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Old 15-12-2006, 01:31 AM posted to rec.food.baking
Richard Hollenbeck
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Posts: 16
Default Batter vs. Dough At what point does a batter become a dough or does a dough become a batter?

Thanks to both of you. I simply kicked up the hydration to 122% without
changing any of the other ingredients' ratios and it did the trick. You can
refer to another post I made today about English muffins. I found that
making the dough into a batter and pouring the batter into biscuit-cutting
rings gave me the characteristic big bubbles I was seeking.

"yetanotherBob" wrote in message
...
In article E0igh.9488$Li6.615@trndny03,
says...
I have a dough formula that I want to convert into a batter. By using
the
"Baker's Percentage," my water is about 78% of the weight of the flour.
That's a pretty wet and sticky dough already. At what point does it
become
a batter? 100% water? Is there any consensus? One of my baking
classmates
told me that if it can be poured, it's a batter. That doesn't sound very
scientific. Ideas?

Thanks.

Rich Hollenbeck
Moreno Valley, CA USA

I'll go along with your classmate. What's scientific about the terms
"dough" and "batter" to begin with?

In another context, it's stepping up to the plate that makes a batter a
batter. Having done that, if he can hit, he makes dough.

Bob ;-)



 

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