1 / 87

Contemporary Baking

Contemporary Baking. Basic Ingredients. Baking, unlike cooking, leaves little room for error – if a recipe is not followed precisely, the texture and taste will be affected Ingredients include: Flour Liquids Fats Sugar and Sweeteners Eggs Leavening agents Salt Flavorings. Wheat Flour.

rania
Download Presentation

Contemporary Baking

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Contemporary Baking

  2. Basic Ingredients • Baking, unlike cooking, leaves little room for error – if a recipe is not followed precisely, the texture and taste will be affected • Ingredients include: • Flour • Liquids • Fats • Sugar and Sweeteners • Eggs • Leavening agents • Salt • Flavorings

  3. Wheat Flour • Wheat flour is the main ingredient in many baked goods giving them structure • The classification of flour is based on the type of wheat it come from: • Hard wheat • I.e., Bread flour • Has a high gluten content – gluten is a firm, elastic substance that affects the texture of baked goods. Without gluten, a dough would collapse • Soft wheat • I.e., Cake and pastry flour • Has a low gluten content making it perfect for cakes and cookies

  4. Wheat Flour

  5. Liquids • The most common liquids used in baking are water, milk and cream. • Accurate measurement of liquid is important because too much or too little can affect the outcome of the baked product. • For example, adding too much water in pie dough will cause excess gluten formation, which may result in a tough texture.

  6. Liquids • Water • It has many uses besides moistening dry ingredients. • Water is necessary for gluten structure to form in flour. • Water temperature is used to adjust temperatures in dough. • Because water is tasteless, odorless, and colorless, it does not affect the flavor or color of baked products. It also adds no fat or calories.

  7. Liquids • Milk • Its protein, fat, and sugar content make it a valuable addition to baked products, ice creams, and custards. • Milk also improves the flavor and texture of bread and other baked goods.

  8. Liquids • Other Dairy Products used include: • Buttermilk, yogurt and sour cream • These products contain live bacteria that convert milk sugar into acid. The acid in buttermilk, for example, provides a whiter, more tender crumb in biscuits.

  9. Liquids • Cream • Heavy cream has a high fat content. • This fat content allows it to tenderize baked goods. • Cream is often whipped for toppings, chilled desserts, and fillings such as pastry cream. It is used as a liquid ingredient in custards, sauces, and ice creams.

  10. Fats • Fats surround or enclose, the flour particles and prevent long strands of gluten from forming. This tenderizes the baked goods. • Fats also add to the flavor, moistness, browning, flakiness, and leavening, depending on the type of fat. • Solid fats are referred to as shortening. Oils are made solid by a process called hydrogenation. I • In hydrogenation, the oils are made solid by adding hydrogen to the oil.

  11. Fats • Vegetable Shortening • Vegetable shortening has a fairly high melting point, which makes it ideal for forming flaky pie dough. • Oil • Oil is a fat that is extracted from plants such as soybeans, corn, peanuts, and cottonseed. • They are liquid at room temperature and neutral in flavor and color because they are highly refined. • Oil causes baked products to be more tender. • Oil is used in quick breads, some pie crusts, deep-fried products like donuts, and rich cakes like chiffon.

  12. Fats • Butter • Butter can be purchased with or without salt. • Unsalted butter is used in baking because of its pleasant flavor. • Because butter is soft at room temperature, however, doughs made with butter are sometimes hard to handle. • Margarine • Margarine is typically a hydrogenated vegetable oil that has color, flavor, and water added. • While they cannot match butter’s superior flavor, they are less likely to spoil and are usually lower in saturated fat.

  13. Sugar and Sweeteners • Sugars and sweeteners add a sweet, pleasant flavor to baked products. Flavor, however is not their only contribution to, or role in, baking. The other functions of sugars and sweeteners include: • Creating a golden-brown color • Stabilizing mixtures such as beaten egg whites for meringues • Providing food for yeast in yeast breads • Retaining moisture for a longer shelf life. • Tenderizing baked products by weakening the gluten strands • Serving as a base for making icings.

  14. Sugar and Sweeteners • Sugar is produced from sugar cane or sugar beets. • The cane or beet is crushed to extract the juice. • The juice is then filtered and gently heated to evaporate the water. • Through a series of heat-induced steps, the sugar is crystallized and separated from the dark, thick molasses that forms. • It must be refined to produce sugar grains of different sizes.

  15. Molasses Brown Sugar • The thick, sweet, dark liquid made from sugarcane juice • This stronger color and flavor is often desirable in baked products like gingerbread • A soft-textured mixture of white sugar and molasses • It can be light or dark in color • Store in an air-tight container to prevent moisture absorption Sugars and Sweeteners

  16. Granulated Sugar Icing Sugar • Often referred to as extra fine white sugar or table sugar • It is the most common sugar used in the bakeshop • Used in cooked icings, candies and other baked goods • Also known as confectioner's sugar or powdered sugar • It is granulated sugar that has been crushed into a fine powder • It is often used in uncooked icings and glazes and as a decorative dusting on baked products Sugars and Sweetners

  17. Honey • A thick, sweet liquid, made by bees from flower nectar • The type of flower will affect the final flavor and color of honey • Used to give a destinct sweet flavor • Store in a cool, dry place Sugars and Sweeteners

  18. Eggs • Eggs are the second most important ingredient in baked products. • Eggs come in a variety of sizes. • Formulas listing the amount of eggs by number instead of weight have based the formula on large eggs • Commercial bakeshops use egg yolks instead of while eggs when they want a richer, more tender product. • They also use egg whites in place of whole eggs when they bake low-fat products.

  19. Eggs • Structure • Because of their protein content, eggs give structure to baked products such as cakes. They also help thicken some products such as custard sauces. • Emulsification • Egg yolks have natural emulsifiers that help blend ingredients smoothly. • Aeration • Beaten or whipped eggs assist in leavening because they trap air that expands when heated, caused baked products to rise. • Flavor • Eggs add a distinct flavor to baked goods. • Color • Egg yolks add a rich, yellow color to baked products. Eggs also add color to crusts during the browning process.

  20. Leavening Agent • A leavening agent is a substance that causes a baked good to rise by introducing carbon dioxide or other gases into the mixture. • The gases expand from the heat of the oven, stretching the cell walls in the baked product. • The end result is a light, tender texture and good volume.

  21. Baking Powder Yeast • Made from baking soda, an acid and a moisture-absorber such as corn starch • When mixed with a liquid, baking powder releases CO2 • Double-acting baking powder will give off CO2 when mixed with a liquid and when it comes in contact with heat • A living organism that breaks down sugars into CO2 gas and alcohol • Used in breads Leavening Agents

  22. Steam Baking Soda • Steam is created during the baking process when water evaporates to steam and expands • Steam is important in products like puff pastries • A chemical leavening agent that must be used with an acid to give off CO2 gas • The CO2 gas is what caused the baked product to rise Leavening Agents

  23. Air • Air is added during the mixing process • You can add air to a mixture by whipping eg whites, for example with angel foods cake Leavening Agent

  24. Salt • It enhances the product through its own flavor as well as bringing out the flavor or other ingredients. • Salt also acts on gluten and results in an acceptable texture. • Salt can negatively react in baked goods if it is not measured accurately or if it is added at the wrong point in the mixing process.

  25. Flavorings • Flavorings include extracts and spices. Although flavorings do not usually influence the baking process, they do enhance the flavor of the final baked product.

  26. Assignment 1 • Using an on-line dictionary, research the definitions on page 8 of your workbook. • www.epicurious.com • www.dictionary.com • www.yourdictionary.com • www.merriam-webster.com

  27. Quick Breads

  28. Quick breads • Quick breads are baked goods that can be served at breakfast, lunch or dinner and include: • Pancakes • Biscuits • Muffins • Scones • Waffles • Loaf Breads • They are tender and flavorful and do not require a lot of time or equipment to produce

  29. Quick Breads • They are a product with a bread- or cake-like texture, but do not contain yeast and therefore do not need rising time. • Rather, they use chemical leavening agents such as: • Double acting baking powder • Baking soda

  30. Quick Breads • Ingredients and Functions: • Flour – foundation • Eggs – provide added volume and structure • Fat – used to keep the baked product moist and tender • Sugar – improve the flavor and color • Salt – adds flavor and strengthens gluten • Leavening agent – allow quick breads to rise • Liquid – adds moisture

  31. The Biscuit Method The Blending Method • Cut in the fat into the dry ingredients until it resembles corn meal • Add the liquid ingredients Example: Biscuits • Combine the liquid, sugar, liquid fat, and eggs. • Add the dry ingredients to the liquid ingredients. Example: Muffins Quick Bread Methods

  32. The Creaming Method • Cream together the solid fat and sugar until the mixture is light and fluffy. • Add the eggs, one at a time. • Add the dry ingredients and the liquid ingredients alternately. Example: Muffins with cake- like texture Quick Bread Methods

  33. Quick Bread Methods • Quick breads can be made from soft doughs or batters: • Soft dough • Thicker in consistency than batters • Can be rolled and cut into shapes prior to baking • Examples: baking powder biscuits and scones • Batters: • Made from either a pour batter or a drop batter

  34. Quick Bread Methods • Batters: • Pour Batter • Thin and can be poured from the mixing bowl\ • Example: Pancakes • Drop Batter • So thick that it needs to be scraped or dropped from a portion or ice cream scoop

  35. Assignment 2 • Complete the career research on page 11-12 in your workbook. You will need to use a computer and the following websites for reference: • www.alis.gov.ab.ca • www.nait.ca

  36. Cookies

  37. Cookie Characteristics • Cookies are classified according to their texture: • Crisp • Soft • Chewy

  38. Crisp Cookies • A crisp cookie has very little moisture in the batter • Made from a stiff dough with a high ration of sugar • During baking: • Crisp cookies will spread, or expand, more than other cookies because of the high amounts of sugar • After Baking • They dry fast because of thinness and must be stored in an air-tight container without refrigeration.

  39. Crisp Cookies • Examples: • Sugar Cookie • Almond Butter Crisps

  40. Soft Cookies • Soft Cookies has low amounts of fat and sugar in the batter and high proportion of liquid, such as eggs • How do you know if they are done??? • When their bottoms and edges turn golden-brown • Storage • In an air-tight container and not refrigerated • If you put them in the fridge, they will go soggy

  41. Soft Cookies • Examples include: • Chocolate Chip Cookies • Oatmeal Raisin Cookies

  42. Chewy Cookies • All chewy cookies are soft, but not all soft cookies are chewy! • A chewy cookie needs a high ratio of eggs, sugar and liquid, but a low amount of fat. • For chewy cookies, the gluten in the flour must develop during mixing • The amount of gluten will also determine how much the cookie will expand • Pastry flour is ideal

  43. Chewy Cookies • Examples include: • Pumpkin Cookies • Spice Cookies

  44. Cookie Spread • Some cookies require hand-labor to produce a particular molded shape. Although some cookies hold their shape while baking, most cookies will spread • Determined by six factors: • Flour type • Sugar type • Amount of liquid • Baking soda • Fat Type • Baking Temperture

  45. Flour Type Sugar Type • Pastry flour is used in cookies for its medium gluten content. This creates the proper spread. • Granulated sugar provides the right amount of spread. If a finer grain of sugar, such as icing sugar, is used, the cookie will spread less. Cookie Spread

  46. Amount of liquid Baking Soda • A cookie batter with a high amount of liquid, such as eggs, will have more spread. • For reduced spread – decrease the amount of eggs in the recipe • In a cookie batter, the baking soda promotes the proper spread by relaxing the gluten. • Baking soda is used as a leavening agent when it is combined with liquid and an acid Cookie Spread

  47. Fat Type Baking Temperature • When butter or margarine is used, more spread is created. • When vegetable shortening is used, less spread is created • Oven temperatures that are too low cause excessive spread. • Over temperatures that are too high give little or no spread. Cookie Spread

  48. Mixing Methods • One Stage Method • Put all the ingredients into the stand mixer • Blend at low speed using the paddle attachment. • Scrape down the sides of bowl when necessary • Example – Biscotti • Hints: • Measure carefully – its expensive to remake if you make a mistake

  49. Mixing Methods • Creaming Method • Cream the fat, sugar, flavorings and salt in the stand mixer • Add eggs, one at a time, until well blended • In a separate bowl, sift dry ingredients • Add dry to the creamed ingredients and mix on low • Example: Peanut butter cookies • Hints: • Cream only slightly for a chewy cookie, over creaming results in over spreading • Do not over develop gluten and it prevents proper spreading

  50. Cookie Types • Cookies can be classified not only by texture and mixing method, but also by type. There are 5 basic types: • Drop Cookies • Rolled Cookies • Icebox Cookies • Molded Cookies • Bar Cookies

More Related