Prepared by: Sharon P. Davis, Family & Consumer SciencesKansas Wheat Commission www.kswheat.com : Prepared by: Sharon P. Davis, Family & Consumer Sciences Kansas Wheat Commission www.kswheat.com Baking Science…
Field to Flour
Food Grains: Food Grains
All beginnings
are difficult.
Aristotle
Art: “Wheat” Thomas Hart Benton. 1967.
Nat’l Museum of American Art. Washington, D.C.
Long before there were loaves…: Long before there were loaves…
There had to be agriculture—
Over 10,000 years ago
Neolithic People began
cultivating (not just gathering) good tasting wild grasses…
Food Grains…: Food Grains…
…became the base of life.
Q: What are the “food grains” that fuel people worldwide?
Where did those grains begin?
Wheat… West Asia/Iraq, Southeast Turkey
Rice… Asia
Corn (maize)… Americas (north, south, central)
Barley… Europe
Oats… Scotland/Ireland
Rye… Northern Europe
Sorghum… Africa
More at: Exploring Kansas Crops
Kansas Agriculture in the Classroom. 2002
Download @ www.kswheat.com
Someone discovered…: Someone discovered…
…goat grass (Aegilops tauschii)
Get a map!
Find the Tigris & Euphrates River Valley
“The Fertile Crescent”—
Syria, Turkey, Iraq, Iran
Photo: Kansas State University,
Wheat Genetic Research Center.
Learn more: www.wgrc.ksu.edu
…And, the science of wheat breeding began: …And, the science of wheat breeding began
1. Natural crosses or hybrids became early wheat
goat grass X einkorn (28 chromosomes)
2. Humans select grains that taste good, grow well, and then
cultivate them; more crosses occur
3. Goat grass (Aegilops tauschii) (14 chromosomes)
X Emmer (Triticum dicoccum) (28 chromosomes)
Bread wheat (42 chromosomes)
Ex: Goat grass provides glutenin,
essential for elastic bread dough
10,000 years of Wheat : 10,000 years of Wheat
10,000 years ago—early farmers gathered & grew goat grass and einkorn, the parents of wheat.
4,700 years ago—Chinese grew wheat
2,500 B.C.—Fifth dynasty Egyptians baked bread with emmer wheat
85 B.C.—Water mills are first used in Asia Minor
1086—The Doomesday Book, England, lists 5,624 mills in England
1180—Windmills mentioned in France, England and Syria
10,000 years of Wheat-cont.: 10,000 years of Wheat-cont. 1600’s—American Colonists mix native maize (corn) with wheat and rye flour for “Third Bread” to make imported wheat flour go further
1777—Wheat first grown in U.S. as hobby crop
1785—Oliver Evans invents first automated roller flour mill in U.S.
1874—Russian Mennonites introduce Turkey Red wheat in Kansas (hard red winter wheat)
1990s—Kansas begins increasing production of hard white winter wheat
Today--There are over 30,000 varieties of wheat—it is the favorite cereal grain in the world.
8,000 years of bread: 8,000 years of bread 8,000 years ago—Swiss lake dwellers baked flat “cakes” on hot stones
2,000 B.C.—Egyptians discover yeast; bread fed Hebrew slaves building pyramids
300 B.C.—Romans create quantity flour mills; bakers highly regarded
200 B.C.—Romans open bakery stores—bake for 20,000 people daily
100 A.D.—First baking school in Rome
610 A.D.—Romans and Monks in southern France credited with first pretzel. Leftover dough shaped as “pretiolas,” a reward for children learning prayers
1240—Bread used as plates (trenchers), napkins, containers, oven mitts... food
1762—French 4th Earl of Sandwich, John Montagu, creates the sandwich while gambling
8,000 years of bread-cont.: 8,000 years of bread-cont. 1800– Baking soda becomes available; lumps of “sourdough” starters carried by pioneers and prospectors settling the Western U.S.
1850—White House installs first range, but no heat control in oven
1857—Louis Pasteur discovers yeast is what makes dough rise
1859—Baking powder becomes available
1868—Yeast grown and harvested for first time by James Gaff and Fleischmann brothers
1925—Sliced bread introduced in stores.
1942—Dry yeast is developed; helps feed soldiers in the WWII
1980s—Table top bread machines introduced to American homes
Today, healthy people still get 55% of their calories from carbohydrates
Wheat is NOT just Wheat: Wheat is NOT just Wheat Today, thousands of wheat varieties are organized by class.
Classes are formed based on:
--Growing season (winter or spring)
--Bran color (red or white)
--Kernel hardness (hard or soft)
There are six classes:
Hard Red Spring
Hard Red Winter Wheat
Hard White Wheat
Soft White Wheat
Soft Red Winter
Durum Wheat
Classes of U.S. Wheat: Classes of U.S. Wheat
What Wheat for What Products?: What Wheat for What Products? Kernel hardness is just one way to tell how much protein will be in a wheat, and therefore how much will be in the flour.
Hard wheat= medium to higher protein flour stronger gluten strength
Soft wheat= lower protein flour weaker gluten strength
Wheat Utilization: Wheat Utilization
Blending of wheats is done to achieve the best flour for an end-product use.
Where’s the Flour?: Where’s the Flour?
Whole grain flour contains all grain parts
Refined, enriched flours are made from the endosperm only
Endosperm (83% of kernel)
Energy for plant growth
Carbohydrates; protein for people
Bran layers (14.5% of kernel)
Protects seed
Fiber, B-vitamins; minerals
Germ (2.5% of kernel)
Nourishes seed
Antioxidants, Vitamin E, B-vitamins
Learn more at: www.wheatfoods.org www.namamillers.org
Flour Milling Today: Flour Milling Today Mennel Milling
Courtesy of www.namamillers.org
Milling is Science Flour is NOT Just Flour: Milling is Science Flour is NOT Just Flour Flour is the main, and most important ingredient in baked goods.
Millers work with bakers to produce the right flour for the baker’s products, equipment, environment, and cost factors
Flour is responsible for:
Structure--holding and expanding with leavening gases
Texture
Binding all ingredients
Flavor
Nutrition
Flour cannot be exactly the same every year due to weather factors.
Many factors affect flour’s quality : Many factors affect flour’s quality The wheat’s environment.
climate/weather; soil type & fertility
The wheat variety grown.
Each variety has different protein
quality & quantity, starches and enzymes.
The wheat’s milling quality.
Kernel structure, ease of milling, screenings loss, starch damage, flour yield, flour granulation, grinding power
How Flour is Milled: How Flour is Milled
Milling Steps: Milling Steps Wheat roller mills…
Clean
Temper (moisture added)
Remove bran
Remove germ (at right)
Extract flour from
endosperm
Further separate, sift
…to produce flour
More at: www.namamillers.org
Slide21:
Filling flour
bags at mill.
More at: www.namamillers.org
Hard Wheat Flours: Hard Wheat Flours About 75 lbs of white flour comes from 100 lbs. of wheat
The flour comes from the wheat’s endosperm (see Kernel diagram)
The extracted white flour is then separated into grades.
Grades of hard wheat flour are called:
Straight grade flour (100% of the flour separation)
Patent flour (70 - 80% of separation)
Second clear flour = the 20-30% left
Short patent flour (60% of separation)
First clear flour = the 40% left
High gluten flour (comes from high protein wheat = 60% of separation)
Lean more: From Wheat to Flour.
www.namamillers.org or www.wheatfoods.org
Soft Wheat Flours: Soft Wheat Flours Pastry flour
Made from 100% of the soft wheat flour separation
Soft red or white wheats used Flour Protein = 8-9%
Cake flour
60 to 70% of the separation of soft red wheat
chlorine used to bleach for better cakes Flour Protein =7-8%
Pie flour
Unbleached pastry flour made preferably from soft white wheat Flour Protein=7-9%
Whole wheat pastry flour
Milled from soft white or red wheat—white wheat lends a lighter color and flavor Flour Protein = 7-9%
Unbleached vs. Bleached Flour: Unbleached vs. Bleached Flour Freshly milled (“green”) flour will not produce consistently good quality baked goods.
Flour naturally ages or oxidizes if stored 8 to 12 weeks.
Oxidation improves baking quality, producing finer textured, whiter products.
Unbleached vs. Bleached Flour-cont.: Unbleached vs. Bleached Flour-cont. “Bleached” flour: Food technologists have developed FDA approved chemical bleaching and maturing agents to improve baking qualities and speed oxidation.
“Unbleached” flour: no maturing agents are added. Bread flour is generally unbleached; all purpose flour may be either.
Enriched bleached or unbleached have equal nutritional value
Self-Rising Flour: Self-Rising Flour Early 1900’s American “convenience mix” for home bakers
All-purpose flour with baking powder and salt added.
Best for biscuits, some muffins, pancakes or waffles
If substituting for all-purpose, omit the baking soda or powder and salt called for in the recipe.
Not recommended for yeast breads.
Substitution:
1 cup flour + 1 ½ tsp. baking powder + ½ tsp. salt
Why is Flour Enriched?: Why is Flour Enriched? In milling white flour, the bran and germ are left behind…and many nutrients.
Enriching flour means…
thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, iron and folate are added back into the flour at levels equal to or higher than they naturally occur in wheat.
Flour may be fortified with calcium (a nutrient NOT naturally high in wheat)
Why is Some Flour “malted?”: Why is Some Flour “malted?” Malted barley flour is milled from sprouted barley
Supplements wheat’s natural enzymes to make better yeast-raised products
Malted barley flour is not added to whole wheat flour, all purpose flour or cake flour
Ascorbic Acid in Flour: Ascorbic Acid in Flour High protein flour may have ascorbic acid (Vit. C) added as a maturing agent to produce better volume and crumb structure in the bread
The Vit. C is lost in the high heat of baking
Ascorbic acid may replace benzoyl peroxide, which is no longer used in bread flour
Family Flour : Family Flour Family flour may be: all purpose, bread, cake, whole wheat, 50/50, pastry or non-wheat flours
How much protein? Check the label for where the flour milled—is it milled from “spring” or “winter,” “soft” or “hard” wheat?
Whole wheat flour: Is it a “white” bran coat or a “red” bran coat--White whole wheat is a lighter color & sweeter. Red whole wheat is stronger flavored and darker.
All these factors make a difference in what foods it will bake the best. Look at the flour chart for help.
More at: www.homebaking.org
Non-Wheat Baking Ingredients: Non-Wheat Baking Ingredients Barley—may be pearled (quick or medium), rolled, flour
Amaranth, flax, sorghum, quinoa, buckwheat, triticale, brown rice and more can be flour, rolled grain, meal, groats
Oatmeal is wholegrain (rolled instant, quick, old-fashioned, steel cut, Scottish); oat flour; groats
Corn—degerminated (germ removed and enriched) or wholegrain meal or flour; may be self-rising too
Non-Wheat Baking Ingredients-cont.: Non-Wheat Baking Ingredients-cont. Rye flour or rolled; may be whole grain or not; dark, medium or light
Soy flakes, flour (may or may not be defatted), grits, protein isolate
Vegetables,beans, legumes, nuts may be ground and flour-like (potato, garbanzo, peas, lentils and more)
Visit: www.homebaking.org Links: Bobs Red Mill, King Arthur, Hodgson Mill for a variety of non-wheat flours, meal and more
Baking with Non-Wheat Ingredients: Baking with Non-Wheat Ingredients Non-wheat flour, meal, rolled grains, bran and germ add flavor, texture, nutrient variety, and fiber
They must be supported with high-gluten strength wheat flour or added gluten in yeast breads
Substitute non-wheat flour or meal at
levels totaling 5 to 25% of total flour weight
Pre-soak or cook cracked wheat/grains, grits, rolled grains, bulgur
Water may need to be added or reduced if using cooked grains
Food Labels for Grain Foods: Food Labels for Grain Foods
Look for:
Product name, manufacturer, dates
Net weight
(how much food you get in package)
Ingredient List - listed most to least
Advertising or influences to buy
Nutrition Facts Label:
Look at Total Carbohydrates
How much are sugars? How much dietary fiber?
Health claim(s)
(NOT advertising; FDA regulates)
—EX: Whole grain claim
Must contain 51% or more whole grains by weight
Must be low in total fat
More about food labels @ www.cfsan.fda.gov/label.html
Enriched and Wholegrain Grain Foods are Nutrient-Packed: Enriched and Wholegrain Grain Foods are Nutrient-Packed Complex carbohydrates
Muscle and brain fuel
Endurance
Energy
Soluble and insoluble fiber
B vitamins
Folic acid
Thiamin
Riboflavin
Niacin
Iron
Protein
Whole grains—even more phytonutrients (antioxidants), minerals and vitamins, dietary fiber
Get the FACTS about carbs: Get the FACTS about carbs
We gain weight because…
…we eat too many calories, and burn too few.
Check it out for yourself—everybody eats differently.
Are you too heavy? Calculate your BMI.
www.thebeehive.org/health OR www.nhlbisupport.com/bmi
Keep a food and exercise record for a couple weeks.
Are your extra calories from fat, protein or carbs?
Are you eating or drinking too many SUPER servings?
Do you “eat” the Dietary Guidelines? www.eatright.org
Are you active enough? 30 to 60 minutes (10,000 steps)
More about grains, nutrition, milling and baking careers at: : More about grains, nutrition, milling and baking careers at: American Institute of Baking - www.aibonline.org
American Institute of Cancer Research - www.aicr.org
Get on the Grain Train - www.usda.gov/cnpp
Home Baking Association - www.homebaking.org
Kansas State University Ext. Healthful Whole Grains
www.oznet,ksu.edu/library/fntr2/MF2560.pdf
Kansas State University
Agronomy-www.oznet.ksu.edu/fieldday/kids/crops
Grain Science-www.oznet.ksu.edu/dp_grsi
Kansas Wheat Commission - www.kswheat.com and www.wheatmania.com + many more great links!
North American Millers Association - www.namamillers.org
Retail Bakers of America - www.rbanet.com
The Bell Institute, General Mills www.generalmills.com/wholegrain
Wheat Foods Council - www.wheatfoods.org