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Dough Tearing

Shaping

Dough that tears during shaping makes it difficult to create tension and a smooth surface. Understanding why it tears helps you adjust your technique and prevent the issue in future bakes.

Try This Right Now

  • 1Let the dough rest for 15-20 minutes before attempting to shape again
  • 2Use a gentle bench rest to allow gluten to relax
  • 3Work with less tension—do not pull the dough as aggressively

Detailed Solutions

Extended Bench Rest

Easy

Gluten needs time to relax before it can stretch again.

  1. Cover dough with a towel or bowl
  2. Rest for 20-30 minutes
  3. Gluten will relax and become extensible
  4. Try shaping again with gentle movements

Pre-shape Only

Moderate

Skip tight shaping and use a loose pre-shape.

  1. Gently fold dough into a loose round
  2. Let rest for 30 minutes
  3. Final shape with minimal tension
  4. Focus on even shape rather than tight skin

Why This Happens

Dough tears when gluten is too tight, under-developed, or damaged from over-fermentation. Contributing factors include: Gluten too tight from aggressive handling, Under-developed gluten structure, Over-fermented dough with weakened gluten, Dough too cold and stiff, Insufficient bench rest between shaping steps.

Prevention for Next Time

  • Always allow 15-20 minutes bench rest between pre-shape and final shape
  • Develop gluten fully during bulk fermentation with regular folds
  • Work with room temperature dough, not cold from the fridge
  • Handle gently—tension comes from technique, not force

Related Issues

Having other problems? Check out these related troubleshooting guides.