Where to put bread dough to rise
How to make dough rise better? Put it in the right spot!

“Why do I have such trouble with bread dough rising?” Oh, how often we’ve heard this plaintive question on the Baker’s Hotline here at King Arthur! If you're wondering how to make dough rise better, there are several factors at play. Sometimes yeast dough not rising is an issue with the dough itself (too much sugar, salt, flour, fat; take your pick). But often it’s simply the environment in which you’ve placed your bowl of dough. Knowing where to put dough to rise, especially if you’re baking in a chilly winter kitchen, is key to how to make dough rise fully and consistently.
Luckily for all of us bread bakers, yeast will reliably grow, divide, and make bread dough rise except under extreme conditions of duress: high or low temperatures, old age, or a severe imbalance in the dough’s ingredients. Maybe your sweet dough rises with excruciating slowness but, sooner or later, yeast does its thing.
It’s just that most of us don't enjoy waiting around for bread dough to rise. Luckily, assuming you’ve made a “healthy” dough with the correct balance of ingredients, you can control the rising time of your dough pretty easily. It’s all in knowing where to put bread dough to rise.
The temperature at which dough rises has a direct effect on the flavor of your final product. The longer dough rises (up to a point), the more flavor it develops. Conversely, dough that rises too quickly produces bread with flat flavor. Nail the sweet spot — warm enough to rise at a decent rate, yet cool enough to develop flavor — and you're golden.
Studies have shown that the optimum temperature for yeast to grow and flavor to develop is 75°F to 78°F. (Interested in the science behind the data? See our blog post: Desired dough temperature.) This temperature range gives yeast dough enough time to develop flavor while still keeping the whole process within a manageable timeframe.
Unfortunately, an ambient temperature of 75°F to 78°F in your kitchen can be difficult to maintain. I don't know about you, but my winter kitchen is more like 62°F to 65°F. And even if you're down South, you might have trouble keeping your kitchen in the high 70s — whether because it's winter, or you've got the AC going.
Professional bakeries often use temperature-controlled “cabinets” called retarders to let shaped loaves and rolls rise first in a cool environment (often overnight) to develop flavor; then at warmer temperatures just before baking, to make dough rise efficiently. A retarder is obviously the best way to control your dough’s rising environment.
The home baker's version of the pro's retarder is an electric dough proofer, a countertop temperature/humidity-controlled proof box. This appliance lets you set whatever temperature you want and just walk away, knowing that the dough, bread, or rolls you’ve placed inside will rise without any cold drafts or temperature swings to upset the apple cart.
If you’re a passionate bread baker, I highly recommend this effective tool (which is also great for tempering chocolate, making yogurt, proofing sourdough starter, and even slow cooking). Bonus: It folds down for easy storage. Read all about it here: Yeast dough’s secret weapon.
Another handy tool to make dough rise better (especially in cold conditions) is this dough rising mat: Like an electric blanket for your bread dough, it provides steady, gentle heat to help your bread dough rise on even the coldest of days.
But handy though it is, you certainly don't need a countertop proofer to raise your yeast dough. There are plenty of other ways to provide your rising dough with the warm, humid environment yeast loves.
Why not just drape a towel over your bowl of rising dough, like your great-grandma did? Because your goal is to create an environment that's not only warm but humid. Why humid? Moisture keeps the skin of the dough supple and soft, promoting a better rise. A cotton towel allows moisture to escape; plastic (or even better, a snap-on lid) keeps moisture trapped.
I like to use the food-safe plastic dough-rising bucket pictured above. Not only does it create a moisture-trapping environment, but its markings help me gauge when the dough has doubled in size.
Many bakers like to preheat their oven briefly, turn it off, then place the bowl of dough within. My issue with this is, I usually forget and preheat the oven way beyond what’s necessary, and then have to wait for it to cool down.
So instead, I simply turn on the oven light, and the temperature within gradually rises. I’ve learned that in the winter (when my kitchen is cold) if I turn the oven light on an hour ahead of adding the bowl of dough my oven temperature will be right around 76°F. I put the dough in, leave the light on for another 30 minutes or so, then turn the light off, allowing the temperature inside to reverse its course.
Of course, your oven and your kitchen will yield different results. But I urge you to take the time to see how effectively just a simple lightbulb can heat your oven, creating the perfect dough-rising environment.
Here’s a technique savvy bakers have been using for years: Bring a couple of cups of water to a full rolling boil in your microwave oven; in my oven, this takes 3 minutes. Wait about 4 to 5 minutes (for the microwave's interior to gradually cool down some), and exchange the bowl of water for your (uncovered) bowl of dough; quickly close the door.
The interior temperature of your microwave will start out in the mid- to low-80s and will drop down through the 70s over the next hour or so, providing an ideal rising environment.
If you're in a hurry and forgot to boil the water ahead of time, just use a smaller amount of water and bring it barely to a boil. The microwave's temperature will drop more quickly into yeast's comfort zone (though it also won't linger in that zone as long, either).
Word to the wise: Boiling water can be dangerous, of course, so be very careful moving it out of the microwave. Don't decide to add a tea bag or otherwise disturb it until it's calmed down and stopped bubbling!
So far it's all been about dough's first rise in the bowl. What about once it's shaped and in its loaf pan?
Most methods work just as well for shaped dough as for dough in the bowl. The exception: your oven. Since you'll want to preheat your oven well before the bread is ready to bake, you don't want your loaf pan inside — even though you swear you won't forget and will take it out before turning the oven on. (Been there, done that... multiple times.)
So place your pan in some other warm spot you've identified. If it's not a humid environment (e.g., your microwave or a cooler), snap a clear elasticized shower cap (or bowl cover) onto the pan to trap moisture.
Let the dough rise, bake your bread, and enjoy the results!
What other “warm and cozy” ways have you discovered to help your yeast dough to rise in cooler conditions? Please share in “comments,” below.
May 10, 2020 at 8:24pm
I always do no knead bread, so in the winter it's overnight in the oven, having made it warm with oven lights... I live in a very warm place, we don't freeze in winter. In summer, on the counter in the pantry... for a second rise, if it's a little slow I used to put it with a hot water bottle in the microwave, just wrap bottle as usual.
Now I have two ovens, I prove with the light in one, and cook in the other.
The proving function temperature on my oven is too hot!
April 16, 2020 at 7:00am
What would most likely cause a big blister on baked bread? Overproofing?
May 12, 2020 at 1:27pm
In reply to What would most likely cause… by Sam502 (not verified)
Hello! Usually, that's just an air bubble from the inside making its way out to the surface of the dough. It's common to have a lot of really small ones on doughs that have risen slowly in the fridge overnight.
April 14, 2020 at 8:19am
If you are handy, you can make your own proofing box.. Fun project. I use a cooler and a temperature sensor switch controlling a 20w light bulb (larger bulbs get too hot) set to the temp I want.
Here is the switch I used, but there are others out there.. really makes it nice as the temps vary wildly from winter to summer here in the south.... I'll put a warm cup of water in with the dough for humidity
December 29, 2021 at 2:54pm
In reply to If you are handy, you can… by Curtis L Cozier (not verified)
Curtis - I am interested in making a proofing box and so your comment caught my eye. Unfortunately there is no photo included with these comments and so I could not see the temperature sensor switch that you use. Would it be possible for you to give the name or describe it and explain how you can control the temperature of the box using the switch. This is a really interesting idea! Thank you.
April 12, 2020 at 6:14pm
I'm sitting on my loveseat, covered bowl (with dough inside) at my side, with my electric throw covering both myself and the covered bowl. I placed a thermometer atop the bowl and have peeked in to read it several times. I first checked it after about 10 min and it read 70°, and later 75°, and now it's been one hour and it's reading 78.8°, so I'm thrilled. The electric throw came from Kohl's. They offer them every year at a great price, seems like November. It's definitely worth waiting for the sale price. The brand is Biddeford. I pretty much live underneath mine all winter long.
March 17, 2020 at 10:52pm
I finally invested in the bread proofer pictured in this article-as often as I bake bread, it was worth the cost. I used to use the "warm" setting on my 3 quart crockpot to proof bread, and then popped the crock in the oven to bake. Thank you KAF for your wonderful flours and recipes!
March 17, 2020 at 8:43pm
During the cooler months, I set my bread pan with sourdough on top of my Keurig. It rises well here. In the warmer months it rises fine on the counter. We tend to keep a cooler home in the winter and a warmer home in summer to conserve energy.
March 17, 2020 at 7:19pm
I put a half gallon or so of warm water in a dish pan, and sit my dough bowl in the warm water covered with the lid. The dough rises nicely in a cold kitchen.
March 17, 2020 at 10:01am
I have a electric warming tray, which I set to low, put a trivet on the tray (or a single hot pad), then place my bread dough in a dough rising bucket with a snapping lid; it works fairly fast, and with the hot pad or trivet, the bottom isn't "cooked."
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