Kneading & Gluten Development
Building the protein network that gives bread structure, chew, and the ability to trap fermentation gases
Kneading is the mechanical process of aligning and cross-linking the two proteins in wheat flour — glutenin and gliadin — into a cohesive, elastic network called gluten. The goal is to develop this network to the right degree for your bread type: well-developed for shaped rolls, less developed for open-crumb artisan loaves. Gluten development happens through three mechanisms: mechanical kneading, enzymatic activity during fermentation, and hydration over time — a good bread recipe uses all three.