Ingredients and How They Work
This
manual will make you a better baker—we guarantee it.
“Baking is both an art and a science but if you understand the
science, the art comes easier.”
Did you ever wonder what makes baking powder double acting? Or what
the difference is between bread flour and all-purpose flour? Or how
much honey you should use to replace a cup of sugar. This manual will
help you understand how baking ingredients work and how to use them
to get the most from your baking.
You will learn about . . .
Flour Types and Their Uses
yeast
Sugars and Other Sweeteners
The Leaveners
Salt
Butter, Shortening, and Oils
The Wonderful World of Eggs
How Ingredients Work in a Bread Machine
Tips for Improving the Odds with Your Bread Machine
Tips for Improving the Odds with Your Bread Machine
Bread machines are wonderful inventions but they can be a little bit tricky. The margin for error in most recipes is really quite narrow--even for those recipes supplied by the manufacturer—much narrower than breads made in your standtype mixer or by hand.
Here are some hints that will move the odds more to your favor:
• Always measure the ingredients accurately.
Measure liquids in a clear measuring cup at eye
level.
• If the water temperature is specified, use a
Go to www.preparedpantry.com for more baking guides!
kitchen or candy thermometer to measure the temperature.
• Always use fresh flour kept in a closed container. Flour absorbs moisture from the air and will
affect the moisture amount in the recipe. (We receive our flour within 60 days of milling and once
opened, store it in sealed containers.)
• Always start with both the machine and the ingredients at room temperature.
If you have trouble baking bread with your machine, do what many experienced bread machine
users do: use the machine for mixing and rising but not baking. Many machines have a
“dough/manual” setting. Use it and then form the loaf and transfer it to a baking pan or sheet.
To use your bread machine in this way, begin the mix or recipe as instructed. Check on the
dough as the machine mixes and kneads. If the dough is too sticky add another tablespoon of
flour or if too dry, dribble a little water into the machine. Let the machine continue through the rise
cycle. When the machine beeps to signal that baking is to begin, gently remove the dough by
inverting the pan over the counter. Gently knead the dough to release the trapped gas and then
form the loaf. Bake as a conventional loaf, usually at 350 degrees. You will have tilted the odds
back in your favor, you will have the option of forming loaves the size and shape you wish (or
even dinner rolls), and you won’t have a thick crust and a hole in the loaf
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