The End of Bromate: What It Really Means for Flour, Dough, and the Future of Baking
Potassium bromate has quietly defined the performance standard for flour, especially in the United States. It makes dough stronger, more forgiving, and easier to scale.
Now that bromate is being phased out or restricted due to health concerns, the industry is facing a reality that many underestimated:
Bromate wasn’t just an additive – it was a compensation system.
And replacing that system is far more complex than removing a line item from a formula. Without it, the true differences in flour quality, milling, and formulation are being exposed.
Understanding Bromate at a Molecular Level
At its core, dough performance comes down to gluten structure. To understand the impact of the removal of bromate, we need to start with gluten chemistry.
Gluten is formed primarily from two proteins: gliadin (extensibility) and glutenin (strength). These proteins contain sulfhydryl groups (-SH), which can be oxidized to form disulfide bonds (-S-S-) – the backbone of a strong dough network.
When Oxidation Occurs
- Hydrogen is removed
- Sulfur atoms bond together
- A stronger, more elastic gluten matrix forms
This transformation is what allows dough to:
- Retain gas
- Expand during fermentation
- Hold structure during baking
Bromate’s role was to control this reaction over time.
What Made Bromate So Effective
Not all oxidizers behave the same – and this is where bromate is uniquely powerful.
Bromate is a late-stage oxidizer, meaning:
- It activates slowly after hydration
- It releases oxygen gradually
- It strengthens gluten progressively during fermentation
This timing is critical.
It allows dough to:
- Expand first (as gas develops)
- Strengthen later (to hold that expansion)
The result is a dough that is:
- Elastic but not tight
- Strong but still extensible
- Highly tolerant of variation in process
It also explains why bromated flour was so forgiving. Whether in a high-volume bakery or a less controlled environment, it consistently delivered results.
Why Replacing Bromate Isn’t Straightforward
With bromate gone, mills have turned to alternatives like:
- Ascorbic acid (vitamin C)
- Enzyme systems (amylases, oxidases, etc.)
- Chemical conditioners
But these operate on a completely different timeline and fundamentally change the system.
Early Oxidation vs Late Oxidation
Ascorbic acid and many enzyme systems are early oxidizers:
- They react within minutes of mixing
- They rapidly form disulfide bonds
- They “lock in” dough structure almost immediately
From a chemistry standpoint, this creates a problem.
Instead of allowing gradual gluten development:
- The network becomes fully tightened too early
- Gas expansion is restricted
- Dough becomes rigid or overly elastic
In long fermentation – especially the 24-72 hour cycles common in modern pizza making – this can result in dough that feels:
- Dense
- Tight
- Resistant to shaping
In other words, the structure is built before the dough has had time to develop.
The Hidden Challenge: Consistency
Enzymes themselves add another layer of complexity:
- They are temperature-sensitive (optimal around 24-26°C)
- Their activity drops in cold fermentation
- Their interaction depends on particle size and starch damage
If flour isn’t milled with precision:
- Enzymes act unevenly
- Fine particles are over-processed
- Coarser particles are under-processed
The Real Shift: From Forgiveness to Precision
Without bromate, flour is no longer a safety net.
Bakers now have to compensate for:
- Less forgiving dough
- Narrower margins for error
- Greater sensitivity to time, temperature, and mixing
This is why many operators are already experiencing:
- Increased variability
- More frequent dough failures
- Greater reliance on technical skill
In short, the margin for error has narrowed.
The Caputo Model – and a Different Philosophy
While much of the industry is now trying to replace bromate with new systems, Caputo represents a completely different philosophy – one that never depended on it in the first place.
The Caputo Model is built on three pillars:
- Wheat selection
- Milling precision
- Zero reliance on additives – no bromate, no conditioners, no enzymes
Why Caputo Performs Differently
The most misunderstood aspect of flour performance is milling. At Caputo, milling is not just a step – it is the foundation.
Caputo’s approach is fundamentally different because it addresses performance at the source, not after the fact.
Slow Milling, By Design
Caputo uses a slow, controlled milling process designed to:
- Preserve starch integrity
- Maintain protein structure
- Avoid excessive starch damage
This is critical because damaged starch and inconsistent particles directly affect:
- Water absorption
- Enzyme activity
- Fermentation behavior
Fast, high-output milling – common in many systems – prioritizes efficiency, but sacrifices control.
Caputo does the opposite.
1. Strength Comes from Wheat, Not Additives
Perhaps the most defining aspect of the Caputo Model is this:
Everything starts with wheat – and ends there.
Instead of relying on oxidizers, Caputo develops flour performance through:
- Careful selection of wheat varieties
- Balancing protein quality (not just quantity)
- Blending at the kernel level before milling
This creates a gluten network that naturally develops over time – without forced oxidation.
It eliminates the need for:
- Microdosing
- Post-milling correction
- Complex additive systems
And more importantly, it creates a dough that behaves naturally.
2. Granulation Consistency
One of the most overlooked advantages is how Caputo blends.
Rather than blending finished flours or micro-ingredients:
- Caputo blends wheat kernels before milling
This ensures:
- Homogeneous composition
- Uniform particle behavior
- Consistent hydration and fermentation response
Granulation consistency – the precise distribution of particle sizes in the flour, is where many modern systems struggle:
- Fine particles hydrate quickly and react aggressively
- Coarse particles hydrate slowly and react less
When granulation is inconsistent:
- Dough develops unevenly
- Additives and enzymes act unpredictably
- Results vary from batch to batch
Caputo’s level of control is not easy to replicate – it requires:
- Specialized mill design
- Process discipline
- Decades of refinement
3. A Natural Development Curve
Because Caputo flour isn’t driven by early oxidizers:
- Gluten develops gradually
- Dough remains extensible throughout fermentation
- Gas expansion happens naturally, without resistance
This closely mirrors the functional benefits that bromate once provided – but without the chemical dependency.
4. Built for Modern Fermentation
Today’s operators increasingly rely on:
- Cold fermentation
- 24-48 hour dough cycles
- Flexible production schedules
Caputo flour is inherently suited to this:
- No reliance on temperature-sensitive enzyme activation
- Stable performance across fermentation timelines
- Consistent results without reformulation
The Future of Flour Is Not Additive-Driven
The industry is at a turning point.
The removal of bromate has exposed a key truth: you can’t fully replicate time-based gluten development with instant chemical reactions.
Some mills will adapt through increasingly complex additive systems. Others will struggle with consistency.
But the long-term direction is clear:
- Less dependence on chemical correction
- Greater emphasis on raw material quality
- More sophisticated milling and blending practices
Final Thought
Bromate made flour easier to use, but it also masked underlying variability. Now that it’s gone, the difference between flours is no longer hidden.
And in that environment, the mills that lead won’t be the ones trying to recreate the past – they’ll be the ones who never relied on it in the first place.
That’s where Caputo stands.
