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BAKING BASICS

BAKING BASICS. Ingredients and Techniques for Baking. Bell Ringer. What are your favorite baked goods?. Ingredient Basics. Flour Liquid Leavening Agents Fat Sweeteners Eggs Flavoring. Flour. Proteins and starch you find in nearly every baked product

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BAKING BASICS

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  1. BAKING BASICS Ingredients and Techniques for Baking

  2. Bell Ringer • What are your favorite baked goods?

  3. Ingredient Basics • Flour • Liquid • Leavening Agents • Fat • Sweeteners • Eggs • Flavoring

  4. Flour • Proteins and starch you find in nearly every baked product • The protein in flour is called gluten • What is Gluten: Protein that affects the texture of baked products. This gives a baked product it’s structure

  5. The role of gluten • Gluten develops as flour is mixed with liquid • Forms strong, elastic strands that crisscross in a springy mesh of tiny cells • As the product bakes cells expand with heated air or gas • Kind of like blowing a bubble

  6. The role of gluten • The longer the mixing time, the stronger the gluten will be • Cakes: quickly combined • Smooth, melt in your mouth texture • Yeast breads: dough is worked for ten minutes • very elastic framework and a more chewy texture

  7. Types of Flour • All-Purpose Flour • Whole wheat • Bread Flour • Cake Flour • Gluten Flour

  8. All Purpose Flour • Seen mostly in retail stores • Most popular in American Kitchen • Formulated to be weaker than bread flour so it can be used for pastries • Whole-wheat flour • Includes the germ and the bran • Dense and heavier • Self rising flour • Added baking powder and salt

  9. Bread Flour • Strong gluten level • Used for making breads, hard rolls, or any product that requires high gluten

  10. Cake Flour • Low gluten • Pure white color • Used for cakes and other delicate baked goods

  11. Gluten Flour • High protein flour from hard wheat • Never used alone • Often added to dough • i.e. bagels and rye

  12. Liquids • Plays role of physical & chemical changes • Gluten can not be formed without liquid • Milk and Water are most commonly used

  13. Proportion of Liquid to Flour • The amount of liquid in relation to the amount of flour affects the texture and rising • Dough • Soft dough • Yeast breads and rolled biscuits • Stiff dough • Piecrusts and some cookies • Batters • Pour batters • Cakes, pancakes, waffles • Drop batters • Quick breads and cookies

  14. Leavening Agents • This triggers a chemical reaction causing a baked product to rise • Common Leavening Agents • Air • Steam • Yeast • Baking Soda • Baking Powder

  15. Types of Leavening Agents • Air: trapped air in mixture expands when the product is heated. • Air is added when products are beaten & sifted • Ex: Angel food is mainly leavened by beaten egg whites • Steam: As a product bakes, temperature of the water rises and steam is formed. The steam expands which causes product to rise. • Ex: Cream puffs & popovers

  16. Baking Soda • Chemical opposite of an acid: base • Reacts chemically with an acidic liquid in the recipe to produce CO2 • Ie: buttermilk, honey, chocolate • Remember Volcanoes?

  17. Baking Powder • Baking soda + dry acid (cream of tartar) • So no liquid acid is needed

  18. Yeast • Fungus that thrives on moisture and warmth • Feeds on simple sugars in flour and sweeteners • Gives off CO2 & aroma • Active dry yeast • Partially dormant yeast in flour granules • Quick rising yeast • Works in ½ the time • Compressed yeast • Combo of yeast and starch

  19. Eggs • Add flavor, nutrients, richness, color, and structure to baked products. • When beaten eggs add air to mixture • To reduce fat add 2 egg whites in place of 1 whole egg

  20. Q. If you bake a Cake and it doesn’t rise what may have happened?

  21. Fat • Adds richness, flavor, and tenderness to baked products. They can be solid or liquid • Types of fat • Shortening • Butter or Margarine • Oils • Lard

  22. Sweeteners • Helps make products tender, adds sweetness and flavor, and helps crust brown. (Sugar is most commonly used) • Types • Granulated white sugar • Brown sugar • Honey • Corn syrup • Powder Sugar • Molasses

  23. Flavoring • Fruits, vegetables, and nuts add nutrients to baked goods • Extracts are flavorings in liquid form (Vanilla and Almond are common)

  24. Quick breads vs yeast Breads • Quick Breads • Leavened by agents that allow immediate baking • Air, steam, baking soda, and baking powder • Yeast breads • Leavened with yeast

  25. Quick Breads • Quick breads are quick and easy to make. They don’t require kneading and usually use baking powder as a leavening agent. • High in carbohydrates, protein, B vitamins and iron. Some quick breads can be high in fat. • Examples of quick breads are muffins, biscuits, pancakes, corn bread, and fruit breads

  26. Quick Breads Made by Two Methods • Muffin Method • Biscuit Method

  27. Muffin Method • Muffin method: • Mix all dry ingredients in one bowl and make a well in the center. • Mix all liquid ingredients in separate bowl and then pour them in the dry ingredient bowl. • Do not over mix • Mixture should be lumpy • A properly mixed muffin should have a rounded, pebbly top

  28. Steps in the muffin method • Sift • All dry ingredients and make a well in the center • Beat • All liquid ingredients • Pour • Liquid into the well and mix just enough to moisten all ingredients • Fold • Ingredients such as chopped nuts, raisins, berries

  29. Loaf Breads • Many quick loaf breads are mixed in the same manner as muffins. • Usually baked in greased loaf pans. • If bread contains fruits or nuts, the bottom of the pan should be lined with parchment paper.

  30. Testing for doneness • Muffins • Lightly browned with rounded, pebbly tops • Loaf breads • Lightly browned and have pulled away slightly from the sides of the pan • Pancakes • Ready to turn when edges look dry and bubbles form and break

  31. Activity • Leavening agent lab

  32. Quick Breads • Quick breads are quick and easy to make. They don’t require kneading and usually use baking powder as a leavening agent. • High in carbohydrates, protein, B vitamins and iron. Some quick breads can be high in fat. • Examples of quick breads are muffins, biscuits, pancakes, corn bread, and fruit breads

  33. Bell Ringer

  34. Biscuits • Biscuits are delicate, have a crisp crust, and peels apart in tender layers. • 2 kinds of biscuits: • Rolled- rolling out dough ½ inch thick and cutting with a biscuit cutter. If you do not have a biscuit cutter, use the rim of a water glass. • Dropped- dough is dropped with spoon. These contain more liquid and are too sticky to roll. - Both are made using the pastry and biscuit method of mixing.

  35. Pastry and Biscuit Methods • In the pastry and biscuit method the fat is cut-in tothe flour. • To cut in means to mix solid fat and flour using a pastry blender or 2 knives in a cutting direction.

  36. Troubleshooting Quick Breads

  37. Bell WorkWhat is a favorite family recipe or dish ?

  38. Yeast Breads

  39. Yeast breads • Leavened by yeast… (yes unbelievable) • Dough must be well kneaded and allowed to rise

  40. About Yeast • Single celled, microscopic plant. • When you add sugar to yeast, it reacts to the bacteria and creates carbon dioxide. This leavens the baked product. (fermentation) • Water mixed with yeast MUST be between 110 and 125 degrees in order to keep the yeast alive. • Available in three forms: • Active dry (what we use) - Compressed (very perishable) - Fast rising yeast (rises twice as fast)

  41. Kinds of yeast breads • Basic white bread • Made only with all-purpose flour, yeast, slat, sugar, fat and water or milk • Batter Bread • Made like basic white bread, but with more liquid. The batter is beaten so the texture is not as light as kneaded yeast bread • Sweet white bread • Uses basic white bread ingredients plus butter, eggs, extra sugar, and sometimes nuts and fruits. Pecan rolls and coffee cakes are examples

  42. Kinds of yeast breads • Whole grain bread • Made with whole grain flour which replaces part or all of the all purpose four in basic white bread. • Sourdough bread • Leavened with sourdough starter. This well-fermented mixture of yeast, water and flour gives a tangy flavor and chewy texture.

  43. Making yeast breads • Mixing the dough • Conventional method: • The yeast is first dissolved in warm water to activate growth • Dissolve the yeast in water about 105 to 115ºF • Quick Mix Method • Combines dry yeast with the dry ingredients • Liquids must be warmer

  44. Yeast and Kneading • After forming the dough for yeast breads, you MUST knead it!!!! • Almost all of the gluten forms during the kneading stage. • It is important to not add too much extra flour while kneading. This will make the dough far too stiff.

  45. Kneading bread • To the video….. • Sprinkle surface and hands with flour • Flatten dough slightly • With heels of hands…press and push away from you • Pull the far side towards you (trapping air) • Rotate dough one quarter turn • 8 to 10 minutes

  46. Yeast and Fermentation • After you knead the dough, what do you do??? • Letting the dough rise… • When you let it rest in a warm place, the yeast acts upon the sugar and the carbon dioxide causes the bread to rise. This is called FERMENTATION! • The bread should at least double in size during fermentation

  47. Letting the dough rise • Quick-rise yeast • Can bake with only one rise • Traditional method • Must rise twice • Once after kneading and again after it is shaped

  48. Letting the dough rise • Place dough in a large, lightly greased bowl (dough will double in size) • Turn dough so greased side is up and cover with plastic wrap • Cover with a towel • Choose a warm place for the dough to rise 75 to 85ºF is ideal

  49. Letting the dough rise • Allow dough to double in size • To test • Polk the dough about ½ inch into surface • If a dent remains the dough is ready to shape • If it springs back… let it rise longer

  50. Punching Down! • When the dough has risen all the way and has doubled in size, you have to punch it down to release some of the carbon dioxide. • Some doughs require a second rising period.

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