Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Flour Batter Method

What did we cover this week, we looked at another method of production called the "Flour batter" method. Can you recall what the history and advantages of this method are?

Here's a clue, click on the link and take a look at the article listed:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rationing_in_the_United_Kingdom_during_and_after_World_War_II

Do you remember now?
Food Rationing during the war made it differcult to obtain ingredients such as butter, sugar, eggs and milk. The "Flour batter" method of cake production enabled people to produce a good quality cake from a cheap or inexpensive recipe.

How did we do this?
Look at the recipe on page 74 of your books......
  1. We creamed equal parts of the fat with the flour in the begining of the mixing process, creaming a mixture puts air into the mix. This contributes to the rise in the cake batter when it is baked.
  2. Coating a portion of the flour with fat also helps stop over developing the gluten forming proteins in the flour. By controlling the gluten development we helped make a cake with soft or tender eating qualities.
  3. We aerated the eggs with some of the sugar. This helped increase the amount of mechanical aeration in the finished cake batter ensuring our cake would rise.
  4. When we added the beaten egg to the flour batter mix we prevented the cake batter from curdling. This was because of the large proportion of flour already present in the mix assited in emulsifying the ingredients.
  5. Adding the remaining flour last ensured that the flour would not be over worked and the protein in the flour would not become tough and elastic.

Can you see why it is important to understand the functions of your ingredients?

If you undertand what things do then you can adjust your recipes to allow for a lack of ingredients or solve a fault in a product you make. This ability to problem solve is an important part of being a baker or Pastry Chef.

Have a look at the information on flour when you get a chance, this will support what we are talking about in class.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flour

And remember if you have a question relating to this ask, you will not be the only person who is wondering what it all means but you may be the only person brave enough to speak up.

See you in class :-)


1 comment:

Meg xx said...

Ha!! Popped the Blogspot cherry. Top stuff Mrs A., I know it'll refresh my memory come exam time.