Fresh Yeast
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See main entry on Yeast for how Yeast Cream is grown.
Yeast cream is pressed through filters to form more solid matter, which is then compressed into small cakes about 1/2 ounce (15 g), or larger bricks about the size of a pound of butter. Most of us will just see the small cakes, wrapped in foil, in chillers at our supermarkets. The cakes should be firm and moist, easy to crumble and putty-coloured. Any that are dry when you get them home, take back, because stale yeast can make your bread taste sour.
Purists sniff at using dried yeasts, and will only use fresh. They say that it makes supple doughs with a subtle fragrance. And if you're such a purist, I don't blame you: I mean, I'm sure you've also ground your own flour and churned your own butter, so of course you have every right to be picky.
Generally, 1 cake is used for 1 loaf of bread. Fresh yeast has no "lag" phase, in which it needs to come back to life in water. It is live.
Cooking Tips for Fresh Yeast
Substitutes for Fresh Yeast
5 g fresh yeast = 1 teaspoon dry yeast
To convert fresh yeast measures to measures for active dry yeast, multiply x .4 (Rose Levy Beranbaum, in her Bread Bible book, says multiply by .32)
Storage Hints for Fresh Yeast
History Notes for Fresh Yeast
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Other entries for: Yeast
Active Dry Yeast, Bread Machine Yeast, Brewer's Yeast, Compressed Yeast, Cream Yeast, Fast Action Bread Yeast, Fresh Yeast, Inactive Yeast, Instant Yeast, Koji Yeast, Torula Yeast
Other entries for: Leaveners
Chemical Leaveners, Starters



