Hydration × flour

80% Hydration First Clear Flour

Very open irregular crumb with large holes. Very moist, glossy. Focaccia-like texture when pan-baked.

⚠ Outside First Clear Flour's typical range (6678%) — read below for handling

Is 80% hydration right for First Clear Flour?

First Clear Flour's workable hydration range is 6678%. Its absorption multiplier is 1.03× bread flour. 80% is above First Clear Flour's typical range. The dough will be slack and may not hold shape in a free-form hearth loaf. Either reduce hydration to 78%, or blend First Clear Flour (40–60%) with bread flour for structural support.

Absorption math for First Clear Flour at 80%

A recipe written for bread flour at 80% hydration, when substituted with 100% First Clear Flour, becomes 82% effective hydration (because First Clear Flour absorbs 3% more water). Treat it as a strengthening flour, not a standalone. In rye blends, follow the rye's handling (short bulk, minimal knead). For bagels, work stiff and low-hydration. Its slightly weaker gluten rewards gentle, thorough mixing over aggressive kneading.

Technique at 80% hydration

Dough is sticky and slack. Requires 4+ coil folds. Wet hands throughout all handling. Shape only after cold retard. Free-form shaping becomes difficult — consider pan shapes.

Calculator pre-set to 80%

Weights below assume 100% First Clear Flour. For blends, use the main calculator on a recipe page.

Flour to add
450 g
Water to add
350 g
Salt
10 g
Levain @ 100%
100 g
Total dough
910 g
Effective hydration
80%
How the math works

Total water = flour × hydration %. Your levain contributes 50 g flour + 50 g water — both count toward the totals. You add only the remainder as fresh flour and water.

Salt % is computed on total flour weight, not final-dough flour.

Open 80% hydration guide →

Sources: BAKERpedia — Clear Flour; Hamelman, Bread (3rd ed.); Robertson, Tartine Bread.