Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
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. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Wcsjohn" > wrote in message = ... Roland had said: > > I think intensive kneading makes a uniform crumb. to which John replied: > Not in my experience. I mix at relatively high speed for longer than = most > bakers and stretch and fold a lot, making a dough (or glop<g>) that is > extremely elastic and extensible, giving the dough the ability to form = large > pockets that are stable enough to bake due to the strength of the cell = walls. That is my thought, too. I am guessing that good dough is needed for = good holes just like good soapsuds are needed for good soap bubbles. Of = course one cannot go too far with that analogy because of the profound = difference in the molecular structure between starch-gluten membranes and soapsuds. For dough I'd guess that well-arranged an optimally elongated gluten=20 tendrils would be a considerable advantage. However, one could alternatively propose, because of the well-known molecular forces at surfaces that, under appropriate conditions, the=20 macromolecules of dough would be arranged by those, from a helter- skelter state to start, to ordered, elastic/extensible, structures. > I must stress that the preceding observations apply to high, 80%+ = doughs. =20 I am still having trouble with the concept of bakers' hydration because = of the moisture already in dough when milled, and the moisture which is absorbed upon storage. So the 75% hydration I have claimed for my big-hole experiments could be considerably higher, depending on how those sources are considered. > > Wet doughs have weaker walls of individual air cells so they may = fuse=20 > > to form larger cells (says Roland, characteristically = straight-faced). > Not sure that "weaker" is how I would describe the elastic dough I=20 > produce<g> (says John, grinningly). Well, if water molecules are important in the matrix, the matrix may be worse or better depending on their relative abundance. We would really need to hear from Uncle Linus about that. Otherwise I suspect that empirical science is the best hope, = notwithstanding that the isolation of parameters and variables in extemporaneous kitchen = studies is problematic (says Dick, giggling quietly up his sleeve). --- DickA |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Does more hydration translate to bigger air bubbles in the crumb? | Sourdough | |||
Kneading, hydration, gluten content, andholes(coarsely-textured crumb) | Sourdough | |||
Kneading, hydration, gluten content, and holes(coarsely-textured crumb) | Sourdough | |||
big holes in crumb | Sourdough | |||
Relationship of kneading to crumb profile. | Sourdough |