Categories: Recipe

Science of Flour in Baking

Published by
James marcus

If there is one ingredient that defines baking, I would argue that it is flour. Specifically, wheat flour. Sure, sugar is important for desserts and pastries, but flour is the backbone of most baked goods.

The composition of Wheat Flour

Wheat flour is composed of proteins, starch, lipids, sugars and enzymes. The two most important of these components, the starch and the protein, form the “crumb” of a baked good. The crumb is a network of starch and protein interspersed with millions of tiny air bubbles.

Wheat flour is about 70% starch. Starch granules absorb water from the batter, swell up, and gel. As an item bakes, the gelled starch sets to help form the physical structure of the baked good.

Protein is the other major component of wheat flour. When a batter or dough is mixed, two proteins in the dry flour, glutenin and gliadin, absorb water and form gluten.

Gluten is a network of coiled and folded protein strands. The stronger the gluten, the more water it will absorb.

If you replace a low protein flour with an equal volume of high protein flour the batter will be much thicker, since the stronger gluten will absorb more of the available water.

Using a higher protein flour changes the outcome of the recipe not only because the gluten is tougher, but also because there is less water available to the other ingredients in the batter or dough.

The stronger the flour protein the more water it will absorb.

Why We Knead Dough:

As a batter or dough is mixed or kneaded the coiled and folded strands of gluten begin to align and tighten.

This is why a bread dough that starts out loose and “shaggy” becomes smooth and silky as it is kneaded. This is also why over-mixing batter will give you tough pancakes or a dense cake.

Types of Wheat Flour used in baking:

Hard wheat (often a “spring” wheat) is high in protein and low in starch. When this high protein wheat is milled, the hard kernels break into large chunks that will form a strong gluten network when they come in contact with water.

Soft wheat (often a “winter” wheat) has a lower protein content and higher starch content. When low protein wheat is milled, the soft kernels break into very fine particles. Winter wheat produces a fine and silky flour that forms a weak gluten network when it comes in contact with water.

  • Bread flour contains more of the high protein wheat and cake flour contains more of the low protein wheat.
  • All purpose flour is a mix of both types of wheat and has a medium protein content.
  • Whole wheat flour is similar in protein content to all-purpose flour, but the bran and germ are left in the flour.

The Protein Content and Weight by Type of Flour:

Cake Flour is 7-8% protein and 1 cup weighs 4.5 oz

Bleached All Purpose Flour is 9.5-12% protein and 1 cup weighs 5 oz

Unbleached All Purpose Flour is 11-12% protein and 1 cup weighs 5 oz

Bread Flour is 12-13% protein and and 1 cup weighs 5 oz

Whole Wheat Flour is 11-15% protein and and 1 cup weighs 5 oz

When to use Bread flour vs. cake flour vs. all purpose flour

  • Use bread flour when you want a tight and chewy crumb (bread or pizza).
  • Use cake flour when you want a soft and tender crumb (pound cake).
  • Use all purpose flour when you want an in-between texture (muffins or cookies).

What is Gluten-Free Flour?

Gluten-free recipes use non-wheat flours that don’t contain gluten. When using gluten-free flour, a binding agent must be added to the batter to replace the elasticity lost without the presence of the wheat flour protein.

I have used a commercial gluten-free flour which contains rice flour, potato starch, pea fiber, tapioca starch and xanthan gum. The xanthan gum acts as a binder to replace the structure provided by wheat gluten.

Without gluten the structure is weaker so a gluten-free baked good usually won’t rise as high as one made with wheat flour.

Cakes made with Gluten-Free flour but different ways of mixing.

Learn about the science of baking ingredients:

  • The science of fats in baking
  • The science of sugar in baking
  • The science of salt in baking
  • The science of eggs in baking
  • The science of Baking Powder & Baking Soda

This post was last modified on 02/11/2023 23:03

James marcus

Garden Courte is a blog written by [James Marcus], a passionate gardener and writer. She has been gardening for over 20 years and has a deep understanding of plants and how to care for them. In her blog, she shares her knowledge and experience with others, providing tips and advice on gardening, plant care, and more.

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Published by
James marcus

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