Glass bread tastes as good as it looks (and it looks really, really good)
A beautiful bread made possible by bread flour.

Recently I saw a loaf that stopped me in my tracks. It was a loaf that looked like it had all the qualities of a great bread: flavor, texture, sustenance. And most of all, beauty. Beauty, after all, is half the reason I bake. (Haven't you ever made something just because it’s gorgeous?)
That loaf turned out to be Pan de Cristal, a traditional loaf from the Catalan region of Spain sometimes referred to as "glass bread." The outside of this loaf is unassuming — dark and crusty — and not exactly a showstopper. But wait. Hidden inside, lurking like crystals underneath a crust so crisp it seems fried, is a miraculously beautiful crumb. Threads of gluten stretch into glassy, translucent webs. Is it bread, I thought, or is it treasure?
It's both. And that’s what drew me in. I started asking questions: What magic makes Pan de Cristal possible? Will the recipe require days of attention, special flours, or mystical hands to transform four simple ingredients?
Luckily, I found the answers.
When I explore something new, I always start with architecture. In baking terms, what I mean is that I look inside the loaf at the structural components and ingredient ratios. I also consider method — the mixing, fermentation, and baking — and come up with a list of questions. You’ve seen me do this before from chocolate bread hacks to twists on traditional favorites.
The hydration will need to be dangerously high, around 100% in baker’s percentages (meaning, equal weights of flour and water). Compare this with baguettes (in the range of 65% to 75%) or ciabatta (around 80%), and you may be concerned. I don’t blame you. As designed, the dough will feel more like a batter than bread.
For leavening, I choose commercial yeast. The acidity of a sourdough culture isn't the flavor profile that I want. Let’s keep it simple: malty wheat, a well-baked crust, a drizzle of olive oil. Plus, I have time goals: I’d love to make this bread in a single afternoon. No preferment and a little commercial yeast will speed up the process.
Then there's fermentation. The dough will need time and folds to develop the necessary strength for its final proof. I'm not sure how much of each, but I do know that we’re chasing miracles here. This brings me to the crux of the challenge: How will it be possible to push this wet dough to the edge of its rise without collapsing?
Here’s how: Bread flour.
Sometimes baking requires a superhero. Bread flour, with enough strength to hold tons of water and support a long final proof without collapsing, is the caped hero we need. All-purpose could work but I would need to lower the hydration, sacrificing a key requirement for Pan de Cristal’s signature open structure.
Bread flour is also integral to creating a dough that's smooth, silky, and workable, despite the high hydration.
Early attempts involved yeasted preferments and lots of mechanical mixing. While the bread I made was flavorful, the crumb wasn’t much better than my ciabatta. Back to the drawing board.
First up, I needed to fix the most defining characteristic for this loaf: the holes. Since a long process with extensive mixing didn’t produce what I wanted, I went in the opposite direction: less mixing and a shorter process. My thought was that too much strength as a result of either development (mixing, folding, or time being the contributing factors) or fermentation, made my crumb structure too homogenous, not wildly open.
After several bakes with adjustments to mixing, number of folds, length of fermentation, and final rise, I found myself getting closer. The holes started to open, creating a collage of glassy, translucent bubbles, all connected within a network of random threads. The crust became thinner and crispier as I pushed the final rise further and further. As my cutting board was taken over by the piles of loaves, I began cutting them open as a parlor trick, shocking my family with the incredible results.
But rather than taking a bow after, “Wow, daddy, that’s amazing,” let’s give credit where it’s due. Please stand, a round of applause for bread flour — strong, elastic, ready for all the water and fermentation we can throw at it — the true star of this show.
So, if you'd like to see this transformation in action, give the recipe a whirl. Mix the dough just before noon, fold a few times between errands, Zoom meetings, dinner preparation, and life, and you'll have a hero at the table by dinnertime. Cue the applause!
In testing, enjoying, and sharing many loaves of Pan de Cristal, here are some things that I found helpful.
Just keep folding. On the flip side, if your dough doesn't match my above video exactly, or if you feel like it's more suited for pancakes than Pan, keep going. Unless there's a mistake with your measurements of flour or water, and as long as you're using great flour, the dough will definitely come around.
If you make this Pan de Cristal, please let us know — tag your photos #bakeoftheweek and maybe give @kingarthurbaking a shout-out, too. Happy baking!
February 2, 2022 at 1:12am
ok, its 10:40 pm.....just now looking at the cutting and final proof......to say I am nervous is an understatement....I floured the top of the dough while it was in the casserole and then turned it sideways so the the dough just rolled out. Very Scary! Heavily floured the top (that was the bottom), floured my bench scraper and divided the dough. It did not deflate, so I think I am good. Will be baking at 1 am.....and that is ok, I have insomnia most nights, so this is a good project for me.
February 7, 2022 at 1:00pm
In reply to ok, its 10:40 pm.....just… by Lyla (not verified)
Hi Lyla, we hope your bread turned out beautiful and delicious!
January 31, 2022 at 2:36pm
I was one of those who was confused about the olive oil and ended up throwing away my first batch. I went back and instead of reading the comments, I read the questions and got my answer. I made the bread again and am so glad I did, it is fantastic! My husband says it’s his favorite bread, I will be making it often. I need to work on my shaping of the loafs but, it is well worth the time and effort.
January 30, 2022 at 8:27pm
In Martin's videos, the structure of the bread was already beautifully formed before he started the folding sequence. My dough was not, and it stayed a sloppy mess throughout the rest of the steps. I used a gram scale to measure flour and water. I used KAF Bread flour, and I did not add the oil to the dough. I suspect my initial mixing technique is at fault.
If I used my bread machine on dough cycle, would it help me to get a dough with a tighter structure?
If yes, how far into the mixing cycle should I be before I stop it? What should I look for in the dough as it develops?
I have a single paddle Sony, and a double paddle Zojirushi.
In an earlier post, you mentioned that salt was critical. I have Kosher, and coarse sea salt. Does the kind of salt also influence the quality and strength of the initial dough? Is there a chemical "why" for this?
February 6, 2022 at 4:16pm
In reply to In Martin's videos, the… by rusty (not verified)
Hi Rusty, there's no need to mix the dough in a stand mixer or bread machine, although this will certainly result in more gluten development early on. The risk with using a machine to mix your dough is that you might get too much gluten development, which can result in a tighter crumb structure in your final loaves. I would suggest mixing the dough with a dough whisk or a plastic scraper in the bowl a little more vigorously until it is fairly smooth. I also think using a smaller pan (either the 7" X 10" pan or the 8" X 8" pan) and being careful to coat both the sides of the pan as well as the bottom with the olive oil can help make that first fold a little less sloppy. Also, dough temperature matters here, since it's important that the fermentation keeps pace with the folds. This is because as the dough develops more airiness, this also provides structure. If you happen to live in a cooler house, consider using the warmer water recommended in the "tips" section of the recipe, and perhaps finding a slightly warmer spot for your dough to rise. I like to use my microwave as a makeshift proof box by boiling some water on the stove and pouring it into a pyrex cup and placing it in my microwave, along side my pan of dough. If need be you can recharge your boiling water after an hour or so. Aim for a dough temperature of about 76F.
As far as salt goes, our recipes generally assume a finely ground salt, similar to the texture of table salt. This will dissolve a little easier than a coarse salt, but the issue with using a different type of salt also has to do with how you measure it. If you're measuring by weight, it should be the same amount, but when measured by volume, a coarse salt is going to give you a different quantity. I would use whichever salt you have that dissolves the easiest, and measure it by grams.
January 30, 2022 at 4:38pm
Thank you for the videos! It really helps to see the fold techniques & what the dough should “feel” & look like. Almost burned down the kitchen first try with half recipe as I forgot my old oven runs hot & the parchment started to burn. But it still turned out with gorgeous delicate crisp crust & holey inside. Second try was perfect! Now it’s the favorite bread to sop up sauces & top with caponata or tapenades.
Thank you!!
January 30, 2022 at 2:36pm
any chance this recipe can to used to make just one large loaf? Thank you
February 6, 2022 at 3:33pm
In reply to any chance this recipe can… by Jane (not verified)
Hi Jane, the smaller loaves tend to optimize the rise and airiness of this bread, but I think it would work fine to make two larger ciabatta-style loaves (long and flat). You just don't want to try to pile a lot of dough into a pan, as the weight of the dough is likely to compress the crumb structure.
January 29, 2022 at 1:07pm
This is my second attempt. Both times, I measured carefully, followed the directions precisely, and ended up with a dough that worked like sticky batter. The first time, I added extra flour until the dough held together, then resumed coil folds. The bread tasted good, but had the consistency of ciabatta. This time, I am letting the dough rest 30 minutes between folds, and have done 3 sets of bowl folds, because the dough is just not cohesive enough for coils. It sticks to the pan, not itself! What is going on?
February 6, 2022 at 11:36am
In reply to This is my second attempt… by Aileen (not verified)
Hi Aileen, were you able to use our Bread flour in this recipe? We've found it's a fairly critical ingredient because of the super high hydration of this recipe. I think another factor might be what size pan you use and how you distribute the oil in it. Using a smaller 7" X 10" pan, or an 8" X 8" pan, and being sure the oil is distributed evenly on both the sides and the bottom of the pan can help a lot with that first "bowl" fold. Also, a warmer environment (75-78F) helps ensure that the dough is fermenting at pace with the folds, as the growing airiness of the dough also provides necessary structure. If you house happens to be quite cool this year, using the warmer water as recommend in the "Tips" section of this recipe can be helpful, and you might also find it necessary to find a slightly warmer spot for your dough to dwell in between folds. I've found that if I boil some water on the stove and stick it in the microwave in a pyrex cup along side my pan of dough, this will keep it warm for an hour or so.
Pagination