Temperature × recipe
Ciabatta at 78–82°F
Adjusted timing: 2.3h bulk + 1.2h proof (multiplier 0.78×).
- Baseline bulk (76°F)
- 3h
- Adjusted bulk
- 2.3h
- Baseline proof
- 1.5h
- Adjusted proof
- 1.2h
- Multiplier
- 0.78×
- Activity
- very-active
- Target hydration
- 82%
- Bake temp
- 475°F
Why the timing shifts
Warm kitchen or proofing box — ideal for accelerating fermentation. Ferment 25% faster than baseline. Good for schedule compression. Watch carefully — dough over-proofs quickly. Ideal for hot-weather baking when you want to get dough into cold retard before too much fermentation happens. Consider reducing levain to 12-15% to slow things back down.
Technique for Ciabatta
Mix everything (no autolyse needed at this protein level). 3-4 sets of stretch-and-folds in 2.5h bulk at 76°F. Dump onto heavily floured counter, gently stretch into rectangle. Cut into 3-4 rectangles with bench scraper (no deflating). Short proof 60-90 min on linen couche. Bake on preheated stone with steam for first 10 min at 475°F; total 20-22 min until deep golden.
Why 78–82°F changes your timing
Sourdough is a living culture, and its yeast and bacteria speed up as it warms. Across the useful baking window (roughly 50–95°F) the rate follows the classic Q10 relationship — fermentation runs about two to three times faster for every ~15–18°F of warming. At 78–82°F the net effect is a 0.75× bulk and 0.75× proof multiplier versus the 76°F bakery baseline, so every stage runs faster. That single number is why a formula's printed times only hold at the temperature they were written for — move the dough 10 degrees and the clock is wrong.
Worked timing at 78–82°F
| Stage | At 76°F baseline | At this temperature |
|---|---|---|
| Ciabatta bulk ferment | 3 h | 2.3 h |
| Final proof | 1.5 h | 1.1 h |
| Levain to peak | 5 h | 3.8 h |
Ciabatta baselines from the recipe, multiplied by this range's bulk (0.75×) and proof (0.75×) factors. Treat these as a floor to start checking, not a finish line.
What to watch for at 78–82°F
Fermentation runs fast here, so the common failure is over-proofing — the dough balloons, then loses its spring and bakes up flat with a pale, gummy crumb. Set a timer as a floor, not a target, and start checking the dough by feel and jiggle early.
How to adjust your formula at 78–82°F
Because the culture is very-active at this temperature, drop your levain to about 10–15% and keep the bulk short so the fast rise doesn't out-run gluten development — otherwise the crumb goes gummy and the loaf spreads.
To land the dough in this range even when the room swings, use the desired-dough-temperature (DDT) method: dough temperature ≈ (flour temp + room temp + water temp + friction factor) ÷ 4. Solve for the water temperature you need — in a cool kitchen use warmer water; in a hot one, cool or even iced water — so the dough itself, not just the air, sits at your target.
Telling doneness by feel, not the clock
The times above are a guide; the dough is the real timer. Bulk is done when the mass has risen 50–75%, looks domed and bubbly, and jiggles like set custard when you shake the container — an aliquot jar (a small sample in a straight-sided container) makes the rise easy to read. The final proof is ready when a floured poke springs back slowly and only partway. These cues are identical at every temperature; only when they arrive changes — at 78–82°F, sooner or later by the 0.75× factor above.
Ciabatta at 78–82°F — FAQ
How long is the bulk ferment for Ciabatta at 78–82°F?
About 2.3 hours — the 3-hour Ciabatta bulk at the 76°F baseline, multiplied by 0.75× for this temperature. Start checking earlier if your kitchen runs at the warm end of the range.
How long is the final proof for Ciabatta at 78–82°F?
About 1.1 hours (1.5h baseline × 0.75×). A cold retard proof can replace this stage and buys scheduling flexibility.
What's the biggest mistake baking Ciabatta at 78–82°F?
The main risk is over-proofing. Fermentation runs fast here, so the common failure is over-proofing — the dough balloons, then loses its spring and bakes up flat with a pale, gummy crumb. Set a timer as a floor, not a target, and start checking the dough by feel and jiggle early.
Should I change the levain for Ciabatta at 78–82°F?
Because the culture is very-active at this temperature, drop your levain to about 10–15% and keep the bulk short so the fast rise doesn't out-run gluten development — otherwise the crumb goes gummy and the loaf spreads.
Is 78–82°F a good kitchen temperature for Ciabatta?
Warm kitchen or proofing box — ideal for accelerating fermentation. Ferment 25% faster than baseline. Good for schedule compression. Watch carefully — dough over-proofs quickly. Ideal for hot-weather baking when you want to get dough into cold retard before too much fermentation happens. Consider reducing levain to 12-15% to slow things back down.
Calculator pre-set to these values
- Multiplier at 80°F
- 0.78×
- Adjusted bulk ferment
- 2.3 h
- Adjusted final proof
- 1.2 h
How the math works
Multipliers are piecewise-linear interpolations between reference points measured by Myhrvold et al. in Modernist Bread vol 3. 76°F is the baseline (1.0×); every 10°F drop roughly doubles fermentation time, and every 10°F rise roughly halves it.