Sourdough Sorcery
Sourdough Sorcery is a podcast for home bakers, bread lovers, and curious cooks who want to turn simple ingredients into something truly magical.
Hosted by Gloria MacDonald, the Sourdough Sorceress, this show blends stories, science, and a sprinkle of sourdough magic to help you bake better bread, nourish your body, and fall in love with the slow, satisfying art of sourdough.
Each episode dives into:
- The health benefits of sourdough and long fermentation
- The why behind the process—from starters and fermentation to flavor and texture
- Practical tips, techniques, and troubleshooting for real home kitchens
- Creative ideas for using sourdough beyond bread, including discard recipes and seasonal bakes
- The deeper joy of slowing down, baking with intention, and sharing food with the people you love
Whether you’re brand new to sourdough or a seasoned baker looking for fresh inspiration, Sourdough Sorcery is your cozy companion in the kitchen—here to make sourdough feel approachable, empowering, and a little bit magical.
New episodes serve up knowledge, encouragement, and plenty of crusty inspiration to help you bake with confidence and create loaves you’re proud to share.
Learn more, explore recipes, and discover tools of the trade at SourdoughSorcery.com.
Sourdough Sorcery
Bulk Ferment vs. Proofing vs. Cold Ferment: Finally Understanding Your Sourdough Timing
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
If you’ve ever felt confused about bulk fermentation, proofing, and cold fermenting… you are not alone.
And more importantly—this confusion is one of the biggest reasons your sourdough might be turning out dense, gummy, or just not quite right.
In this episode, we’re breaking it all down in a simple, no-guesswork way so you can finally understand what’s actually happening in your dough—and when.
You’ll learn:
- What bulk fermentation really is (and when it actually starts)
- Why stretch and folds are part of bulk—not separate from it
- The difference between bulk fermentation and final proofing
- What cold fermenting really means (and why it’s not a separate step)
- Why the fridge won’t fix under-fermented dough
- What to look for instead of relying on the clock
Because once you understand fermentation, everything changes.
Your sourdough becomes more predictable, your timing becomes more flexible, and your results become so much more consistent.
🎁 Free Resource
Want to take this further and confidently know when your dough is ready?
Grab my free Fermentation Made Simple Guide here:
👉 https://GloriaMacDonald.com/Ferment
If this episode helped you, be sure to follow the podcast so you don’t miss upcoming episodes where we continue to simplify sourdough and make it fit your life.
If you've ever felt confused about sourdough timing, like you're following all the steps but something still isn't quite working, this episode is going to change everything for you. Because today we're talking about bulk fermentation, proofing, and slow cold fermentation. And more importantly, the difference between them, when each one happens, and how they actually work together. Because once you understand this, you stop guessing, and your sourdough becomes so much more predictable, repeatable, and honestly enjoyable. So here's the big picture. Let's simplify this the right way. There really are two main stages. One is bulk fermentation, and two is final proof. And then there's something called cold ferment. But here's the key. Cold fermentation is not a separate step. It's just a way of doing your final proof. So what is bulk fermentation? Bulk fermentation is the first rise. It starts the moment you mix your dough and it continues all the way until shaping. Your dough is still in one mass in the bowl. This is where your bread is being built. So let's get some clarity around this because now this is where a lot of confusion comes in. You'll hear bulk fermentation starts after stretch and folds, but that's not actually true. Bulk fermentation starts the moment flour and water are combined. So what are stretch and folds? There's simply a technique happening during bulk fermentation. They help structure gluten, build structure, sorry, they help strengthen gluten, build structure, and support gas retention. So think of it like this: you mix your dough and bulk fermentation begins. Stretch and folds are part of bulk fermentation. The rest time after stretch and folds are still bulk fermentation. Bulk fermentation ends when you shape your dough. There's no separate pre-bulk phase. Why does this matter? Well, if you mentally separate stretch and folds from bulk fermentation, you're not necessarily going to overferment your dough, but you're more likely to misunderstand where your dough is in the process. And that often leads to shaping too early or dough that hasn't fully developed and underfermented results. What's happening during bulk fermentation? Well, yeast is actively producing gas, dough is rising and expanding, gluten is developing and strengthening, and this is where structure is created. So the real consequence is if bulk fermentation isn't complete, you get a dense crumb, gummy structure, and a poor rise, and you cannot fix that later. So what should you look for during bulk fermentation? Forget the clock. Watch your dough. You're looking for about a 75% rise, not necessarily doubling. You're looking for a smoother, slightly domed surface, you're looking for visible bubbles forming and a light, airy, slightly jiggly feel in your dough. That's your signal, not time. So now let's talk about bulk fermentation versus proofing and clearing up this terminology. Because this is where another big part of confusion comes in. The word proofing, because people use it for everything. Here's the simple truth: there are two proofing stages. Number one is bulk fermentation. That's the first proof. It happens after mixing, before shaping, and it builds structure. Number two is the final proof or second proof. It happens after shaping and right before baking. It prepares the dough for the oven. So the distinction is simple. Before shaping is bulk fermentation, after shaping is final proof. So why do people get confused? Well, you'll you'll hear terms like let it proof, bulk proof, second rise, and they're often used inconsistently. So instead of focusing on the words, focus on the stage. If your dough is in the bowl, it is bulk fermenting. If it's shaped, it is final proofing. Now let's talk about what cold fermentation is. It's not separate, it's simply the final proof stage, but in the refrigerator. So to say it simply, cold fermentation is slow final proofing. There are two ways to final proof. Once your dough is shaped, you have two options. Number one is room temperature final proof. It's faster, it's usually one to three hours, it's more active fermentation, and it's for a same-day bake. Slow cold fermentation is in the fridge. It's obviously slower, it's usually eight to maybe 48 hours, it gives you deeper flavor and flexible timing. So to me, slow cold fermenting is so powerful because it gives you better flavor, easier scoring, and a flexible baking schedule. And there are some additional health benefits to it as well. So the biggest mistake people think I'll just let it finish proofing in the fridge. But the fridge slows everything down. If your dough wasn't ready when it went in the refrigerator, it won't magically be ready when it comes out. Here's the golden rule: bulk fermentation must be complete before shaping, before refrigeration. Cold ferment enhances, it does not fix. So, how it all works together. Bulk fermentation builds your dough, final proofing prepares it for baking. Cold fermentation gives you flavor and flexibility. Here's a simple analogy. Think of it like this bulk fermenting equals building the house. Final proofing is like staging the house, and cold fermentation is putting it on pause before showing your house. Let's give you a real life example. If you want to bake fresh bread for dinner tomorrow, you would in the morning today feed your starter, then around midday, once your starter is activated, you'd mix your dough. In the afternoon, you'd bulk ferment, including the stretch and folds, and then you'd shape your dough in the late afternoon, maybe early evening, but it's all going to depend upon your timing, the temperature in your kitchen, and when you see that rise, it's 75%, it's light, there are visible bubbles, and your dough is jiggly. Then you'd put your you'd shape your dough and you put it into the refrigerator overnight. And then the next day you bake whenever you want to on your schedule. This is a huge confidence shift. Once you understand this, you stop asking, how long should I ferment, and start asking, what is my dough telling me? That's when sourdough becomes predictable, repeatable, and stress-free. If your sourdough has been inconsistent, it's probably not your recipe. It's that these stages have been blurred together, separate them, understand them, and everything starts to click. If this episode helped simplify things for you, I've created something that will take it even further. My free fermentation made simple guide. Inside, I walk you through exactly how to read your starter, exactly how to read your dough, and how to confidently know when everything is ready. So you're not guessing, you're just baking. You can grab my fermentation made simple guide at gloriamacdonald.com slash ferment. And if you enjoyed this episode, make sure you subscribe so you don't miss the next one. Because once you understand fermentation, everything in sourdough starts to feel a whole lot easier.