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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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![]() The question occurs in regard to several recipes and boils down to should I or should I not be concerned with the slump and add more flour. Sounds like you're saying I should add flour 'till the ball holds up for a couple of minutes of kneading. By percentages do you mean 60% water by weight? I'm not familiar with the term "baker's percentages". -- Ken Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines. "barry" > wrote in message t... > > "Ken Ortmann" > wrote in message > ... > > I'm hoping someone can answer a question making bread dough (and pizza > > dough and such). I'm using a Kitchen Aid stand mixer as I am disabled and > > cannot mix and knead by hand. The instructions generally say to start with > > 3/4 of the flour and all of the liquid and mix for a minute or so. Then > add > > flour "until the dough forms a ball and cleans the sides of the bowl. Then > > knead for two minutes more". I can get it to the stage that the dough > forms > > a ball on the dough hook and cleans the sides of the bowl all right > > but,oftentimes, before two minutes are up, the ball of dough will slump > and > > stick at the bottom center of the mixer bowl. Adding more flour will cause > > the ball to re-form on the hook but I may have to do this several times > > going well over the amount of flour called for in the recipe. I understand > > that the amount of flour will vary somewhat due to weather and the whims > of > > the kitchen gods but surely should not exceed upper limits of the recipe. > > Whadda ya think I'm doin' wrong? By the way, I measure the flour by weight > > in grams. > > > > -- > > > > > > Ken > > > > Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines. > > > > Couple of observations. > > 1. What you're seeing is a normal process. The dough picks up the water, > sort of on the surface, and looks like it's finished -- the dough clears the > side of the bowl and forms a nice dough. Then the flour gets wetted through > and the thing slumps a bit. Normal. > > 2. Be careful of what you or the recipe author use as equivalents. One of > the nasty little secrets of bread, and most other, cookbooks is that a lot > of the recipes aren't tested to perform as written. The other little secret > is that a cup ain't a cup. If you measure the flour, you should also > measure the water and do some calculation of baker's percentages. > > If you are checking baker's percentages, use these as guidelines. 60% is > classic French bread. 65% is a tacky bread. 70% is pretty wet. 75% will > flow. 80% is a bear to work, and will require special handling. Obviously, > others have different guidelines and different doughs and local conditions > will lead to different conclusions, but if you start here, you at least have > an idea of what's going on. > > So, how much flour and water does the recipe call for? > > Barry > > |
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