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[email protected] 16-03-2005 12:02 AM

Looking for noninstant nonfat dry milk
 
Several of our bread recipes include nonfat noninstant dry milk powder.
I used to be able to purchase it from any of several natural food
stores in my area, but now they all either don't carry it or can't get
it. So far I haven't found anything online either. Can instant nonfat
dry milk be substituted? If so, at what ratio. Or, if anyone knows
where I can get it online, I'd appreciate the address.

Thanks.

--Dave


The Old Bear 16-03-2005 04:24 AM

writes:

>From:

>Newsgroups: rec.food.baking
>Subject: Looking for noninstant nonfat dry milk
>Date: 15 Mar 2005 16:02:46 -0800
>
>Several of our bread recipes include nonfat noninstant dry milk powder.
>I used to be able to purchase it from any of several natural food
>stores in my area, but now they all either don't carry it or can't get
>it. So far I haven't found anything online either. Can instant nonfat
>dry milk be substituted? If so, at what ratio. Or, if anyone knows
>where I can get it online, I'd appreciate the address.


King Arthur Flour lists it in their catalog as Item No. 1188 at $4.25
for a one-pound bag or $3.75 each for two bags. The catalog description
is as follows:

"Our nonfat 'Baker's Special Dry Milk' is specially prepared
for use in yeast doughs; the high-heat processing disables
protease, an enzyme that normally slows down yeast growth.
Substitute our special dry milk in any yeasted recipe, and
see how much taller your bread rises.

"The addition of 1/4 cup dry milk will result in better
nutrition (extra calcium) and a more tender crumb. (Dry milk
won't reconstitue, so combine it with your other dry
ingredients)."

They also carry dried buttermilk powder and dried whole milk for
baking. See:
http://www.kingarthurflour.com

Cheers,
The Old Bear


Eric Jorgensen 17-03-2005 04:29 PM

On Tue, 15 Mar 2005 17:50:32 -0700
Eric Jorgensen > wrote:

> On 15 Mar 2005 16:02:46 -0800
> wrote:
>
> > Several of our bread recipes include nonfat noninstant dry milk powder.
> > I used to be able to purchase it from any of several natural food
> > stores in my area, but now they all either don't carry it or can't get
> > it. So far I haven't found anything online either. Can instant nonfat
> > dry milk be substituted? If so, at what ratio. Or, if anyone knows
> > where I can get it online, I'd appreciate the address.

>
>
> I actually researched this once.
>
> nonfat dry milk is a product of the butter industry, and it's
> manufacture gives it properties that make it valuable for baking (and
> possibly chocolate making) but also make it unsuitable for drinking, as
> I'm sure you've noticed.



I was curious, so i dug a little deeper.

It turns out that the process of boiling the water off of the leftovers
from butter and cheese manufacture are being replaced by filtration
processes that are in fact cheaper and produce a more valuable end product.

Read an FDA report from 2001 he
http://tinyurl.com/3umdn

Seems that liquified whey, whey powder, and purified lactose are
increasingly becoming market commodities that are more valuable than
non-fat dry milk. And in addition, the factory actually saves money by
switching from the boiling process to the filtering process.

Says here, also, that non-fat dry milk is 36% whey, which is clearly far
more than you get in the more drinkable instant powdered milk.

You could use regular milk as Roy suggested or use other powdered milk,
and spike it with a small amount of whey powder to get the flavor you were
going for.

I can think of a few things off the top of my head that wouldn't taste
right without the right amount of whey.


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