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biig 22-04-2007 02:12 PM

Silly question..Corn flour/corn starch
 


I've never used corn flour, but have heard about using it in
recipes. I use cornstarch to thicken gravies. How do they differ? Is
corn flour just finer ground corn meal? Thanks....Sharon

Sheldon 22-04-2007 02:29 PM

Silly question..Corn flour/corn starch
 
biig wrote:
> * *I've never used corn flour, but have heard about using it in
> recipes. *I use cornstarch to thicken gravies. *How do they differ? * Is
> corn flour just finer ground corn meal?


In UK recipes it's one and the same.

corn flour
Finely ground cornmeal, corn flour comes in yellow and white and is
used for breading and in combination with other flours in baked goods.
Corn flour is milled from the whole kernel, while CORNSTARCH is
obtained from the endosperm portion of the kernel.

In British recipes the term "cornflour" is used synonymously with the
U.S. word cornstarch.

MASA HARINA is a special corn flour that's the basic ingredient for
corn tortillas.

� Copyright Barron's Educational Services, Inc. 1995 based on THE FOOD
LOVER'S COMPANION, 2nd edition, by Sharon Tyler Herbst.
---

Sheldon


Jke 22-04-2007 03:20 PM

Silly question..Corn flour/corn starch
 

"biig" > schreef in bericht ...
>
>
> I've never used corn flour, but have heard about using it in
> recipes. I use cornstarch to thicken gravies. How do they differ? Is
> corn flour just finer ground corn meal? Thanks....Sharon


To the best of my knowledge, corn flour is corn starch (US vs UK or vice
versa). And I *think* corn meal is the yellow stuff that is polenta in Italy
(avalaible in at elast 3 degrees of fineness).



Phred 22-04-2007 03:55 PM

Silly question..Corn flour/corn starch
 
In article >, "Jke" > wrote:
>
>"biig" > schreef in bericht ...
>> I've never used corn flour, but have heard about using it in
>> recipes. I use cornstarch to thicken gravies. How do they differ? Is
>> corn flour just finer ground corn meal? Thanks....Sharon

>
>To the best of my knowledge, corn flour is corn starch (US vs UK or vice
>versa). And I *think* corn meal is the yellow stuff that is polenta in Italy
>(avalaible in at elast 3 degrees of fineness).


Judging by the shelves in our local Coles supermarket, most Oz corn
flour is now made from friggin' wheat! "Wheaten Corn Flour" for
crissake!

You can still buy the real stuff though if you read the labels
carefully. It's very fine and soft and "disolves" *very* readily in
water so you can add quite a bit to a brew to thicken it without
adding much extra liquid.

Cheers, Phred.

--
LID


Karen AKA Kajikit 22-04-2007 09:04 PM

Silly question..Corn flour/corn starch
 
On Sun, 22 Apr 2007 18:51:51 +0200, "Jke" >
wrote:

>
>
>> Judging by the shelves in our local Coles supermarket, most Oz corn
>> flour is now made from friggin' wheat! "Wheaten Corn Flour" for
>> crissake!

>
>Wow, how strange.


It's not really strange - Australia is a major wheat-growing country,
not a corn producer. They don't have cornflour for the same reason
that they use cane sugar instead of (ick) cornsyrup.

Melondy 22-04-2007 09:39 PM

Silly question..Corn flour/corn starch
 
biig wrote:
>
> I've never used corn flour, but have heard about using it in
> recipes. I use cornstarch to thicken gravies. How do they differ? Is
> corn flour just finer ground corn meal? Thanks....Sharon



In the United States corn flour is different than cornstarch. And then
you can also find cornmeal. Cornmeal is grittier than corn flour. Corn
flour is more fine like flour. Masa is a type of cornmeal that is
processed with lime, used in making tamales and tortillas, Mexican
style. But if you are in the UK, corn flour IS cornstarch.

Melondy

biig 22-04-2007 10:07 PM

Silly question..Corn flour/corn starch
 


Karen AKA Kajikit wrote:
>
> On Sun, 22 Apr 2007 09:12:49 -0400, biig > wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > I've never used corn flour, but have heard about using it in
> >recipes. I use cornstarch to thicken gravies. How do they differ? Is
> >corn flour just finer ground corn meal? Thanks....Sharon

>
> Cornstarch IS cornflour... just a different name for it.


I thought so too, until yesterday a tv chef used 1 cup of corn flour
and 1 cup of unbleached ap flour to make pasta......???

biig 22-04-2007 10:09 PM

Silly question..Corn flour/corn starch
 


Melondy wrote:
>
> biig wrote:
> >
> > I've never used corn flour, but have heard about using it in
> > recipes. I use cornstarch to thicken gravies. How do they differ? Is
> > corn flour just finer ground corn meal? Thanks....Sharon

>
> In the United States corn flour is different than cornstarch. And then
> you can also find cornmeal. Cornmeal is grittier than corn flour. Corn
> flour is more fine like flour. Masa is a type of cornmeal that is
> processed with lime, used in making tamales and tortillas, Mexican
> style. But if you are in the UK, corn flour IS cornstarch.
>
> Melondy


Thanks. I use cornmeal for cornbread and to dust a pizza pan, corn
starch for gravy. I've seen corn flour in the stores.....Sharon

Victor Sack[_1_] 22-04-2007 10:54 PM

Silly question..Corn flour/corn starch
 
biig > wrote:

> I've never used corn flour, but have heard about using it in
> recipes. I use cornstarch to thicken gravies. How do they differ? Is
> corn flour just finer ground corn meal? Thanks....Sharon


See section 3 of the rec.fook.cooking FAQ.

Victor

Phred 23-04-2007 02:40 PM

Silly question..Corn flour/corn starch
 
In article >, Karen AKA Kajikit > wrote:
>On Sun, 22 Apr 2007 14:55:44 GMT, (Phred)
>wrote:
>>In article >, "Jke"

> > wrote:

[snip]
>>>To the best of my knowledge, corn flour is corn starch (US vs UK or vice
>>>versa). And I *think* corn meal is the yellow stuff that is polenta in Italy
>>>(avalaible in at elast 3 degrees of fineness).

>>
>>Judging by the shelves in our local Coles supermarket, most Oz corn
>>flour is now made from friggin' wheat! "Wheaten Corn Flour" for
>>crissake!
>>
>>You can still buy the real stuff though if you read the labels
>>carefully. It's very fine and soft and "disolves" *very* readily in
>>water so you can add quite a bit to a brew to thicken it without
>>adding much extra liquid.

>
>That's been true for over a decade - if you're only just noticing it
>now you're a bit behind the times... my mother was complaining about
>the 'wheat' cornflour when I was still in school! I think there's
>still one brand of real cornflour in Australia...


Aw, geez, Karen. "For over a decade"? That's *recently* in my book,
hence "now made from friggin' wheat!" But I admit I can't say when I
did first notice it. Perhaps when I bought the packet (of *real* corn
flour) I just finished last week -- the Use By date was Oct 1995. :)
Clearly, I don't use much; but it keeps forever in the freezer. (Or at
least keeps well enough to do what I want it to do. :-)

Cheers, Phred.

--
LID


Dimitri 23-04-2007 04:37 PM

Silly question..Corn flour/corn starch
 

"Sheldon" > wrote in message
ups.com...
biig wrote:
> I've never used corn flour, but have heard about using it in
> recipes. I use cornstarch to thicken gravies. How do they differ? Is
> corn flour just finer ground corn meal?


In UK recipes it's one and the same.

corn flour
Finely ground cornmeal, corn flour comes in yellow and white and is
used for breading and in combination with other flours in baked goods.
Corn flour is milled from the whole kernel, while CORNSTARCH is
obtained from the endosperm portion of the kernel.

In British recipes the term "cornflour" is used synonymously with the
U.S. word cornstarch.

MASA HARINA is a special corn flour that's the basic ingredient for
corn tortillas.

? Copyright Barron's Educational Services, Inc. 1995 based on THE FOOD
LOVER'S COMPANION, 2nd edition, by Sharon Tyler Herbst.
---

Sheldon



It should be noted that Masa Harina is a specially processed (slaked) corn and
therefore differs in taste;

Dimitri

masa; masa harina
[MAH-sah ah-REE-nah]
The Spanish word for "dough," masa is the traditional dough used to make corn
TORTILLAS. It's made with sun- or fire-dried corn kernels that have been cooked
in limewater (water mixed with calcium oxide). After having been cooked, then
soaked in the limewater overnight, the wet corn is ground into masa. Masa harina
(literally "dough flour") is flour made from dried masa.
© Copyright Barron's Educational Services, Inc. 1995 based on THE FOOD LOVER'S
COMPANION, 2nd edition, by Sharon Tyler Herb



Miche 25-04-2007 12:26 AM

Silly question..Corn flour/corn starch
 
In article >,
(Phred) wrote:

> In article >, "Jke"
> > wrote:
> >
> >"biig" > schreef in bericht ...
> >> I've never used corn flour, but have heard about using it in
> >> recipes. I use cornstarch to thicken gravies. How do they differ? Is
> >> corn flour just finer ground corn meal? Thanks....Sharon

> >
> >To the best of my knowledge, corn flour is corn starch (US vs UK or vice
> >versa). And I *think* corn meal is the yellow stuff that is polenta in Italy
> >(avalaible in at elast 3 degrees of fineness).

>
> Judging by the shelves in our local Coles supermarket, most Oz corn
> flour is now made from friggin' wheat! "Wheaten Corn Flour" for
> crissake!


It's been that way in NZ for at least 20 years.

> You can still buy the real stuff though if you read the labels
> carefully. It's very fine and soft and "disolves" *very* readily in
> water so you can add quite a bit to a brew to thicken it without
> adding much extra liquid.


Look for maize cornflour.

Miche

--
In the monastery office --
Before enlightenment: fetch mail, shuffle paper
After enlightenment: fetch mail, shuffle paper


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