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Breads

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roll the dough 8 to 10 times or pat into a circle, cut with a biscuit cutter, up ... Too much pressure at the beginning will keep dough ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Breads


1
Breads
2
Selecting and storing baked products
  • - quick breads,
    yeast breads, cakes, cookie, and pies
  • Freshly baked items
  • Brown-and-serve baked goods
  • Refrigerated
  • Frozen doughs and baked goods
  • Storing - room temperature or freezer,

3
Cost of baked products
  • Depends on the amount of
  • Breads - size, extra ingredients, and

4
Quick breads
5
Types
  • range in consistency from thin
    to stiff liquids
  • - thin batter - larger
    amount of liquid and small amount of fat
  • pancakes and popovers
  • - stiff batter - high
    proportion of flour, can drop them from a spoon
  • biscuits and muffins

6
Types cont.
  • higher proportion of flour,
    stiff enough to shape by hand
  • - shortcake and biscuits
  • - rolled cookies and
    pastry

7
Ingredients
  • - give structure to baked products
  • All-purpose flour -
  • Self-rising - all-purpose flour with leavening
    agent and salt

  • ingredients that produce gases thin batters and
    doughs
  • Gases rise the product -
  • Baking soda and baking powder
  • Carbon dioxides, steam and air

8
Ingredients cont.
  • - hydrate the protein
    and starch in flour, moisten or dissolve
    ingredients, create steam
  • Proteins and water will later form
  • Water, milk, juice, eggs, and fats
  • - tenderizing agent
  • Fat coats the flour and forms

9
Ingredients cont.
  • - help incorporate air into baked
    products when you beat them
  • Add color, flavor, and structure
  • Egg proteins coagulate and give batter/dough
    elasticity and structure
  • - sweetness, tenderize, helps
    crust brown
  • - flavor

10
Food science principles
  • protein that give strength an
    elasticity to batters and dough and structure to
    baked products
  • Quick breads light and tender, mix them for only
    a short time and handle them carefully
  • strokes
  • -
    double-acting baking powders - release some
    carbon dioxide when moistened but most released
    when heated

11
Preparing biscuits
  • - sifting dry
    ingredients, pastry blender to cut fat in, add
    liquid all at once, stir until the dough form a
    ball
  • - use spoon
  • - roll the dough 8
    to 10 times or pat into a circle, cut with a
    biscuit cutter, up and down motions (no twisting)

12
Preparing biscuits cont.
  • - low volume, rounded
    top, slightly rough crust
  • - low volume, rounded
    smooth top, tough and compact

13
Preparing muffins
  • - mix dry
    ingredients, make a well in the center of dry
    ingredients, in separate bowl combine beaten
    eggs with milk and oil, pour into the well, stir
    just until the dry ingredients are moistened
    (hardly no stirring)
  • Waffles, pancakes, popovers, and some coffee
    cakes

14
Preparing muffins cont.
  • - low volume, flat top, crumb
    is course
  • - peaked top, slick crust,
    broken apart narrow open areas called tunnels

15
Preparing popovers
  • - can be filled
  • Do not open the door because it can cause the
    steam to leave the popover and collapse
  • Popover should be crispy
  • with moist inside

16
Preparing cream puffs
  • with crisp
    walls - filled
  • Elongated cream puff filled with custard
    éclairs
  • Require special
  • Bringing water and fat to boil, add flour, stir
    vigorously over low heat until the mixture forms
    a ball, remove from heat, stir in eggs until
    mixture is smooth
  • Cook at high temp then back it down - will allow
    the middle to finish cooking

17
Yeast breads
18
Ingredients
  • Flour
  • flour
  • - larger amounts
    of gliadin and glutenin - stronger and more
    elastic gluten
  • Whole wheat or nonwheat flour (rye, soy, corn,
    and oat) lower protein - produce denser loaf

19
Ingredients cont.
  • Liquid
  • Warm liquids used in
  • Too kills the yeast cells
  • Too temp can slow or stop yeast
    activity
  • - regulates the action of yeast
    and inhibits the action of certain enzymes in
    the flour
  • Dough is sticky and hard to handle - with

20
Ingredients cont.
  • - microscopic, single-celled
    plant used as leavening agent
  • yeast - made from fresh,
    moist yeast cells that are pressed into cakes,
    must refrigerate
  • yeast - has been dried and
    made into granules
  • yeast - highly active
    yeast, smaller granules
  • For best result - buy new, small amounts when
    needed, refrigerator when not using

21
Ingredients cont.
  • - browning, flavor, texture, food
    for the yeast
  • - tenderness
  • - flavor, richness, color, and
    structure
  • Other ingredients

22
Mixing methods
  • Traditional method
  • Dissolve yeast in small amount of
  • Add remaining liquid, sugar, fat, salt, and some
    flour
  • If called for egg add at this time
  • Add remain flour to form a soft dough
  • Allowed to

23
Mixing methods cont.
  • One-rise method
  • Requires
  • Mix yeast with some flour and all of the dry
    ingredients
  • Heat liquid and fat together
  • Add warm liquid to
  • If called for egg add at this time
  • Add remain flour to form a
  • Knead the dough
  • Cover and allow it to rest for

24
Mixing methods cont.
  • Mixer method
  • Use a mixer instead of a
  • Other step are the same as
  • Shortens the kneading time

25
Mixing methods cont.
  • (no-kneading method)
  • Uses less flour, so yeast mixture is thinner than
    dough
  • , rather
    than kneading
  • Requires two rising - first in bowl, second in
    pan

26
Food science principles
  • - press the dough with
    the heels of the hands, fold it, and turn it
  • Repeat until dough is smooth and elastic
  • Avoid adding too much extra flour - will make the
  • Too much pressure at the beginning will keep
    dough
  • Too much pressure at the end can tear or break
    the

27
Food science principles cont.
  • yeast
    acts on the sugars in the bread dough to form
    alcohol and carbon dioxide
  • After kneading must allow to rest
  • Should double in
  • into the
    dough, if the print stays, then the dough is
    ready

28
Food science principles cont.
  • - punch
    dough down to release carbon dioxide
  • Firmly pushing a fist into the dough
  • Fold edges of dough toward the center and turn
    the dough over so the smooth side is on top
  • May require a second rising

29
Food science principles cont.
  • Shaping
  • Use sharp knife to cut into sections - allow to
    rest for
  • Baking
  • - first few minutes
    of baking, dough will rise dramatically
  • - remove from pan and
    place it on cooling racks
  • Let cool before cutting

30
Food science principles cont.
  • Characteristics of yeast bread
  • , smooth,
    rounded top, golden brown
  • - fine, and
    uniform, crumb is tender and elastic, springs
    back when touched

31
Timesaving yeast bread techniques
  • -
    designed to rise slowly in the refrigerator
  • Everything is the same except you place in pan
    and let it rise in the refrigerator for
  • Refrigerator doughs
  • Let it rise in refrigerator and shape after,
    shape the dough,

32
Timesaving yeast bread techniques cont.
  • doughs
  • Mix and knead the dough - freeze the dough before
    or after shaping
  • Store up to one month
  • Let thaw, shape, rise, and bake
  • machines
  • Follow recipe directions that come with the
    machine
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