Hydration × flour

80% Hydration Whole Wheat Flour

Very open irregular crumb with large holes. Very moist, glossy. Focaccia-like texture when pan-baked.

✓ Within Whole Wheat Flour's workable range (7585%)

Is 80% hydration right for Whole Wheat Flour?

Whole Wheat Flour's workable hydration range is 7585%. Its absorption multiplier is 1.075× bread flour. At 80%, you are in the sweet spot — the dough will handle predictably and produce the crumb described above.

Absorption math for Whole Wheat Flour at 80%

A recipe written for bread flour at 80% hydration, when substituted with 100% Whole Wheat Flour, becomes 86% effective hydration (because Whole Wheat Flour absorbs 7% more water). Extended autolyse (60-90 min) allows bran to fully hydrate and soften, improving gluten development. Warmer water (80-85°F) during autolyse accelerates this. Use at 15-30% of flour in blended doughs for flavor without overwhelming structure; use at 100% for true whole-grain loaves accepting denser crumb. Add 2% extra hydration beyond recipe baseline when substituting whole wheat.

Technique at 80% hydration

Dough is sticky and slack. Requires 4+ coil folds. Wet hands throughout all handling. Shape only after cold retard. Free-form shaping becomes difficult — consider pan shapes.

Worked water math for a 500 g batch

Whole Wheat Flour ingredient weights for 500 g flour at 80% hydration
Whole Wheat Flour500 g (100%)
Water400 g (80%)
Salt10 g (2%)

Add your levain on top of these weights; the calculator below subtracts the flour and water it already contributes so the bench numbers land at 80% exactly.

What Whole Wheat Flour gives you at 80%

At 80% hydration you can expect a very open, glossy, holey crumb — the signature of a high-hydration hearth loaf. A very wet dough: minimal handling wins. Use wet hands and a bench scraper, coil or stitch folds only, a strong pre-shape, and a well-floured couche or banneton — this hydration rewards a light, confident touch and punishes over-working.

Whole Wheat Flour at 80% — FAQ

How much water do I use for Whole Wheat Flour at 80% hydration?

Multiply the flour weight by 0.8. For a 500 g batch of Whole Wheat Flour that's 400 g water, plus about 10 g salt (2%). Whole Wheat Flour absorbs 1.075× as much water as white bread flour, so it will feel a touch stiffer than the 80% number suggests.

Is 80% hydration right for Whole Wheat Flour?

Yes — Whole Wheat Flour's workable range is 75–85%, and 80% sits inside it, so the dough handles predictably and gives a very open, glossy, holey crumb — the signature of a high-hydration hearth loaf.

What crumb will Whole Wheat Flour at 80% give me?

Expect a very open, glossy, holey crumb — the signature of a high-hydration hearth loaf. Very open irregular crumb with large holes. Very moist, glossy. Focaccia-like texture when pan-baked.

Is Whole Wheat Flour at 80% beginner-friendly?

This hydration is rated advanced. A very wet dough: minimal handling wins. Use wet hands and a bench scraper, coil or stitch folds only, a strong pre-shape, and a well-floured couche or banneton — this hydration rewards a light, confident touch and punishes over-working.

Calculator pre-set to 80%

Weights below assume 100% Whole Wheat Flour. For blends, use the main calculator on a recipe page.

Flour to add
450 g
Water to add
350 g
Salt
10 g
Levain @ 100%
100 g
Total dough
910 g
Effective hydration
80%
How the math works

Total water = flour × hydration %. Your levain contributes 50 g flour + 50 g water — both count toward the totals. You add only the remainder as fresh flour and water.

Salt % is computed on total flour weight, not final-dough flour.

Open 80% hydration guide →

Sources: WSU Bread Lab — whole wheat milling research; Hamelman, Bread (3rd ed.); Robertson, Tartine Bread.