What Is Amylase?

The Definition

Amylase is an enzyme naturally present in flour (and saliva) that acts as a biological catalyst. Its primary function is to break down complex starches (polysaccharides) into simple sugars (maltose and glucose). Without amylase, the yeast in your sourdough starter would starve, as yeast cannot consume complex starch directly.

The Mechanism

Think of starch as a brick wall and sugar as individual bricks. Yeast can only eat bricks. Amylase is the sledgehammer that breaks the wall down. Sourdough bakers often add malted barley flour (diastatic malt) to increase amylase activity and boost fermentation speed.

Last updated: 6 January, 2026
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