Bread Baking and Flour Substitution Tips (2024)

A lot of people are baking sourdough bread for the first time since the Covid pandemic began, and inconsistent availability of flour in grocery stores has given new and experienced bakers alike the challenge of substituting different flours in bread recipes and for their sourdough starter feeds. As a result, Eric wrote this Newbie’s Guide to Flour for Bread Baking to help people better understand the properties of different flours and wheats, and I’ve written some quick rules of thumb for flour substitutions in bread baking in this article.

Before we jump into the flours, here is a short but important list of fermentation variables to keep in mind as you bake bread and manage your sourdough starter.

  • Heat: higher ambient and water temperature will speed up fermentation
  • Water: higher hydration dough and sourdough starter ferment faster
  • Starch and Nutrients: dough and sourdough starter with more whole grain flour ferment faster
  • Fat and Protein: eggs, butter, milk, and oil slow down fermentation

All purpose flour sourdough bread

Flour Type and Bread Dough

If you’re following a recipe that calls for bread flour and you only have all purpose flour, that’s fine. The level of gluten-forming protein in all purpose flour is a little lower than in bread flour, but the difference is not dramatic and it won’t cause your bread to be flat. All purpose flour tends to produce a more tender crumb, and bread flour produces a more chewy crumb. Baguettes are usually made with all purpose flour, for example, and many bakers use it alone or in combination with other flours, such as in the loaves in the photo below.

If you’re following a recipe that calls for refined or “white” flour, and you only have whole grain flour, keep in mind that the dough will probably ferment faster and you’ll probably need more liquid than what the recipe calls for. Commercial whole wheat flour and stoneground hard red wheat flours absorb more water than refined flour. This recipe for yecora rojo wheat sourdough breads shows the difference in water needed for a 100% whole wheat flour dough versus a 50% whole wheat flour dough. (You can also see results of a no knead approach vs. active gluten development.) Exceptions to this whole grain thirstiness include, einkorn, white sonora, and other soft white wheats.

How about pastry flour and soft wheat flours? These flours usually have significantly less protein than all purpose flour, bread flour, and conventional whole wheat flours. Similarly, ancient or heirloom varieties of whole grain wheat like emmer, durum, Kamut, einkorn, and warthog tend to be low in gluten strength. You can use a loaf pan to bake bread with these flours, relying on fermentation alone for airiness and the side support of the pan. You can also mix these flours with a higher-gluten flour. This blog post shows the difference in outcomes between using a mix of bread flour and whole grain einkorn flour and using whole grain yecora rojo flour and whole grain einkorn flour.

You can also use a low-gluten flour alone, and while the resulting loaves are usually not tall or airy, they can be soft and delicious. This article, Baking Bread with Low Gluten Wheat, explains how to assess different wheat flours and bake beautiful breads with them. Here is an example of a whole grain Kamut sourdough bread baked freestanding and a naturally leavened einkorn bread baked in a loaf pan to prevent the dough from spreading.

Rye is another wheat with little gluten development potential. Here’s a recipe for tourte de seigle, an all-rye, relatively flat freestanding bread that is traditional to the Alps region of France, Germany and Switzlerland. You can also use a loaf pan for this bread as is discussed in the comments of the recipe. This Swedish-style artisan rye bread uses a 50:50 mix of rye and bread flour, and is one of the most popular recipes on Breadtopia.

Another option for working with low-gluten flour is to add vital wheat gluten. Here is a calculator tool from our Naturally Leavened Panettone recipe by @DanDee to help you determine how much vital wheat gluten to add to get the percentage of protein you’re targeting. The link to the tool is in the paragraph labeled High Gluten Flour and I recommend you read the entire paragraph.

In the photo below, you can see some of the amazing variety of wheat flours.

Top Row from left: Einkorn, Warthog Hard Red Winter, Hard White Spring, Sprouted Hard Red Spring, Turkey Red.
Bottom row from left: Rye, Durum, White Sonora, Ethiopian Blue Tinge Emmer

In my experience, non-wheat flours like oat, quinoa, and buckwheat can be used at up to 25% of the total flour weight with basically no volume issues in the resulting bread if the other 75% of the flour is bread flour, all purpose flour, or a hard red whole grain flour. If you go for higher percentages of these non-wheat flours, you may want to bake the dough in a loaf pan. For example, here’s a buckwheat bread made with only fermented and food-processed buckwheat groats. Note that non-wheat flours with high fat content e.g. coconut, flaxseed, and almond, will cause your dough to ferment slower. Here’s a recipe for sourdough bread with flaxseed meal.

Very slack bread dough

Tips On Gluten Development

If all your calculated substitutions still result in a dough that feels too wet or slack, like in the photo above, you have a few options. You can stiffen the dough with more flour, plan to bake the dough in a loaf pan, and/or develop the gluten strength in the dough through methods such as stretching and folding, depicted in the video below.

Gluten strength develops over time. When a dough’s bulk fermentation is short (a lot of starter in the recipe, warm temperature), the dough often needs more rounds of stretching and folding, or other methods of active gluten development. When a dough’s bulk fermentation is long (a little bit of starter in the recipe, cold temperature), the dough can develop strength on its own, with few or even no rounds of stretching and folding.

Strength can be built late in the process. Stretching and folding during the beginning of the bulk fermentation is great for gluten strength, but if you skipped doing this, you can still work strength into your dough later. If at the pre-shape stage, I feel that a dough is floppy, I stretch it into a very large rectangle before rolling it up tight. And after the bench rest, depending on how the dough feels, I might shape it twice in a row to build enough tension that it doesn’t splay outward.

Last minute trick for making your dough more manageable: Put your proofing basket in your freezer for 20-30 minutes before baking. This will stiffen the dough for scoring and transfer, and possibly help it retain some height once it’s out of the basket.

A flat dough can still sometimes get voluminous during baking

Flour Types and Sourdough Starter

It is fine to feed your sourdough starter any wheat flour (all purpose, bread, einkorn, rye, emmer…etc.) and probably many non-wheat flours. It’s also fine to switch flours regularly. Maybe you’ve always fed your starter rye flour and now only have all purpose flour. No problem. Though your starter may take longer to peak, and it may have a different texture, it will peak and it will leaven dough. This even applies to bleached flour; though I’ve only tested it for a week on vacation, my starter thrived.

Tips for Starter Management and Discard

If you love pancakes, crackers, naan flatbreads and other ways of using sourdough discard, it makes sense to feed your starter a lot of flour and water, and to refresh it multiple times before each bake. But if you prefer to run a lean starter system with rare or no discard, you might try the starter feeding protocol I’ve been doing for several years, or try that of @homebreadbaker described here which produces discard at most about once a month.

I use most of the ripe starter in my jar when I mix up a dough, then I feed the remainder. The feeding amount varies, but I aim for about 100g starter in the jar after feeding. I let the fed starter expand just a little bit before refrigerating. Then, the next time I bake bread (usually 2-3 days later), I use this starter after bringing it to room temperature and full expansion (a few hours). Or, if I am making more than one loaf, I feed the starter to make it larger, let it ripen (a few hours) and use most of it. Occasionally, I do make too much starter, and my preference is to immediately mix up a batch of dough for naan or crackers.

You can learn more about Breadtopia’s experiments using different amounts of starter in different states of dormancy in this article: Challenging Sourdough Starter Convention.

Minimal supply of starter that is ready to use

Bread Baking and Flour Substitution Tips (2024)

FAQs

What is a good substitute for bread flour? ›

You can use all-purpose flour as a 1:1 substitute for bread flour and vice-versa. For example, for 1 cup of bread flour, you can use 1 cup of all-purpose flour. Bread and pizza crust made with all-purpose flour may have a little less chew than those made with bread flour, but the results will still be good.

What happens if you use all-purpose flour instead of bread flour? ›

Bread Flour Substitute

You can always substitute all-purpose flour for bread flour one for one in any recipe that calls for it. Your bread might not raise quite as high or have quite as much chew, if you are using all-purpose flour, but it will still be delicious and homemade and all the good things.

How do you replace flour in bread? ›

11 best flour substitutions
  1. Chickpea flour. Often confused with besan (see below), chickpea flour is made from ground white chickpeas. ...
  2. Almond flour. Almond flour is an excellent alternative to have in your kitchen cupboard. ...
  3. Gluten-free flour mixture. ...
  4. Coconut flour. ...
  5. Gram flour (besan) ...
  6. Rice flour. ...
  7. Buckwheat flour. ...
  8. Oat flour.
Jan 31, 2023

What happens to bread if you don't use enough flour? ›

Not using enough flour, though, results in a more caramelized-looking loaf. The difference between using too much and using too little flour is drastic. The outside turned a dark-brown color and looked almost caramelized.

What can I use if I don't have bread flour in a bread machine? ›

All purpose flour is used in many bread machine recipes, especially sweet “quick breads” such as banana bread, pumpkin bread, gingerbread, zucchini bread, etc. You can also use all purpose flour to replace bread flour in many sandwich-type breads (esp. if you have run out of bread flour).

How do you make all-purpose flour like bread flour? ›

Here's How Much to Add

Lots of baking sites disagree about how to turn all-purpose flour into bread flour. Some people recommend adding just 1 teaspoon of vital wheat gluten per cup of all-purpose, while others recommend 1 to 3 tablespoons per recipe. I guess the variation depends on the baker's preferences and budget.

What is the best flour for homemade bread? ›

While bread flour is the best option, it can sometimes be used if you don't have bread flour. “Check the protein content,” advises Chef Jürgen, since it can vary from brand to brand, and an all-purpose flour that contains protein on the higher end of the range, 12 to 13 percent, will produce a better outcome.

What can I use if I don't have enough all-purpose flour? ›

Four All-Purpose Flour Alternatives
  1. Chickpea Flour. Relatively new to American households, chickpea flour (also called garbanzo bean flour or besan in Indian kitchens) is arguably one of my favorite ingredients. ...
  2. Rice Flour. ...
  3. Almond Flour. ...
  4. Buckwheat Flour.

Will bread rise with all-purpose flour? ›

If you make a bread dough with all-purpose flour, the gluten network won't be as strong because of the lower protein content; this means the dough won't be able to stretch as much to accommodate those bubbles, resulting in smaller bubbles and bread with a tighter crumb.

What to use if you run out of bread flour? ›

Bread flour has a high protein content, which is important for yeast dough, but you can make a bread flour substitute using all-purpose flour.

Does flour go bad? ›

Expired flour can be safe to use if the flour is still good. However, flour does go bad, which you can determine from smell and appearance. If the quality has deteriorated and you use it, whatever you make will mirror those deficiencies.

What happens if you use the wrong flour for bread? ›

Plain flour will work for bread, however, it will not have as much protein or develop as much gluten as bread flour. This can matter for some recipes where you want to have a good rise with lots of air pockets or where you want to stretch the dough thin enough to see through.

What if I don't have enough bread flour? ›

If you're working on a recipe that calls for bread flour and you don't have any on hand, save yourself a trip to the store and a few bucks by using an equal amount of all-purpose flour as a substitute.

Can you let bread rise too long? ›

If the dough has risen too long, it's going to feel fragile and might even collapse as you poke it,” says Maggie. If this is the case, there's a chance you can save your dough by giving it a quick re-shape. Learn more about this fix in our blog on saving overproofed dough.

What temperature do you bake bread at? ›

Pop the loaves into a 375º oven and bake for 30 to 35 minutes. The loaves should be golden brown. If you want to be sure they're baked through, use your thermometer to check the internal temperature of the bread. You're looking for about 185º.

Can I substitute self-rising flour for bread flour? ›

Once again, self-rising flour is not the same thing as all-purpose flour nor is it the same thing as cake flour, bread flour, or pastry flour. Self-rising flour is almost exactly like all-purpose flour, but it has added salt and leavening mixed into it.

Can plain flour be used for bread? ›

But if you only have plain flour or need to supplement strong flour with plain, go ahead. The loaf will rise, with a soft crumb and golden crust, and the bread will taste better than a cheap, shop- bought loaf – but it won't have the springy chew of a loaf made entirely with strong flour.

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