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Published byMolly Hope Parks Modified over 8 years ago
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Flour Liquid Leavening agents Fat Sweeteners Eggs Flavoring
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Protein and starch in the flour give structure Gluten- a protein that affects the texture and helps determine how the product will rise ◦ Gluten develops when flour is moistened and mixed, and hold the leavening agents ◦ Starch helps absorb some of the liquid that is added in most recipes
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All-purpose flour- the most popular, good results for most products Cake flour- contains less gluten and gives cakes a tender structure
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Water and milk are the most common ◦ Eggs and fat too Hydrate the protein and starch to form the gluten Moistens and dissolves ingredients Leavening agent when converted to steam Milk adds flavor and nutrients
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Leavening agent- substance that produces gas in batters and doughs to make baked products rise and become light Three leavening gases are air, steam, and carbon dioxide Beating eggs, creaming fat and sugar together, folding doughs, and beating batters incorporates air
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Air: Is trapped when creaming fat and sugar, sifting flour, adding beaten egg whites ◦ When the mixture is heated, the air expands and the product rises Steam: leavens products that contain high amounts of water ◦ Water heats as the product bakes and turns to steam and causes the product to rise
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Yeast: produces carbon dioxide as it grows ◦ Needs food (flour and sugar), liquid, and warm temperature
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Baking Soda: when mixed with flour and heated releases carbon dioxide ◦ Can produce an off flavor and color, so it is usually combined with an acidic ingredient Baking Powder: contain a dry acid, baking soda, and starch or flour ◦ Double acting baking powder- release some carbon dioxide when moistened, and the rest when heated ◦ Too much baking powder can cause a product to collapse
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Adds richness, flavor, and tenderness Usually cannot be eliminated, but can be substituted or reduced ◦ Applesauce or pureed dry fruits Solid and liquid fats are not easily substituted with each other ◦ Example: oil instead of shortening
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Add flavor, richness, nutrients, and color Help form structure Add air when beaten Can use substitutes such as just egg whites or liquid substitutes
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Sugar adds sweetness and flavor, helps crust brown Fruits, vegetables, and nuts add flavor, texture, and nutrients ◦ Herbs, spices, and extracts in small amounts
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Amount of liquid in relation to flour determines batter or dough Pour batters: steady stream ◦ Cakes, pancakes, waffles Drop batters: thick, spooned in pans ◦ Quick breads and cookies Soft doughs: sticky ◦ Biscuits, breads, cookies Stiff doughs: firm ◦ Piecrust and cookies
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Correct amount of flour gives the correct amount of gluten needed for structure Correct amounts of fat and sugar tenderize the gluten ◦ Too much weakens the cake Correct amount of liquid provides moisture for the gluten to form Correct number of eggs gives proteins that strengthen the gluten
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Mix the correct proportions of ingredients with the correct mixing method Over mixing will cause the gluten to overdevelop, it will be tough
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Cream fat and sugar together until light and fluffy Beat eggs into creamed fat and sugar Add dry ingredients alternately with liquid ingredients Dry ingredients are usually sifted together in a separate bowl
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Choose the appropriate size pan The cake will have a gently rounded top if using the correct size pan Grease and flour the pans, bottom and sides Place in preheated oven and bake just until done Insert a toothpick in the center and it will come out clean when done
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Good sources of carbohydrates, protein, B vitamins, iron Most common quick breads: ◦ Muffins ◦ Loaf breads ◦ Biscuits
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Prepared using the muffin method of mixing ◦ Properly mixing liquid and dry ingredients ◦ Properly mixed: pebbly and rounded top when cooked
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Sift together dry ingredients in a bowl ◦ Flour, sugar, baking powder, spices Make a well in the center of the dry ingredients Beat all liquid ingredients together in a small bowl until well blended ◦ Eggs, milk, water, oil, melted fat, liquid flavorings Pour the liquid into the well ◦ Mix enough to moisten the dry ingredients ◦ Batter should be lumpy ◦ Few floury spots could remain Fold in ingredients gently ◦ Raisins, chopped nuts, fruit Don’t over mix: ◦ Peaks on top, tough, heavy ◦ Insides will have long narrow tunnels
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Grease muffin pans or use liners Fill 2/3 full Test for doneness 5 minutes before end of cooking time ◦ Insert toothpick, should come out clean ◦ Nicely browned
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Rolled- requires a stiff dough ◦ Cookie cutters are used ◦ Example: sugar cookies Dropped- soft dough ◦ Drop or push off from spoon ◦ Spread more when cooked than rolled cookies, place 2 inches apart on cookie sheet ◦ Example: chocolate chip cookies
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Bar- soft dough ◦ Spread in square pan ◦ Can be chewy or cake like depending on thickness ◦ Example: brownies Refrigerator- high proportion of fat ◦ Form dough into long roll, cover with foil or plastic wrap and refrigerate until firm ◦ Cut in thin slices once firm ◦ Example: pinwheels
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continued Pressed- rich, stiff dough ◦ Pack into cookie press ◦ Press out onto cookie sheet and bake ◦ Example: spritz cookies Molded- stiff dough ◦ Break off small pieces of dough and shape with fingers ◦ Examples: crescents and small balls
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Flour, sugar, liquid, fat, salt, egg, and leavening agents Have more fat and sugar and less liquid than cakes
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Conventional mixing method ◦ Cream fat and sugar, then add eggs, then flour Cookies should be crisp and chewy, rather than light and fluffy
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Flat baking pan or cookie sheet Bright shiny cookie sheets will give a light, delicate brown crust Dark cookie sheets will give dark bottoms May have to rotate pans during cooking to cook evenly is baking more than 1 pan
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2 main types of biscuits: ◦ Rolled and dropped ◦ Made using the pastry and biscuit method of mixing Biscuit mixing method: ◦ Sift dry ingredients together ◦ Cut fat into dry ingredients ◦ Make a well, add liquid, stir until blended to form a soft dough
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Roll out dough to even thickness and cut with biscuit cutter ◦ Can also use rim of a glass Turn out dough on slightly floured surface and knead 10 strokes ◦ Use your fingertips, not your hands as they give off warmth that will cause the fat to melt making the biscuits tough ◦ Overkneading results in tough, compact biscuits Lightly dust biscuit cutter with flour ◦ Place straight down in dough ◦ Do not twist because dough can tear Reroll any unused dough to create more biscuits Place on cookie sheet 1 inch apart and bake
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Drop dough from a spoon More liquid than rolled biscuits ◦ Too sticky to roll Irregular shape ◦ Still flaky and full of flavor like rolled biscuits Drop 1 inch apart on greased cookie sheet Can also spoon drop on a casserole for a topping
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