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Baking (rec.food.baking) For bakers, would-be bakers, and fans and consumers of breads, pastries, cakes, pies, cookies, crackers, bagels, and other items commonly found in a bakery. Includes all methods of preparation, both conventional and not. |
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difference is easy and not technical, cake tastes nicer!!
"Mark Floerke" > wrote in message ... > Technically, > Bread is a combination of flour and water, with the addition of yeast for > leavening. FDA labelling states White Bread must be a minimum based on > flour weight of 2% salt, 2% sugar, 2% shortening and 2% milk powder. To be > classified as a dough, the principle ingredients must flour and water, in > that order. > All batter mixes and pastes such as quick breads, i.e. tea biscuits, banana > bread, muffins, are sweet goods. > > Mr. Pastry > > "Dee Randall" > wrote in message > ... > > I've heard that when Marie Antoinette said "let them eat cake," that cake > > was actually bread, and now people are a bit non-plussed about her > > statement. > > Dee > > > > > > "Alex Rast" > wrote in message > > ... > > > at Tue, 11 Nov 2003 12:30:55 GMT in > > > > , > > > (Ben) wrote : > > > > > > >Hi. My wife and I got into a discussion last night about the > > > >difference between bread and cake. She's European and says 1/2 of the > > > >stuff Americans call bread is cake (eg. Banana Bread). Is there a > > > >definative difference between bread and cake like ingredients, baking, > > > >etc? > > > > > > Like most non-technical words, there is at least some ambiguity. First, > I > > > will dismiss a few special cases. > > > > > > Preceded by "short-" both words change meaning from the standard. > > > Shortbread is a type of cookie, shortcake is a type of scone. > (Humorously, > > > I have to resort to the American "cookie" and the British "scone" > because > > > in Britain, a cookie is called a biscuit, where in America, a scone is > > > called a biscuit. So depending on one's POV, *both* shortbread and > > > shortcake are "biscuits"!) > > > > > > "Cake" in a non-baking context can refer to any food that's been > > compressed > > > into a solid block, usually with one definitely smallest dimension. Thus > > we > > > have rice cakes, yeast cakes, etc. > > > > > > But generally, at least by my way of looking at it, the difference > between > > > bread and cake is that in cake, the amount of eggs is sufficient to > > > contribute substantially to the *structure*, not just the *texture*. > That, > > > I realize, is a very vague point in itself, although in general cakes > will > > > be less dense than breads because once eggs start to have an impact on > the > > > structure, that impact is to make it lighter. In fact, a cake doesn't > have > > > to have any flour at all, thanks to the structure contribution of eggs, > > for > > > example flourless chocolate cake. However, a cake must have some other > > > contributor to structure besides eggs, otherwise things like souffle > would > > > be a cake. It's all quite fuzzy and the boundaries overlap to some > extent. > > > But this is at least a close approximation to the way I see things being > > > named. > > > > > > > > > -- > > > Alex Rast > > > > > > (remove d., .7, not, and .NOSPAM to reply) > > > > > > |
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