Yeast dough is dough (basically a mixture of flour, water, salt) to which yeast (a form of fungi) has been added to cause the dough to 'rise', add in dimension by filling the dough with carbon dioxide given off by the yeast. Dough without yeast does not expand.
no its not
The yeast cells in bread dough ferment sugars and produce gas (carbon dioxide). This makes the dough rise.
Yeast is added to bread along with moisture and sugar, and the dough is kept in a moist, warm environment. During this rising time, the yeast consumes the sugar in the dough and release CO2 gas, which is trapped in the dough and causes the dough to rise. When the dough is baked, the yeast is killed, but the bubbles created by the gas remain.
Yeast. The correct answer, is yeast.
The yeast consumes the natural sugars in the dough and causes bubbles to form. This causes the dough to rise. It's being blown up by the yeast.
Yeast is used to make bread by fermenting the dough.
Adding sugar and yeast to dough will activate the yeast, causing it to feed on the sugar and produce carbon dioxide gas. This gas creates air pockets in the dough, causing it to rise and become light and airy when baked. The sugar also provides food for the yeast to grow and improve the flavor of the dough.
Yeast is a fungus. I wouldn't imagine it would feel anything like play dough.
To show that yeast was responsible for making the dough rise, you can conduct an experiment where you prepare two batches of dough- one with yeast and one without. Allow both doughs to rise, and observe that the dough with yeast rises significantly more due to the yeast's fermentation process producing gases that make the dough expand.
Yeast does go into the bread, but before baking, when the dough is prepared. This is the yeast which allows the dough to rise before being finally baked.
Yeast makes the crust rise.