Steam from a wet loaf in a hot oven is not just cosmetic; it is a small structural reset. What looks like a kitchen hack is actually a targeted assault on starch retrogradation, the molecular process that turned yesterday’s baguette into a club.
The blunt truth is that staling is chemistry, not simple drying. In baked bread, starch granules have been gelatinized, their amylose and amylopectin chains loosened into a flexible, hydrated network. As the loaf rests, those chains realign and crystallize, a process food scientists label retrogradation, squeezing out mobile water and locking the crumb into a rigid matrix. Dry air makes things worse, but the hardness is written into the crystallites themselves.
Reheating with added water does something more radical than a damp towel. Heat pushes the starch back toward a gelatinized state, disrupting part of those crystals and increasing molecular mobility, while injected moisture reoccupies the spaces the chains had expelled it from. The result is a transient re‑plasticization of the crumb, not just a wet crust. Microwave energy or a hot oven both supply the thermal input; the key is driving water into the starch phase, so the glass transition of the biopolymer shifts downward and the network softens. The bread has not been turned fresh again, but for a brief window, the physics has been partially rewound.