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Sourdough (rec.food.sourdough) Discussing the hobby or craft of baking with sourdough. We are not just a recipe group, Our charter is to discuss the care, feeding, and breeding of yeasts and lactobacilli that make up sourdough cultures. |
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Hello all.
(I do not at any point want to discourage anyone from using either cups or scales simply that we use them for the right reasons. Knowledge is empowering after all.) A discussion recently in another group about cups v scales, brought up that flour and humidity thing. Since I've noticed that it's only people that bake using cups that ever mention this as a search on the internet confirmed, (one or two who used scales mentioned it but their argument didn't make any sense at all so I disregard it). Well in the name of balance (no pun intended) I thought I'd see what I could find for myself. The weather here in London had been quite dry a for a week so I expected the flour to be on the dryer side too. I took a bag (paper) of flour and weighed it. I also weighed an inert control weight. I then put a large tray in the bottom of the oven, filled it with boiling water and switched the oven on set to 40C. I then put the flour in the oven and waited on hour. After the hour was up the flour in 100% humidity had gained just 1.4% weight and of course the control was unchanged. I returned the flour to the oven and waited one more hour. This time there was no change at all. So I returned the flour to the oven. I repeated this for four hours with no further change. I then returned the flour to the cupboard. The next day the weather was very wet and the flour was just 0.5% above the starting weight. So, it seems my flour absorbed only 1.4% of it's weight from the water in the 100% humidity air at 40C. And just 0.5% when left in the kitchen cupboard. This really isn't significant in the slightest and I'd challenge any home baker to spot the difference when they were mixing. I put this to the people in the other group but they had all suddenly lost their voice. Again I'm not interested in discouraging people from using either cups or scales they both have their uses fulfilling the different needs of different home bakers. I just think we should use the method that suites us for honest and real reasons, there's no need to invent reasons for what we do in the kitchen. Because we are comfortable with that way is enough. Jim |
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