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Chocolate (rec.food.chocolate) all topics related to eating and making chocolate such as cooking techniques, recipes, history, folklore & source recommendations. |
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Does anyone know of a broad reference on the ins and
outs of using invertase? I see it used in recipes but they don't contain much discussion as to why it's used and how quantity is determined. Not much in the way of theory or deep background. A web search only returns superficial information. A web reference would be good, but a book title would work too. Thanks in advance. -- Reg |
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Well, invertase converts sucrose to fructose and glucose and is relatively
stable through a range of pHs. Glucose isomerase does the same thing and is cheaper. You might want to use invertase to prevent crystallization of sucrose (maybe in soft centers), or possibly to enhance sweetness (fructose tastes sweeter than sucrose -- though it's probably easier to add fructose from the get-go rather than enzymatically convert it). I suppose that by breaking up the disaccharide you could also lower the water activity (which would have a number of effects, not the least of which making the product more resistant to spoilage). I can't think of a web-site per se that covers invertase specifically, and I'm not sure what you mean by the "ins and outs" of using it. That's like asking about the ins and outs of using water or sugar. Reg wrote: > Does anyone know of a broad reference on the ins and > outs of using invertase? I see it used in recipes but > they don't contain much discussion as to why it's used > and how quantity is determined. Not much in the way of > theory or deep background. A web search only returns > superficial information. > > A web reference would be good, but a book title would > work too. > > Thanks in advance. > |
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James McIninch wrote:
> I'm not sure what you mean by the "ins and outs" of using it. That's like > asking about the ins and outs of using water or sugar. Go **** yourself. -- Reg |
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Reg wrote:
> James McIninch wrote: > > >> I'm not sure what you mean by the "ins and outs" of using it. That's >> like asking about the ins and outs of using water or sugar. > > Go **** yourself. What? Someone gives you a lot of good information and this is your response? What an ass. |
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On 2006-12-11 12:43:27 -0500, Reg > said:
> Does anyone know of a broad reference on the ins and > outs of using invertase? I see it used in recipes but > they don't contain much discussion as to why it's used > and how quantity is determined. Not much in the way of > theory or deep background. A web search only returns > superficial information. > > A web reference would be good, but a book title would > work too. > > Thanks in advance. Try Jean Pierre Wybauw's "Fine Chocolate-Great Experience" book |
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