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Leavening Agents

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Two parts flour One part liquid. Mix only until dry ingredients are moist. Examples ... Sponge. Leavened by air beaten into egg foam. Steam a minor leavener ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Leavening Agents


1
Leavening Agents
2
Objectives
  • Explain the purpose of leavening agents in baked
    goods.
  • Identify natural leavening agents and describe
    how they work.
  • Explain the chemical process by which baking soda
    and baking powder leaven baked goods.
  • Describe the role of yeast in leavening.

3
Purpose of Leavening
  • To create light, fluffy baked goods.
  • Leavening means to lighten.
  • Heat is added to batter or dough
  • Bubbles of gas cause the mixture to inflate.
  • The main gases that leaven are
  • Air
  • Steam
  • Carbon dioxide

4
Natural Leavening Agents
  • Air
  • Steam

5
Air as a Leavening Agent
  • Sift flour
  • Beat fat with sugar
  • Whip batter, cream or egg whites
  • Fold the flour into the foam

6
Using Steam to Leaven
  • Water in liquid produces steam.
  • Requires a very hot oven.
  • Steam forms and
  • batter expands
  • around it.

7
Chemical Leaveners
8
Baking Soda and Baking Powder
  • A chemical reaction occurs that produces carbon
    dioxide.

9
Baking Soda
  • Sodium bicarbonate
  • Made from NaOH and H2CO3
  • When heat is added a chemical reaction between
    the liquid and the NaHCO3 occurs and gas is a
    product.

10
Baking Soda
  • If an acid is not added to the recipe sodium
    carbonate will form. (NaCO3)
  • This is a bitter tasting solid that gives an off
    color flavor to the baked good.

11
2NaHCO3 CO2 Na2CO3 H2O
Baking Soda
Gas
Bad Taste Yellow Color
12
Preventing Na2CO3
  • Add an acid to the recipe
  • Buttermilk
  • Vinegar
  • Honey
  • Fruit juice
  • Cream of Tartar

13
Baking Powder
  • Is a leavening compound that contains
  • Baking Soda
  • Dry Acid
  • Filler (Cornstarch)

14
Two Types of Baking Powder
  • Single Acting
  • CO2 released when liquid is added.
  • Acid is soluble in cold liquid.
  • Homemade baking powder.
  • Rarely sold commercially in US
  • Double Acting
  • Contains two acids.
  • One reacts with cold liquid.
  • One reacts with heat
  • Most CO2 released when heat is added.

15
Strength of Baking Powder
  • By Federal Law
  • Must yield 12 g CO2/100 g powder
  • BP used in home 14
  • BP used in industry 25

16
Use the Correct Amount of BP
  • Too Much
  • Product rises too far and collapses
  • 2. Too Little
  • Compact product
  • with little volume

17
Storing Baking Powder
  • Air Tight Container
  • Reacts in the container
  • Products wont produce as much CO2

18
Ammonium Bicarbonate
  • Used in Industry
  • Creates CO2
  • Bakers Ammonia
  • Used in crackers and thin cookies
  • Produces Ammonia gas that has bad smell and odor.
  • Thin products this gas dissipates.

19
How It All Works
  • Eggs and gluten provide the structure for the
    steam, air or CO2 to form around.
  • The structure sets when the protein in the eggs
    and gluten coagulate.
  • Large pockets sometimes seen in baked products
    are created by the steam, air and CO2.

20
Organisms that Leaven
  • Yeast is a living organism.
  • It leavens baked goods by producing carbon
    dioxide gas through fermentation. As it consumes
    sugars
  • the Yeast produces
  • ethyl alcohol and
  • carbon dioxide gas.

21
Producing CO2 with Yeast
  • Yeast is a microscopic organism.

22
Fermentation
  • Process in which yeast splits complex organic
    compounds into simpler substances.
  • CO2 is a product.
  • Yeast converts sugar into alcohol and carbon
    dioxide.

23
Carbon Dioxide
Yeast
C6H12O6 2C2H5OH 2CO2
Ethyl Alcohol
Glucose (sugar)
24
Fermentation Continued
  • Ethyl Alcohol Evaporates during baking.
  • Carbon dioxide causes the product to rise.
  • Yeast is killed by high baking temperatures and
    fermentation is stopped.

25
Assignment
  • Use the internet and research The History of
    Yeast. Write a one page paper that describes
    how yeast was used in cooking in the past and
    compare it to the way we use yeast today.

26
Making Leavened Products
27
Leavened Products
  • Yeast Breads
  • Quick Breads

28
Quick Breads
  • Made with baking powder or baking soda.
  • Doesnt need to rise as long as yeast bread.
  • Examples
  • MUFFINS
  • COFFEE CAKE
  • BISCUITS

29
Four Categories of Quick Breads
  • Pour Batters
  • Drop Batters
  • Soft Doughs
  • Stiff Doughs

30
Batters and Doughs
  • Batters
  • contain more
  • liquid than
  • doughs.

31
Types of Batters
  • Pour batters
  • Drop Batters

32
Pour Batters
  • Equal ratio of flour to liquid
  • Steam is the main leavener
  • Examples
  • Popovers
  • Cream puffs
  • Waffles
  • Pancakes
  • Cake

33
Drop Batters
  • Two parts flour One part liquid
  • Mix only until dry ingredients are moist
  • Examples
  • Muffins
  • Cookies

34
Doughs
  • Soft Doughs
  • Stiff Doughs

35
Soft Doughs
  • 3 parts flour 1 part liquid
  • More mixing to develop gluten may need to be
    kneaded
  • Example
  • Baking Powder Biscuits

36
Stiff Doughs
  • 6 to 8 parts flour 1 part liquid
  • Drier than soft doughs
  • Examples
  • Pie crust
  • Pasta

37
Leavening in Cakes
  • Shortened Cakes
  • Unshortened Cakes

38
Shortened Cakes
  • Contain
  • Margarine, Shortening, Butter (fat)
  • Chemical Leavener (Baking Powder/Soda)
  • Air as minor leavener
  • Examples
  • White cake
  • Yellow cake
  • Chocolate cake

39
Unshortened Cakes
  • Pound Cake
  • Leavened with air and steam
  • Pound cakes
  • Sponge
  • Leavened by air beaten into egg foam
  • Steam a minor leavener
  • Angel Food and other
  • sponge cakes

40
Assignment
  • Lab preparation
  • You will be making pancakes in lab. Use the
    recipe as a guide and list all supplies
    equipment you will use. Write a summary of the
    steps you will follow.
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