Recipe calls for fresh yeast but you've got instant? Swap confidently between active dry, instant (rapid-rise), and fresh yeast — by weight, so your dough rises just the way it should.
| Instant / rapid-rise | — |
|---|---|
| Active dry | — |
| Fresh / cake | — |
Rule of thumb: a standard 7 g packet of instant or active dry yeast ≈ 2¼ teaspoons. Active dry traditionally gets dissolved in warm liquid first; instant can go straight into the flour.
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Between baking sourdough and the occasional enriched loaf, I keep running into recipes that call for a kind of yeast I don't have on the shelf. One recipe wants fresh cake yeast, another assumes instant, and the packet in my drawer is active dry. Instead of giving up on a recipe over which yeast it names, I made this converter so you can swap one for another and get the amount right. Tell it what you have and what the recipe wants, and it does the conversion.
Here's how the three types relate and how each one actually behaves, because the amount is only half the story.
The three common baking yeasts are active dry, instant (also sold as rapid-rise or bread-machine yeast), and fresh (cake) yeast. The rough working ratios I use are:
These are working approximations, not lab numbers. Yeast is forgiving, and a small difference mostly changes how fast the dough rises, not whether it works.
The big practical difference is how you add each one to your dough.
A standard packet of dry yeast is 7 grams, which is about 2¼ teaspoons. That's true for both active dry and instant packets, so when a recipe just says "one packet," that's your number. If you buy yeast in a jar instead of packets, measuring out 2¼ teaspoons gives you the equivalent of one packet. Knowing this saves a lot of squinting at recipes that mix "packets" and "teaspoons" in the same ingredient list.
If you want bread to put all this yeast to work in, I share what I bake on my recipes page. And if you like these little kitchen helpers, browse my other free tools.
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