Temperature × recipe
Neapolitan Pizza (Sourdough) at 36–40°F
Adjusted timing: 5.8h bulk + 69.6h proof (multiplier 2.90×).
- Baseline bulk (76°F)
- 2h
- Adjusted bulk
- 5.8h
- Baseline proof
- 24h
- Adjusted proof
- 69.6h
- Multiplier
- 2.90×
- Activity
- dormant
- Target hydration
- 65%
- Bake temp
- 900°F
Why the timing shifts
Refrigerator territory — used for overnight retard during proofing or bulk slowdown. 12-16 hours at this temperature is equivalent to 1-1.5 hours at 76°F baseline. Essential for flavor development in artisan sourdough. Cold retard improves shape retention, enables flexible scheduling, and develops deeper tangy flavors. Place dough in floured banneton, cover, refrigerate at this temperature.
Technique for Neapolitan Pizza (Sourdough)
Mix dough, short 2h bulk at room temp. Divide into 230g balls. Cold retard 24-48h in sealed containers. Take out 2h before baking. Stretch by hand to 12-inch round on floured surface (no rolling pin). Top minimally, launch onto pizza steel/stone at maximum oven temp. Bake until edges charred and cheese melted (2-6 min depending on heat).
Why 36–40°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 36–40°F the net effect is a 10.00× bulk and 10.00× proof multiplier versus the 76°F bakery baseline, so every stage runs slower. 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 36–40°F
| Stage | At 76°F baseline | At this temperature |
|---|---|---|
| Neapolitan Pizza (Sourdough) bulk ferment | 2 h | 20 h |
| Final proof | 24 h | 240 h |
| Levain to peak | 5 h | 50 h |
Neapolitan Pizza (Sourdough) baselines from the recipe, multiplied by this range's bulk (10.00×) and proof (10.00×) factors. Treat these as a floor to start checking, not a finish line.
What to watch for at 36–40°F
Dough moves slowly here, so the common failure is pulling it too early. An under-proofed loaf bakes up dense with a tight, gummy crumb and often bursts at a random seam instead of the score. Trust rise and feel over the printed clock: give it the extra time, then judge by the poke test below.
How to adjust your formula at 36–40°F
Because the culture is dormant at this temperature, raise your levain to about 20–25% of the flour (from a typical 15–20%) to offset the slow rise — or simply plan for the longer clock and leave the formula alone.
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 36–40°F, sooner or later by the 10.00× factor above.
Neapolitan Pizza (Sourdough) at 36–40°F — FAQ
How long is the bulk ferment for Neapolitan Pizza (Sourdough) at 36–40°F?
About 20 hours — the 2-hour Neapolitan Pizza (Sourdough) bulk at the 76°F baseline, multiplied by 10.00× for this temperature. Start checking earlier if your kitchen runs at the warm end of the range.
How long is the final proof for Neapolitan Pizza (Sourdough) at 36–40°F?
About 240 hours (24h baseline × 10.00×). A cold retard proof can replace this stage and buys scheduling flexibility.
What's the biggest mistake baking Neapolitan Pizza (Sourdough) at 36–40°F?
The main risk is under-proofing. Dough moves slowly here, so the common failure is pulling it too early. An under-proofed loaf bakes up dense with a tight, gummy crumb and often bursts at a random seam instead of the score. Trust rise and feel over the printed clock: give it the extra time, then judge by the poke test below.
Should I change the levain for Neapolitan Pizza (Sourdough) at 36–40°F?
Because the culture is dormant at this temperature, raise your levain to about 20–25% of the flour (from a typical 15–20%) to offset the slow rise — or simply plan for the longer clock and leave the formula alone.
Is 36–40°F a good kitchen temperature for Neapolitan Pizza (Sourdough)?
Refrigerator territory — used for overnight retard during proofing or bulk slowdown. 12-16 hours at this temperature is equivalent to 1-1.5 hours at 76°F baseline. Essential for flavor development in artisan sourdough. Cold retard improves shape retention, enables flexible scheduling, and develops deeper tangy flavors. Place dough in floured banneton, cover, refrigerate at this temperature.
Calculator pre-set to these values
- Multiplier at 38°F
- 2.9×
- Adjusted bulk ferment
- 5.8 h
- Adjusted final proof
- 69.6 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.