T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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956.1 | You may need more yeast with heavier flours. | SQM::AITEL | Every little breeze.... | Wed Jan 27 1988 09:35 | 7 |
| I'm not sure what happened, but I have a suggestion. If you still
have the bag the flour came in, write to the company. Companies
are usually delighted to hear from customers, and will often provide
lots of information in response. You might ask if they have a
booklet about baking with oat flour.
--Louise
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956.2 | Oats are heavy | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed Jan 27 1988 12:57 | 13 |
| Oats are heavy, and don't contain much gluten (maybe even none).
I love the flavor of oats and use them in a lot of baking (I like
barley, too), but I've never tried to make a yeast bread with the
big a quantity of oat flour in it - when I do make oatmeal bread,
it comes out pretty heavy, but not disasterously so. You need to
use a lot more leavening in non-yeast breads and cakes with the
oat flour.
I don't bother to buy oat flour from the healthfood store anymore
since it is easy to grind up rolled oats (I do still buy barley
flour since barley is a good deal harder - the store bothers me
a bit because it mostly sells things like ginseng-extract capsules
and other questionable, and expensive, "foods").
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956.3 | Add cake flour | XCELR8::CORMIER | | Wed Jan 27 1988 13:01 | 13 |
| It's also quite possible that between the oat and wheat, it was
simply too heavy. Some recipes recommend adding a touch of cake
flour (I know, not good for you) to lighten the batter. You could
try increasing the yeast by half, but that may just end up flat
but more chewy. I would try the cake flour, myself. But then,
I'm willing to sacrifice the health benefit for a loaf of bread
that is presentable!
I'd be interested to know if the company responds to you, since
I love oat breads, but I have never seen a recipe for one.
Sarah
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956.4 | oat BRAN, not oat flour... | THE780::WILDE | Imagine all the people.. | Wed Jan 27 1988 15:57 | 21 |
| Two ideas:
When blending several flours, make sure at least one cup is plain, unbleached,
white flour (maximum gluten)...make a sponge and let it rise, then stir it
down and continue making bread the regular way...the extra rising will raise
the gluten and give the yeast something to work with.
Oat flour is nice, but the real benefit is from oat BRAN, and this added
to your bread will NOT change the color to an ugly gray, and should not
bog down your bread nearly as much....the one problem may be with it's
tendency to soak up liquids - you may need to add more of your liquids.
I would think 1 cup of oat bran to each 1 loaf's worth of ingredients
would be the maximum you'd want to add.
Just for the record, oat bran is not like wheat bran, much gentler on
the "fiber" issue, so one cup of oat bran/ loaf of bread (to replace 1 cup
of flour) would not be excessive....1 cup of wheat bran/loaf of whole
wheat bread might be excessive.
Anyway, home made bread is never a disaster....save it and make raisin
cinnamon bread pudding...they'll love it.
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956.5 | I'd use a *lot* more gluten. | SMEGIT::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Thu Jan 28 1988 13:17 | 34 |
|
You didn't mention salt in your base note; I assume that it was
a note oversight and that you used about 1 to 1 1/2 tsp in baking.
Assuming that you didn't also over-proof the final rising (unlikely
with your previous experience), the problem is almost certainly in the
flour.
Oat flour has no gluten. Zippo. One of your other flours was low in
gluten (displaced by the bran, etc.) and the last was even lower (soft
wheat flower with bran to boot).
I believe that the flour in yeast risen breads should be at least 85%
to 90% wheat endosperm (or whatever the main constituent of ordinary
white flour is called) flour. The higher the gluten content of the
primary flour, the more freedom you have in the other aspects. Here
are some suggestions assuming a six cup recipe:
If you use whole wheat *bread* flour, substitute in only one cup of oat
flour, maybe less. Likewise if you use "all purpose" white.
If you use whole wheat *pastry* flour, don't substitute in any low
gluten flour at all. It is already low.
If you use white *bread* flour, substitute in up to 1 1/2 cups of zero
gluten flours (oat, corn, soy, buckwheat).
Treat rye as something between oat and whole wheat.
I'm winging this without my bookshelf, so I may be off base. Try the
above and tell us how you make out.
Incidentally, Ojakangas has a chapter of oat breads and another on
barley.
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956.6 | Gluten | SQM::AITEL | Every little breeze.... | Thu Jan 28 1988 13:43 | 8 |
| I've seen gluten for sale - it's sort of a floury stuff. In fact,
when I was a vegetarian, I got some to use to make a meat substitute.
since it's high in protein. I got it in a health food store, as
I recall. Anyhow, would it work to use low gluten flours and then
add some straight gluten to the dough to make up for the flours?
Any idea how much you should use?
--Louise
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956.7 | Laurel's Kitchen Bread Book: Dont bake without it! | TUDOR::ERYN | | Thu Jan 28 1988 15:34 | 17 |
| I bake only with whole grain flour, though I have not tried an oatmeal
bread yet. I would recommend you stop by a bookstore and look at
Laurel's Kitchen Bread Book. It is an entire book on baking with
whole grains, includes sections on using different grains, beans,
eggs, milk, fruit, etc. I always use her method and have always
been successful. My guess is that if you put some pastry flour in
the bread, it was too low on gluten. I would start with your basic
bread recipe, replace 1/2 cup of the flour with 1 cup oatmeal (not
oat flour), and increase the liquid slightly if you have to. This
will make an oatmeal bread but will not rely on the oats for any
help in holding together or rising. I would only use ww bread flour
and leave out the pastry flour. Use the pastry flour when you are
not using other low/no gluten substances.
Eryn Utz (also on QUILL, CREDIT and DEBIT::UTZ if you need to send
me mail).
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956.8 | some oat breads don't have yeast | SMEGIT::RYDER | Al Ryder, aquatic sanitary engineer | Fri Jan 29 1988 13:09 | 28 |
| Patti, now that we have talked you into not using that oat flour
for yeast breads, especially since you are getting into French bread,
do you want [polite] suggestions for the oat flour?
I usually see oat flour in recipes for the quick breads where the
gluten is of little concern. Laurel's Kitchen Bread Book, memtioned
in the previous reply, has a recipe for:
Oatmeal Poppy Seed Bread (or muffins) pg 317
-------------------------------------
oat flour 2 cups
bread flour 1/2 cup whole wheat bread flour
baking powder 2 1/2 tsp
salt 1/2 tsp
mace or nutmeg 1/4 tsp
poppy seeds 2 Tbs plus some for a topping
lemon peel 2 tsp
milk 1 cup
honey 3 Tbs
oil 2 Tbs or melted butter
eggs 2
chopped raisins 1/2 cup soaked in
boiling water 1/4 cup
If you make this into a loaf, the baking time is an hour at 350.
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956.9 | 2/3 oat 1/3 white | SALES::RFI86 | Ain't no time to hate | Fri Jan 29 1988 14:52 | 6 |
| If you want to use oat flour in normal yeast bread try using 2/3rds
oat flour and 1/3rd reagular white unbleached flour. This will give
you the glutton you need without sacrificing the taste of the oat
flour.
Geoff
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956.10 | Correction | SALES::RFI86 | Ain't no time to hate | Fri Jan 29 1988 14:53 | 6 |
| RE: -1
Should be gluten not glutton. Thought gluttons can eat lots
of food with gluten in them:-)
Geoff
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956.11 | Oatmeal Batter Bread | ROLL::HARRIS | | Wed Feb 03 1988 18:39 | 36 |
| Here is a recipe for a batter bread that contains rolled oats. I
have made it on several occasions and it is very good, especially
when served warm. It's fairly dense and quite flavorful.
OATMEAL BATTER BREAD
To make 1 loaf:
1-1/2 cups boiling water
3/4 cup rolled oats
1/4 cup molasses tsp = teaspoon
1-1/2 tsp salt Tbsp = Tablespoon
3 Tbsp butter
1/4 cup warm water (105-115F)
1 pkg. dry yeast
4 cups sifted all-purpose flour
1. In medium bowl, pour boiling water over oats. Add
molasses, salt, and butter. Stir and let cool.
2. Pour warm water into a large bowl; add yeast and whisk to
dissolve.
3. Add oatmeal mixture to yeast and gradually stir in flour.
4. Cover with a towel and let rise in a warm spot until
doubled in volume. (30min.)
5. With a wooden spoon, beat batter for 25 vigorous strokes.
Pour into greased bread pans (9x5x3"). Preheat oven to 400F.
6. When bread has risen to within 1 inch of top of pan, bake
for 30-35 minutes, or until bottom sounds hollow when tapped.
Cool 10 minutes before serving.
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956.12 | status report | WAGON::ANASTASIA | It's in every one of us | Sat Feb 13 1988 17:43 | 11 |
| You've all talked me out of using oat flour in yeast bread. I did
get some oat bran and have been adding it to some of my recipes.
Yesterday, I used Al Ryder's recipe with the lemon (947.?), but
substituted in one cup of oat bran and 1/2 cup of sesame seeds. It is
yummy. I will use the oat flour for batter bread. I wrote to Arrowhead
Mills and asked for recipes. I'll post their reply.
That elusive bread baking touch is starting to come back to me...
Thanks for all the advice,
Patti
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