Publisher's Synopsis
Bread Making for Beginners:
Comprehensive Guide on Breadmaking, Types, Common Mistakes & Preparation Steps, Answers to Your Likely Questions & Lots More
Breadmaking involves dynamic physicochemical, microbiological, plus biochemical changes caused by mechanical-thermal action, yeast including lactic acid bacteria (LAB), and endogenous enzymes. Mixing involves mechanical and hydration-induced changes, while proofing involves enzymes and baking involves temperature increase. Starch and proteins alter most during breadmaking. Gluten proteins control wheat flour dough rheology, structure development during mixing, as well as gas holding, while starch controls final textural qualities and stability of the item after baking.
Additionally, breadmaking has seen several changes in processing and basic materials. Commercial bakeries quickly adapt their production, product, and distribution networks to changing consumer lifestyles. To meet consumer needs and simplify breadmaking, various methods have been created. Breadmaking processes now include mixing ingredients, dough resting, splitting and shaping, proving, and baking, with intermediate phases varying by product. Low-temperature technology was first used in bakery products to reduce economic losses from bread staling and market acceptance. Refrigerated dough, par-baked bread, along with frozen bread are now normal. The bread dough is partially baked until its shape is fixed, resulting in a product having structured crumb and no crunchy crust that bakes quickly in the retail bakery. Thus, these alternate breadmaking methods cause chemical changes not considered in regular breadmaking. More bread-baking experience helps you see how various steps affect the outcome. Ingredients, measurements, proofing, kneading, and baking are all involved. Although visiting a bakery may appear simpler, you won't be terrified once you grasp the essentials. And if you're a lover of bread, then this mind-blowing guide will show you all you need to know about bread production, the steps, types, errors to avoid and more.