T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2213.1 | a guess | SQLRUS::FISHER | Pat Pending | Fri Jan 19 1990 15:17 | 13 |
| According to Julia Child in "The Way to Cook," in the South (generally
not Shrewsbury, hmmm) All-Purpose Flour has a lower gluten content
than it does in the north so it can be used for biscuits and Bread
flour, in the South, has a blend which results in 1/3 more gluten.
My impression was that Bread flour in the South was the same as
All-purpose Flour in the North.
She did not say anything special about Bread Flour in the North. I can
only guess that it isn't much different from All-Purpose Flour, it might
have a little more gluten. I looked for bread flour in the super
markets around here and haven't seen any.
ed
|
2213.2 | | NITMOI::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Tue Jan 23 1990 12:51 | 7 |
| I was under the impression that bread flour is high in gluten, and cake flour
is low in gluten. All purpose flour is somewhere in the middle. Bread flour
is also harder; cake flour ia softer; all purpose is more in the middle.
Different regions draw the dividing lines in different places.
Bread flour is also good for making pasta.
|
2213.3 | Bleached vs Unbleached Flour ?? | CSMADM::BLOOD | | Wed Jan 24 1990 12:45 | 9 |
|
Speaking of flour! I've heard that the chemicals they
use to 'bleach' flour are bad for us. While shopping last
week, I noticed 'unbleached' flour. When cooking, is there
any difference between bleached and unbleached?
Thanks,
Joanne
|
2213.4 | stainless pots are bad, too, if you eat them | VIA::GLANTZ | Mike, DTN 381-1253 | Wed Jan 24 1990 13:32 | 14 |
| I'm sure the chemicals used to bleach flour are bad for you, but I get
around that very easily: I never cook with those chemicals :-).
Seriously, as far as I know the main complaint about bleached flour is
that some nutrients are removed or destroyed by the bleaching process,
and THAT'S why it's not as good for you as unbleached flour. I've
never heard that trace amounts of whatever chemicals might be used in
the bleaching process were the problem, but, on the other hand, you're
probably right to ask the question.
In any case, I've never noticed any major differences between bleached
and unbleached in baking, so I use unbleached. There doesn't seem to
be much difference in price, either. Anyone else have more detailed
info?
|
2213.5 | A needless process.. NO?? | MADMXX::GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Wed Jan 24 1990 13:46 | 20 |
| PRICE is an interesting issue.... Though the price of bleached via
unbleached is not so far apart... have you noticed that the UNbleached
flour is more than the bleached.
Now, I know that there is more processing involved in bleaching
flour then the processing of unbleached flour. If this is so, how
can they justify charging more for the unbleached flour. Now I know
that it has to do with DEMAND on the products... But I am interested
in hearing from others on this..
Also, with the growing concern for health, you would think that
the bleached flour would be less popular these days. Why would they
even process the flour into "bleached" when the unbleached will
yield the same results in the final product (though slightly darker
in color).
Your comments would be interesting.!
Bob G.
|
2213.6 | Where cake and bread flour? | NOVA::FISHER | Pat Pending | Wed Jan 24 1990 13:56 | 20 |
| Where do you find "cake" flour, "bread" flour? I usually shop at
Purity or Market Basket or Shaws. I know Purity does not carry Rye
flour but the others do. I thought you had to go to specialty
places to find the different labels (cake, bread) and then only in
special circumstances would it really make a difference.
My thoughts as to why unbleached is more expensive than bleached
are (please excuse me, this is tongue in cheek):
"Health Nuts will pay more for healthful food items, so sock it to
'em."
"Unbleached has a lower demand and volume so handling costs more."
<soapbox follows>
Really, I have no respect for the grocery business. I mean, after you
see dill-weed at 7 grams for $2.05 and realize that's $132.95 a pound.
Or when you see how totally messed up the unit pricing is, you realize
they don't give a hoot about the consumer.
ed
|
2213.7 | | VIA::GLANTZ | Mike, DTN 381-1253 | Wed Jan 24 1990 14:29 | 5 |
| I've seen most flours in most supermarkets, though I don't recall if
Purity has a particularly small selection. Cake flour is most often
available in only one brand name: Swan's Down (or something like
that), and it comes in a red and white box (two pounds, I think), not
the usual five-pound bag. You may have been overlooking it.
|
2213.8 | | VIA::GLANTZ | Mike, DTN 381-1253 | Wed Jan 24 1990 14:31 | 3 |
| PS Cake flour does make a big difference. As far as I can tell, it's much lower
in gluten than other flours. It won't knead very well, but it makes nice, light
cakes.
|
2213.10 | | CSCOA5::ANDERSON_M | | Tue Feb 06 1990 18:01 | 5 |
|
Not only is it marketed in a small box, in order to confuse ed, but it
is not all flour. Cake flour has a fairly high percentage of corn
starch, which keeps those beaten egg whites from drooping.
Mike
|
2213.11 | another guess to question in .5(?) | BANZAI::FISHER | Bo knows Rdb Support | Thu Feb 08 1990 14:26 | 10 |
| I came up with another idea about why bleached flour costs less than
unbleached. It is just a guess but I remembered what was done in a
packing plant that I worked in for an eternity a few years ago.
It is possible that the flours used to make bleached flour consists
of a blend of cheaper grades of flour than that used for unbleached.
For example unbleached flours might consist of more "natuarally white"
flours.
ed
|
2213.12 | GLUTEN flour? | BLKWDO::KWILSON | Just plane crazy | Tue Feb 27 1990 02:55 | 7 |
| OK, I've got another flour I can't find in any stores, namely
gluten flour. I need it to make bagels and just about every recipe
calls for it. Can something else be used and/or is this just a name
for something else that I CAN find?
Keith
|
2213.13 | try a health food store | LEDS::BLODGETT | The fjords are calling me... | Tue Feb 27 1990 07:32 | 4 |
| I don't know where you're located, but I've found bags of gluten in the
local health food store, the Living Earth in Worcester.
Martha
|
2213.14 | | BLKWDO::KWILSON | Just plane crazy | Tue Feb 27 1990 22:52 | 8 |
| I'm just about 2600 miles from Worcester down here in Arizona. But
we do have plenty of health food stores here so I'll give them a
try. Does anyone know what the difference is from all purpose flour?
I thought of asking the bagel shop I frequent where they buy it but
that seemed kinda sleazy.
Keith_who's_wishing_he_was_back_in_New_England
|
2213.15 | | CSOA1::WIEGMANN | | Wed Feb 28 1990 13:05 | 13 |
| I think gluten flour is just another name for bread flour; in Ohio,
bread flour is usually on the shelf with all the other variations of
flour - I think Pillsbury makes it. I'm pretty sure you could use
regular flour instead. I think the added gluten in bread flour just
increases your chances of getting a good loaf, but if you're using good
yeast and kneading as long as you're supposed to, you should be okay. A
similar situation is pastry flour; Swan's Down would give you a better
product, but all-purpose flour will do OK.
I haven't tried pricing or using just gluten added to regular flour, so
I don't know about that!
Terry
|
2213.16 | Or a Commercial Baking Supply | TLE::ELLENBERGER | | Wed Feb 28 1990 14:20 | 9 |
| I bought an 80lb bag of bread flour at a commercial baking/pizza supply
place. I found out that the health food store was simply buying these
larger bags, dividing them up, and then charging an order of magnitude
more for them. Of course you then have the problem of keeping 80lbs of
flour away from your insect friends. This shouldn't be nearly as much
of a problem down where you live because its so dry (it IS in New
England). The selection was also much better at the commercial supply:
they had at least 4-5 different kinds of bread flour. Not to mention
those five gallon pails of buttercream frosting...
|
2213.17 | Gluten vs bread flour | REORG::AITEL | Never eat a barracuda over 3 lbs. | Wed Feb 28 1990 16:14 | 17 |
| Gluten and bread flour are different. Bread flour is a flour with
a higher than usual gluten content. It may also be made from a
slightly different sort of wheat? Gluten is a "flour" that is
mainly gluten. It is very high in protein and is often used as
either an addition to regular flours or low-gluten flours OR
as a meat substitute. Preparing gluten as a meat substitute is
a sticky proposition - you have to take the gluten, add water,
and then knead under running water to rinse off all the starch
you can. Then you take this sticky mass, having the consistency
of silly putty, and try to cut it into equal sized portions, try
to cook it so it's edible, try to eat it.... It's also sold in
cans in health food stores and oriental stores, sometimes called
"mock abalone". I would rather eat beans or tofu. It is, however,
great in pizza crusts and bagels. About 1 tablespoonful for every
2 cups or so of flour, adjust as you experiment.
--Louise
|
2213.18 | Boil that water, the bagels are ready! | BLKWDO::KWILSON | Just plane crazy | Wed Feb 28 1990 22:02 | 16 |
| re .15,.16,.17 Thanks for your replies, they've been a big help. I'm
not sure I want to know about 5lb buckets of buttercream
frosting but just in case I ever need one...8^) I don't
think I'd mind the 80lb bag, especially if the bagels
come out good but just finding the stuff will do for a
start. Time to get out the yellow pages and look under
bakery supplies. As far as bugs are concerned, you're
correct as far as mosquitoes, blackflies, gnats and
other such New England delicacies are concerned, but
we do have to spray monthly in the warm weather for
crickets and other things that may infest flour. Perhaps
fresh cricket bagels will be the new taste sensation;
then again.
Keith
|
2213.20 | conversion/substitutes | FDCV07::HSCOTT | Lynn Hanley-Scott | Thu Mar 01 1990 08:07 | 6 |
| One sidenote about gluten vs. bread flour:
Often when I can't find an exact ingredient, I check out the conversion
/substitute tables in one of my cookbooks. If it works with the
substitute, I don't need to go searching!
|
2213.21 | | CLSTR1::JEFFRIES | | Thu Mar 01 1990 09:58 | 4 |
| Just a side note regarding bugs and things in the flour. I keep
all my flours and corn meal in the freezer. It doesn't really freeze,
so you can just take it out in the quantities you need when it's
time to prepare your recipe.
|
2213.22 | | TLE::ELLENBERGER | | Thu Mar 01 1990 11:19 | 9 |
| I don't mean to nit-pick, but the health food store and I were buying
the SAME flour. Most cookbooks as well my instructor at the night
course in "International Baking" (taught by the local culinary school)
consider them to be the same thing. The gluten content is governed by
the ratio of soft wheat (low in Gluten = pastry flour) to hard wheat.
Bread flour is high in gluten which allows bakers to develop
free-standing loafs easily. Bakers in the in the States tend to always
used bread/high gluten flour for their bread. In Europe they don't
have access to hard wheat so they develop the gluten in other ways.
|
2213.23 | It is not always the same however. | QUICKR::FISHER | Dictionary is not. | Mon Mar 05 1990 03:09 | 5 |
| concerning 'All purpose' vs. bread flour, as I quoted Julia Child in .1
All purpose is blended differently in defferent parts of the US,
changing the gluten content (higher in the north, lower in the south).
ed
|
2213.24 | hard-wheat flour? | TLE::EIKENBERRY | Sharon Eikenberry | Mon Mar 05 1990 10:48 | 5 |
| Does anyone know where I can get hard-wheat flour in the Nashua area?
James Beard gives the impression that it's not readily available in the
standard supermarket.
--Sharon
|
2213.25 | | NITMOI::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Mon Mar 05 1990 20:09 | 3 |
| Would Semolina work? If so, it's at East-West Grocery.
-JP
|
2213.26 | Self-rising flour? | TLE::DANIELS | Brad Daniels, VAX C RTL whipping boy | Tue Mar 13 1990 00:42 | 13 |
| We were making some cookies tonight, and the recipe called for self-rising
flour. Like most people, we didn't happen to have any on hand, so we
started searching through all of our cookbooks for substitutions. I was
sure it was a commonly listed substitution, but the Joy of Cooking was no
help, nor were any of our other books. I vaguely recalled seeing something
in this notesfile, so I searched for the strings "substit" and "flour" in
titles (there was no SUBSTITUTIONS keyword till I just added it...) but I
couldn't find anything.
I assume it's a mixture of flour and baking powder or something similar, but
I don't know the ratios.
- Brad
|
2213.27 | | VIA::GLANTZ | Mike, DTN 381-1253 | Tue Mar 13 1990 08:22 | 17 |
| You got it exactly right. You can make your own self-rising flour by
adding 1/2 to 1 level tsp of baking powder to each cup of general-
purpose flour. If your recipe calls for less than two cups of flour,
then use the high end of the range (1 tsp per cup). If more, then cut
down on the baking powder. The exact amount of baking powder to use is
hard to say, because it depends on the age (strength) of your baking
powder and the moisture content of your flour. Older baking powder or
higher moisture need more baking powder.
In cookies, getting it exactly right isn't as critical as it is for a
cake, but you still run the risk of a failure if you can't tell by the
"feel" and appearance of the batter whether it's got the right amount
of leavening. That's why they sell self-rising flour (and stuff like
Bisquick, which also has shortening). If it's an "important"
performance (i.e., you need to impress someone), then don't take a
chance -- get some self-rising flour. Otherwise, definitely do your
own. It's the only way to learn.
|
2213.28 | BAKING POWDER - MAKE YOUR OWN! | WMOIS::LONGLEY_M | | Thu Jun 14 1990 13:06 | 15 |
| Speaking of Baking Powder.....how about making your own. I've been
using this recipe for several years (from a old Shaker Cook Book).
SHAKER BAKING POWDER
1 CUP BAKING SODA
1 CUP CREAM OF TARTAR
1 CUP ARROWROOT POWDER
Sift ingredients together 5 or 6 times and store in an airtight
container (a large peanut butter jar works well). Cream of tartar and
arrowroot powder is best purchased from a health food store by the half
pound. Since I make my own "bisquit mix", the three cup amount doesn't
last very long.
|
2213.31 | MO | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Thu Nov 15 1990 11:06 | 17 |
| Bread flour has more gluten. If you don't find something
labelled "bread flour" you should be able to rely on any
unbleached flour because that is made of the harder wheat
grains that have more gluten.
One way to compare, if the bag doesn't say is to look at the
nutrient info. Higher gluten means higher protein levels per serving.
The only place where I would worry is in the south where
"all-purpose flour" is a different combination of grains and has
less gluten because it is designed to make biscuits more than bread.
King Arthur's unbleached makes great bread. Whole wheat (don't know
which you meant) is good but doesn't help bread rise the way the
white flours do.
ed
|
2213.29 | | SMURF::CHANDLER | And the bits go on . . . . . | Fri Dec 14 1990 15:15 | 7 |
| If you want a good bread flour in New Englad, try King Arthur Brand.
Used to make a lot of breads and always had good luck with it. You
can find it in most supermarkets. It's unbleached, and if you read the
lable, they claim to have a higher percentage of 'hard' wheat than the
all purpose stuff. Another nice thing is that the cost isn't too high!
Liz
|
2213.30 | | LOMITA::GOHN | "WITH THE WIND" | Tue Jun 04 1991 16:12 | 47 |
| I know this is VERY late but I just found this article from the Los Angeles
Times (I believe the article was printed in 1990.)
Ultimate Bread Flour
Heartland Mill
Route 1, Box 2
Marienthal, Kansas 67863
(316) 379-4472
Brochure Available
Billed Open Account
Bread has become such an important part of the modern meal that many
restaurants have taken to baking their own. Many home cooks have done the
same. With all this sudden baking of bread, flour has assumed a new
importance.
It takes two kinds of flour to make great bread. Flours such as rye, whole
wheat and cornmeal add interesting taste and texture to a loaf, but they
contain very little gluten. It is gluten that gives bread its strength
and elasticity, and high-gluten flours were once available only to
commercial bakers.
But things have changed. Heartland Mill, a Mennonite co-op in Kansas, freshly
mills and ships a fine selection of grains grown without chemical fertilizers,
herbicides or pesticides. (Even its packaging is environmentally friendly-
the pretty cotton bags resemble '40s feed sacks and are very good at keeping
flour fresh and dry.)
One of their newest products is a high-performance flour named "golden buff."
They make it by running hard red winter wheat through a stone grinder. This
does not eliminate the bran, but merely sifts it off, leaving the germ behind
and making the flour healthier. Priced at $1.16 a pound, this is the
ultimate flour for discerning bread bakers: It works like white flour, yet
contains both high protein and high gluten.
The mill's all-purpose D & H flour is another high-performing flour suitable
for general baking needs, as well as bread baking when gluten strength is
important. A five-pound sack sells for $1.92.
Heartland Mill's other products are also priced reasonably: A two-pound
bag of cornmeal costs $1.16; two pounds of oat bran will run $2.81. But
remember, it takes a lot of flour to bake a loaf of bread, and shipping
charges could double the cost of the order.
L
|
2213.32 | | RANGER::WIMMER | | Fri May 29 1992 10:40 | 6 |
| I just picked up "whole wheat bread flour" at Bread & Circus. Has
anyone tried it? I'm assuming I can just substitute it for the bread
flour in the recipes???????
diane
|