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Rosemary Mark

Rosemary Mark

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Hot Bake or Cold Bake — your choice!

Breads, RecipeRose, Wild Yeast Water Breads

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Hot bake vs cold bake comparison

If you’ve been around the artisan bread baking block, you know about super-heated Dutch oven baking—-a dangerously hot task! But did you know that starting the bake in a cold oven works too? I’d been preheating for years until I heard of the cold start method from FoodbodSourdough.

There are differences in results, but by golly either hot bake or cold bake method is excellent. So, it’s your choice!

This is a side-by-side comparison using my Easiest Ever No Knead Bread with wild yeast water.

Click here for how to make your first jar of Yeast Water

You can also use my BAsic Artisan bread Recipe.

I evenly divided the final dough by gram weight then overnight proofed in a cloth lined bowl in the refrigerator. Both breads were baked in my 4.3qt-size Amazon Basics Dutch oven which I’ve used for 5 years and love. (*not a paid advert). The first dough went straight from the refrigerator into the pan then I scored the top. Put it into the cold oven on the highest rack that fits the Dutch oven, which is just above center in my oven. If baked lower in the oven it tends to make darker bottom crust. Turned the oven on to 450F convection (or use 475F conventional). Baked covered for 50 minutes. Removed lid and baked additional 10 minutes in the pan.

Note: For super dark crusty bake, sometimes at this point I remove the bread from the pan and place on the oven rack for another 5-10 minutes. But watch carefully, it browns quickly.

For the hot bake, I returned the same Dutch oven to the hot oven for 10 minutes to be sure it was super heated. Then CAREFULLY transferred the second dough from the refrigerator into the hot pan and scored the top. I cannot emphasize enough how careful you must be handling the hot lid and pan. (So far I’ve only burned my wrist slightly one time). I baked this one covered at 450F convection for 30 minutes then removed the lid and baked additional 15 minutes until the same brownness as the first loaf.

Then, I patiently waited for 3 hours until the breads were cool! It was obvious that the hot bake loaf had a bit more ‘oven spring’ height. Both loaves were equally crusty and very soft crumb. The hot bake has visibly larger holes in the ‘crumb’. Yet, when I started slicing and tasting, I nearly mixed up which I was eating as the texture was so similar. I had five tasters who said the same!

So if it’s oven time, or energy savings, or that you just like tighter crumb (for less ‘stuff’ to fall through), then go for the cold bake. I’ll continue using either, depending if I think my dough needs extra heat boost, or whichever method fits my schedule because that’s one rule I try to keep: don’t let bread dough rule your life!

I hope this helps you and your baking life 🙂 I’d love to hear about your baking!
And try my Apple Date Snack Cake with the spent dates when refreshing your wild yeast water.

Hot cold bake side by side
Cold pan bake (left) Hot pan bake (right)

Top photo: Hot Bake method; Bottom photo: Cold Bake method

Last but not least, these are my favorite and important tools for successful bread baking.

affiliate link

The high capacity baking scale
I use all day long in my kitchen!

Brod & Taylor Folding Proofer

Brod & Taylor Folding Proofer
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Comments

  1. Margaret says

    February 18, 2023 at 11:22 am

    This was very helpful. I’m not baking bread yet, but
    you make get me to try my hand at it yet! Love following all you’re doing!!!

    Reply
  2. Chris says

    February 18, 2023 at 1:41 pm

    Wowowow

    Reply
  3. Rose Gillen says

    February 18, 2023 at 4:39 pm

    So exciting to see the bakes side by side! Who would have ever guessed that they could be so similar? And how wonderful not to have to be so careful with the cold bake–saves a lot of burned skin!

    Reply
    • Rosemary Mark says

      February 18, 2023 at 7:43 pm

      It was so great to see it’s not necessary to super-heat. I really like the savings both in time and electricity. Though I’m always planning multiple things to bake once I crank up the oven for breads!

      Reply
  4. Cynthis says

    February 18, 2023 at 8:25 pm

    I am not a baker but just might try this experiment!

    Reply
    • Rosemary Mark says

      February 20, 2023 at 9:03 pm

      I’d be happy to coach you through some baking!

      Reply
  5. Carolyn Bushey says

    June 15, 2025 at 5:08 am

    In your photos I am seeing a difference in scoring and wonder if that also played a part in the lesser spring in the cold start loaf.
    It appears to me that there was not a complete score across the top of the cold start loaf, do you think it made a difference?
    Thanks for all the information!

    Reply
    • Rosemary Mark says

      June 15, 2025 at 9:26 pm

      Carolyn – thank you for your observation on the scoring. I wish I’d included a before bake photo. I suspect the scores were as similar as I could do and the hot bake expanded a little more than the cold-start bake. Seems worth another test! I use cold-start method periodically and feel it’s acceptable considering the time and heat saving especially in summer.
      Have you tried baking bread with wild yeast water? I’m always curious to hear how folks like this method.

      Reply

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