Types of Yeast Dough
Types of Yeast Dough
Types of Yeast Dough
Quick-Rising Yeast
This is a higher protein strain of yeast that has been recently developed. Just like other dry yeast, it can
be stored for a long time if kept cool and dry. It is blended with the other ingredients in the recipe and
activated with very hot (125 to 130F) water. This eliminates the proofing process where the yeast is
activated by dissolving it in warm water. In addition, the rising process is speedier because the initial
temperatures are warmer due to the very hot water.
One packet of quick-rising yeast can be used in place of 1 packet of active dry yeast. Keep in mind that
bread flavor develops under a long leavening period; this may not be the best choice of yeasts since it
speeds up the rising process.
You need a lot of eggs plus plenty of sugar, which helps create a thick syrup that keeps the egg
foam from collapsing. The neat thing about the whipping method is that it gives lie to the myth that
egg foams can only be created with whites. Twaddle. Indeed in most instances where the whipping
method is employed youre whipping either whole eggs or egg yolks plus sugar. Egg whites plus
sugar are a rarity in the whipping method universe because, well, then youd have a meringue,
would you not?
But I digress. In general sponges made via the whipping method begin with the egg-sugar foam. Any
flavorings (like chocolate) are added next, then the dry ingredients are carefully folded in so as to
preserve the bubbles (I said you can make a foam with egg yolksI didnt say that foam was stable).
Sometimes a meringue is folded in as well to add more volume.
The upside of the whipping method is that it creates sponges that are very light, sweet and eggy-
tasting. The down side is that those sponges can be a little dry tasting, at least by New World
standards. All this begs the question: why use the whipping method at all when perfectly good
chemical leaveners are available? The answer is because egg sponges have a cleaner taste and a
lighter texture. The high proportion of egg can also create very plastic sheets of sponge that are
perfect for rolling into things like yule logs. And anyway, dry cake is what cake syrup is for!
The roll-in method is the description for what you do when you laminate dough for croissants,
Danishes and puff pastry. Effectively youre rolling butter into a flour-and-water dough. Personally
I think of it as folding it in, but there you go. Who am I to argue with decades of established pastry
lingo?
Theres no question that laminating seems more like a technique than a mixing method, though
when you consider that one of the chief aims of mixing is to incorporate fat it all starts to make a
little more sense.
So what does the roll-in method accomplish? By itself its an elegant way to maximize the process of
mechanical leavening, i.e. the raising of a dough via steam power. Lest we forget, a drop of water
transformed into steam occupies something on the order of 1400 times more space. Which makes
confined steam a heck of a leavening engine.
Done well, the roll-in method creates over a thousand ultra-thin, alternating sheets of fat (usually
butter or margarine) and dough. When heated the fat melts, freeing the dough sheets to push apart
from one another through the action of steam.
The question often asked is: where does the water come from? The butter? Yes, though plenty of
water/steam is released from the dough itself. In fact the dough supplies all the water thats needed
for leavening. A wet butter with a high proportion of water can actually harm the process,
dampening the dough sheets and making it harder for them to separate from one another and rise.
This is why experienced laminators favor fats like Euro-style butter, dry butter or margarine
which have little-to-no water, and which create higher rising, crispier products.
How high can laminated doughs rise? Under perfect conditions, up to 7 times their original
thickness. Granted thats far less than the theoretical 1400 times, but then nobodys perfect. Even
under the best circumstances the vast majority of the steam we bakers try to capture escapes.
The Egg Foam Method begins, unsurprisingly, with eggs. Usually just the whites, though it is
possible to make egg foams using the yolks too (they dont fluff up as well, but more on the reasons
for that later). The eggs are introduced to some sort of whipping device a stand mixer, hand
mixer, or whisk. Air begins to be incorporated and before long, voila , ze foam. The next step is
usually to introduce some form of acid stabilizer (cream of tartar, say) before the foam is folded into
the other ingredients in the recipe.
What do those air bubbles do in the, erwhatever-it-is? Just as with all other mixing methods, they
leaven (or push up) the batter. Once again its not expanding air that accomplishes the task. Air
only expands by 20% or so in the heat of an oven. Rather its the water in the batter that does it. As I
mentioned last week, water expands to some 1400 times its original volume when its converted to
steam. The steam blows up the air bubbles and bingo, youve got leavening.
Interestingly its the hand mixer, as opposed to one of the stand variety, thats the best tool for
making egg foam, since it allows you to chase down every last little pocket of unwhipped white (my
big ol Viking mixer is terrible at egg whites). Of course you can do it by hand, but there are very few
people out there with the forearm strength to whip up a mass of egg whites into peaks before some
of the foam starts to collapse. I once knew a brawny Swede who could do it. That sweet old lady
could have pimp-slapped a longshoreman unconscious. The rest of us mortals need machines.
What are the advantages to that? First, the cutting in of fat serves the function of coating and
lubricating flour granules, which greatly reduces the ability of the gluten molecules they contain to
bond to one another. Thus, the Biscuit Method makes baked goods tender. The other big thing the
Biscuit Method does is make things flaky.
Hows that? Well remember the rubbing thing. Most of the time when you dive into a recipe that
employs the Biscuit Method, youll come across instructions directing you to stop rubbing when the
fat blobs are about the size of peas (or at the very least when the mixture starts to look like corn
meal). The reason you do this is because flakiness is a direct result of odd-sized blobs of fat, which,
when the dough is rolled out into a sheet, form semisolid layers. When the dough is baked these
layers melt away, leaving long slender gaps in the structure. These gaps are what are responsible for
the texture we know as flaky.
Like the Muffin Method, the Biscuit Method is characterized by minimal mixing. Once the dry
ingredients and the wet ingredients finally come together, the less you work the dough the better.
This is especially important with pie crust, where any gluten formation at all can lead to significant
shrinkage and toughness.
HISTORY OF BAKING
Baking is a method of cooking food that uses prolonged dry heat, normally in an oven, but also in
hot ashes, or on hot stones. The most common baked item is bread but many other types of foods
are baked. Heat is gradually transferred "from the surface of cakes, cookies, and breads to their
centre. As heat travels through it transforms batters and doughs into baked goods with a firm dry
crust and a softer centre". Baking can be combined with grilling to produce a hybrid barbecue
variant by using both methods simultaneously, or one after the other. Baking is related to
barbecuing because the concept of the masonry oven is similar to that of a smoke pit.
Because of historical social and familial roles, baking has traditionally been performed at home by
women for domestic consumption and by men in bakeries and restaurants for local consumption.
When production was industrialized, baking was automated by machines in large factories. The art
of baking remains a fundamental skill and is important for nutrition, as baked goods, especially
breads, are a common but important food, both from an economic and cultural point of view. A
person who prepares baked goods as a profession is called a baker.
*An Egyptian funerary Model of a bakery and brewery (11th dynasty, circa 20091998 B.C.)