 loaves with notes, patterns emerge that no recipe can teach you โ€” you'll know what properly fermented dough looks like in your kitchen at your typical temperature, and you'll be able to adjust on the fly when something feels off.