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18 Professional
Baking Calculators
Fermentation, hydration, baker's percentages, preferments, tangzhong and more. Built for precision. Trusted by home bakers and professionals in the UK, US, Canada and Australia.
Instant results
No sign-up, no waiting. Type your numbers and get professional-grade calculations in real time.
Works anywhere
Metric or imperial, any currency. Built for bakers in the UK, US, Europe, Australia and beyond.
Baker's precision
From fermentation timing to lamination layers — every formula is grounded in real baking science.
Every
calculation
a baker needs.
calculators
From bulk fermentation to lamination layers. All free. All instant. No account needed.
Open all 18- 01FermentationBulk & proof timing from yeast, hydration, and temperatureTiming
- 02Baker's PercentageConvert grams to percentages and backFormula
- 03Sourdough StarterFeed ratios, levain quantities, peak timingSourdough
- 04Water TemperatureTarget DDT from room temp, flour temp, friction factorTemperature
- 05Dough PortioningPizza ball weights by size, style, and total doughPortioning
- 06PrefermentPoolish, biga, and pâte fermentée ratiosPreferment
- 07Recipe CostingIngredient cost per unit with overhead and markupBusiness
- 08Hydration AdjusterWater to add or remove to hit a target hydrationFormula
- 09Batch & YieldScale recipes up or down, count yield from dough weightScaling
- 10Flour ProteinBlend flours to hit a target protein percentageFlour
- 11TangzhongWater-roux ratios for super-soft Japanese-style breadTechnique
- 12Enriched DoughEffective hydration accounting for eggs, milk, and butterEnriched
- 13Lamination PlannerLayer count for croissants — folds mapped to layersPastry
- 14Sourdough DiscardUse discard in any recipe — flour and water breakdownSourdough
- 15Autolyse & RestOptimal rest time from flour type, hydration, and temperatureTiming
- 16Yeast ConversionConvert between fresh, active dry, instant yeast, and sourdough starterConversion
- 17Ingredient ConverterConvert cups, tablespoons, grams and ounces for 50+ baking ingredientsConversion
- 18Vital Wheat GlutenHow much VWG to add to hit a target protein percentageFlour
DoughRise Calculator Suite
18 professional tools for precision baking
Enter your flour weight, yeast %, dough temperature, and target start time. The calculator uses the Q10 temperature rule to estimate bulk fermentation and proof times. Warmer dough = faster ferment. Cooler = slower and more flavour development.
Dough Fermentation Calculator
Calculate bulk fermentation and proofing times
Choose Grams→% to analyse an existing recipe, or %→Grams to build one from scratch. Flour always equals 100%. Every other ingredient is expressed as a percentage of the flour weight. Great for scaling any recipe up or down.
Baker's Percentage
Convert between grams and percentages
Enter your starter amount and desired feeding ratio (e.g. 1:5:5 = starter:water:flour). The calculator shows you exactly how much water and flour to add and gives step-by-step feeding instructions.
Sourdough Starter
Calculate feeding ratios
Enter your target dough temperature, room temperature, and flour temperature. The calculator returns the exact water temperature you need to hit your DDT (Desired Dough Temperature). Consistent dough temp = consistent fermentation.
Dough Temperature
Calculate water temperature needed
Select your pizza style, pan size, and number of balls. Each style has a calibrated weight factor based on crust thickness. The calculator returns the total dough weight and per-ball weight so every pizza is consistent.
Pizza Portioning
Dough ball weights for pizza sizes
Choose your preferment type (Poolish, Biga, or Pâte Fermentée), then enter your total flour weight and preferment %. The calculator returns exactly how much flour and water goes into the preferment, and how much remains for the final dough.
Preferment
Poolish, biga, or pâte fermentée
Add each ingredient with its weight and cost per kg. The calculator totals your ingredient cost and suggests retail prices at 2×, 3×, and 4× markup. Use it to price loaves, pastries, or batch bakes accurately.
Recipe Costing
Calculate costs and pricing
Enter your current dough weight and hydration %, then your target hydration %. The calculator tells you exactly how much water to add or remove to hit your target. Shows a before/after comparison so you can see the difference at a glance.
Hydration Adjustment
Convert between hydration levels
Use Yield mode to find out how many loaves a recipe makes, or Scale mode to work backwards from a target number of loaves. Enter your dough weight per loaf to get totals for every ingredient in the batch.
Batch & Yield
Calculate yields and scale recipes
Add two or more flours with their protein % and blend ratios. The calculator returns the weighted average protein % of your blend. Use it to hit a specific protein target by combining strong and weak flours.
Flour Protein Blend
Custom blends for perfect protein
Enter your total flour weight and the tangzhong flour %. (5% is standard for milk bread.) The calculator returns the flour and water needed for the tangzhong roux, and the remaining amounts for your main dough. Cook the roux to 65°C before adding to the dough.
Tangzhong / Water Roux
Pre-cook a portion of flour to 65°C to lock in moisture for ultra-soft, long-lasting enriched breads
Enter your flour weight and adjust the enrichment sliders for eggs, butter, milk, and sugar. The calculator shows how each addition affects hydration and gives adjusted water amounts to keep the dough workable.
Enriched Dough Hydration
Calculate true hydration accounting for moisture in eggs, milk, and butter.
Egg input mode:
Presets (500g flour):
Enter your dough weight and butter block % (typically 25–33%). Select your fold type (single, double, or book fold) and number of turns. The calculator returns the butter weight and total number of layers after each fold sequence.
Lamination & Fold Planner
Calculate layer counts and generate a fold timeline for laminated doughs.
Preset:
Enter the amount of discard you have and select a recipe type. The calculator scales the recipe to match your discard weight exactly — no waste, no guessing. Works for pancakes, crackers, waffles, and more.
Sourdough Discard
Adjust a recipe to use your discard, or find what you can bake with it.
Mode:
Enter your flour weight and hydration %. The calculator returns the water amount for autolyse and recommends a rest time based on your flour type. Autolyse hydrates the flour before mixing, improving extensibility and reducing kneading time.
Autolyse & Rest Planner
Calculate optimal autolyse duration and generate a timed pre-mix schedule.
ℹ️ What is autolyse?
A pre-mix rest of just flour + water (no salt, no levain) that allows flour to fully hydrate, activates enzymes, and develops gluten passively — reducing mix time and improving extensibility.
Preset:
Include levain in autolyse?
Include salt in autolyse?
Type any amount into any field — the other three update instantly. Fresh yeast, active dry, and instant follow a fixed weight ratio (3 : 1.5 : 1). Sourdough starter shows a range because activity varies by starter age, feeding ratio, and temperature.
Yeast Conversion
Convert between fresh, active dry, instant, and sourdough starter
How yeast conversion works
Fresh : Active Dry : Instant = 3 : 1.5 : 1 by weight. Fresh yeast has the highest moisture content (~70%). Instant yeast is most concentrated and can be added directly to flour without rehydrating.
Sourdough starter is a live culture of wild yeast and bacteria in flour + water. You need 35–50g of 100% hydration starter to replace 1g of instant yeast. The range reflects starter activity: a vigorous freshly-fed starter sits at the lower end; a sluggish or cold starter needs more.
Search for an ingredient, enter an amount, choose the starting unit, and all other units update instantly. Densities are sourced from King Arthur Baking's ingredient weight chart.
Ingredient Converter
Convert cups, tablespoons, grams and ounces for 50+ baking ingredients
Why weight beats volume in baking
Volume is inconsistent; weight is exact. Scooping flour compresses it — a carelessly packed cup can weigh 50g more than a sifted one. A gram is always a gram. Professional bakers and King Arthur Baking publish ingredient weights because they produce consistent results every time.
Millilitre conversions for dry ingredients are marked with ~ (approximate) because volume-by-density assumes ideal packing. The ml figure is a useful estimate, not a precise measure.
Enter your flour's current protein %, your target protein %, and the flour weight. The calculator shows how much vital wheat gluten to add. VWG protein % defaults to 75% — open "Advanced" to change it for your brand.
Vital Wheat Gluten
Boost weak flour to bread-flour strength
Advanced: VWG protein % (75%)
What is vital wheat gluten?
Vital wheat gluten (VWG) is a dry powder extracted from wheat — approximately 75% pure gluten protein. Adding it to weaker flours raises protein content, giving dough more strength, extensibility, and structure.
When to use it: upgrading plain flour for bread baking; strengthening whole grain flours (rye, spelt) which have weak gluten; high-hydration doughs needing more structure.
Caution: More than ~5% baker's % (50g per 1kg flour) can make dough tough and inelastic. Use the minimum needed to reach your target.
Need to blend multiple flours instead? Use the Flour Protein Blend calculator (#10).
Dough temp — how warm your mixed dough feels (use a probe thermometer for accuracy). Inoculation — starter weight divided by flour weight × 100 (e.g. 100g starter in 500g flour = 20%). The timer updates as you type and shows a ±25% window because every kitchen is different. Open Start time, starter, cold retard to: set when you begin bulk fermentation and get a "ready at" clock; adjust for whether your starter is freshly fed, at peak, or hungry; or model a cold retard in the fridge. DoughRise Coach subscribers can record actual bulk times — after 3 bakes the predictions are calibrated to your kitchen, starter, and flour.
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DoughRise Pro
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Go Bakery →Bread Hydration Calculator
Find your dough's ideal water level
Hydration is the single number that changes everything about how bread looks, feels, and bakes. Too low and you get a tight, dense crumb. Too high and you have dough climbing up the walls and a loaf that spreads flat. The bread hydration calculator gives you a starting point that accounts for your flour type, protein level, and any inclusions.
Input your total flour weight, flour type (white, wholemeal, rye, or a blend), and the percentage of wholegrain in your recipe. The calculator returns a target hydration range, adjusted water weight in grams, and notes on how ambient temperature and flour age might shift the ideal figure. It also accounts for wet inclusions like seeds or olives that contribute moisture.
Hydration percentages in recipes are always based on total flour weight — 75% hydration means 75g water for every 100g flour. Once you understand that relationship, you can adapt any recipe to your flour and your kitchen rather than following a fixed number that was written for someone else's conditions entirely.
Recommended starting hydration for most beginner sourdough bakers
Extra water to add per 20% wholegrain flour for full bran hydration
Flour profiles modelled: white, wholemeal, rye, spelt, and einkorn
Common questions about bread hydration
What hydration should my sourdough bread be?
Most sourdough beginners do best with 70–75% hydration. This gives an open, airy crumb without dough that's too wet to handle. As your technique improves you can go higher — 80% and above produces a more open crumb but requires stronger gluten development and good shaping skills. The right hydration also depends on your flour's protein content and absorption rate.
How does flour protein affect bread hydration?
Higher-protein flours absorb more water, so strong bread flours (13–14% protein) can handle 75–85% hydration while producing good structure. All-purpose flour (10–11% protein) is better suited to 65–72%. Wholegrain flours absorb significantly more water due to bran — add 5% extra hydration for every 20% wholegrain substitution and allow extra rest time for the bran to fully hydrate.
Why does my high-hydration dough stick to everything?
Wet dough sticks because the gluten network hasn't fully developed. High-hydration doughs need more mechanical mixing or stretch-and-fold sets to build structure. Try cold bulk fermentation (overnight in the fridge), use wet hands instead of flour when handling, and ensure your bench is clean and slightly damp rather than floured. If it's still unmanageable, drop your hydration by 5% and work back up as your technique improves.
Calculate your perfect hydration
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