The Easiest Way to Tell If Your Dough Is Done Rising (2024)

This article is part of the Basically Guide to Better Baking, a 10-week, 10-recipe series designed to help you become a cooler, smarter, more confident baker.

Here’s the scene: Your shaped Cinnamon-Date Sticky Buns have been rising for an hour and you’re not sure if they’re ready to be baked. You took a picture of them when they first went into the skillet, but it’s still hard to say just how much they’ve grown. You could take a chance—or you could do the poke test.

The poke test, which is just what it sounds like, is an easy way to tell whether a shaped dough is ready for the oven, and it goes like this: Lightly oil or flour a finger or knuckle, then give the dough a gentle but assertive poke, as if you’re trying to get its attention. If the dough springs back right away (it’s saying, “Hey, why’d you do that!”), let it rise for a few more minutes. If the dough springs back slowly, like it’s waking up from a long nap, and your prod leaves a small indentation, it’s ready to go.

Why does this work? You want to put your dough into the oven when the yeast has expanded as much as it can (it will have one final “feeding frenzy” once it hits the oven’s heat, at which point your dough will expand even more). When the dough springs back quickly, it’s an indication that the yeast is still producing gases and has not yet reached its limit—the air bubbles in the dough (which are trapped in the network of gluten) refill fast. But when the dough springs back in slo-mo, it’s a sign that gas production has slowed—you’ve pushed the air out of those bubbles with your finger and it’s not being replenished at high speed. Time for the last hoorah!

And yes, it’s better to poke early than late. If the dough doesn’t spring back at all, you’ve likely over-proofed the dough. When the dough rises too much before it gets baked, it will collapse, rather than rise, in the oven’s heat, and the crumb will be uneven and ragged.

The time it takes for your dough to rise will vary based on the temperature of your kitchen and the temperature of your dough—and the alignment of the stars in the sky. So while recipes can offer ranges—an hour to four, let’s say—the poke test is a better way to judge readiness and to get your know your dough, whether it's for buttery pull-apart rolls, doughnuts, conchas, or, sure, classic cinnamon rolls, on a closer level.

Poke, poke:

The Easiest Way to Tell If Your Dough Is Done Rising (1)

These fluffy buttermilk-laced buns are filled with a cinnamon-scented date purée to capture all that gooey sticky bun glory without being overly sweet.

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The Easiest Way to Tell If Your Dough Is Done Rising (2024)
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