What are the different types of flours that can be used for making bread?!


Question:

What are the different types of flours that can be used for making bread?


Answers:
There are lots of varities of flour that can be used for making bread depending on the availability in your area.

Here it is:

Types of Flour

Wheat Flours
When referring to flour, most people mean wheat flour, unless they say otherwise. Flours made from other foods include amaranth, barley, buckwheat, millet, oats, soy, quinoa, rice, rye, and triticale.

Wheat flours are classified by the amount of protein they contain. Wheat flours made from soft wheats are relatively low in protein and generally are used for making cakes, cookies, pastries, and crackers. Those flours made from hard wheats are high in protein and generally are used for quick and yeast breads.

All-purpose flour: This flour is made from a blend of soft and hard wheat, or medium-protein wheats. As its name implies, it is used as a multipurpose flour in a range of baked goods.

However, different manufacturers use varying proportions of hard and soft wheats, so the protein level in all-purpose flours ranges from 9 to 15 grams per cup. When baking yeast breads, use an all-purpose flour or a bread flour with at least 2 3/4 grams of protein per 1/4 cup because high-protein flours tend to produce finer textured, higher-volume yeast breads. To find out how much protein an all-purpose flour contains, check the amount of protein in grams per cup on the flour bag's nutrition label.




Cake flour: A soft wheat blend. Its low protein and low gluten content make it suitable for baking fine-textured cakes. Cake flour produces a tender, delicate crumb because the gluten is less elastic. Many bakers use it for angel food and chiffon cakes.



Self-rising flour: Self-rising flour is an all-purpose flour that contains baking powder, baking soda, and salt.



Bread flour: Bread flour contains more gluten and protein than all-purpose flour, making it ideal for baking breads. When rubbed between your fingers, it feels a bit more granular than all-purpose flour. When used instead of all-purpose flour, you usually need less. If you use a bread machine, use bread flour instead of all-purpose flour for the best results. Or, use all-purpose flour and add 1 or 2 tablespoons of gluten flour (available at grocery or natural food stores).



Instant flour: A patented process is used to produce a quick-mixing flour for use in thickening gravies and sauces.



Whole wheat flour: Whole wheat or graham flours are processed less than plain flour and, therefore, retain more of their nutrients and fiber. Whole wheat flour, also called graham flour, is a coarse-textured flour ground from the entire wheat kernel. It is good in breads and some cookies, but generally is not the best choice for pastry or other delicate baked goods.



Other Types of Flour
Specialty flours: Specialty flours, such as whole wheat or graham, rye, oat, buckwheat, and soy, generally are combined with all-purpose flour in baked products because none has sufficient gluten to provide the right amount of elasticity on its own.



Rye flour: Rye flour is a traditional ingredient in many breads, cakes, and pastries of Northern and Eastern Europe. The gluten in rye flour adds stickiness to the dough but lacks the elasticity of wheat flour gluten. Using a large proportion of rye flour to wheat flour results in a more compact product.



Oat flour: Oat flour can be purchased or made by grinding rolled oats to a fine powder in a food processor, 1/2 cup at a time.



Soy flour: Soy flour is a cream-colored, strong-flavored flour that is a rich source of protein and iron and contains no gluten. Baked products made with soy flour brown more quickly, so you may have to reduce the baking temperature depending on the amount used.

AND IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO SUBSTITUTE FLOURS:

Substituting Flours

Interchanging bleached flour and unbleached flour: Both types are all-purpose, which means they are equally good for making most baked goods. The difference is that bleached flour has been made chemically whiter in appearance than unbleached flour.

The bleaching process does compromise some of the flour's nutrients, but they are often added back to the flour.

Which flour you choose is a personal preference. Some bakers like their white cake and bread as white as they can be; others prefer their flour to be processed as little as possible.


Substituting cake flour for all-purpose flour: Sift the cake flour first. Then, use 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons of cake flour for every 1 cup of all-purpose flour.

Substituting self-rising flour for all-purpose flour: You can use it as a substitute for all-purpose flour in quick bread recipes, but omit the salt, baking powder, and baking soda from the recipe.

Substituting whole wheat flour for all-purpose flour: You can replace part of the all-purpose flour with whole wheat flour. Use proportions of half all-purpose flour and half whole wheat flour in most baked goods. The end product will not look the same and may have less volume and a coarser texture.

AND ADDITIONAL INFO ABOUT STORING IT:

Storage and Sifting

Storing: Store all-purpose flour in an airtight container in a cool, dry place for 10 to 15 months; store whole grain flours for up to 5 months. For longer storage, refrigerate or freeze the flour in a moisture- and vaporproof container. Before using a refrigerated flour in yeast breads, bring it to room temperature so it does not slow the rising of the bread.

To Sift or Not to Sift: You usually can skip the sifting of all-purpose flour. Even though most all-purpose flour is presifted, the flour settles in the bag during shipping. So, it's a good idea to stir through the flour in the bag or canister before measuring to make it lighter. Then gently spoon the flour into a dry measuring cup and level it off with a spatula.

You will need to sift cake flour before measuring it.

I HOPE THIS HELPS.

Self Raising Flour

Whole Grain Flour

Hard Flour ('bread flour')

All-purpose (aka Plain Flour)

You can use any flour, such as rye, millet, brown rice, oat, soy, chickpea or even potato, so long as you use at least 50-60% wheat flour. Hard wheat is the best, as it contains the most wheat gluten, which helps the bread to rise. All-purpose would work, but pastry flour should be avoided, as it's too soft.

You can also use spelt flour which gives a nutty taste / texture. It is ok for hand baking or for bread machines .

When baking bread you want to use a strong flour. This means that there is plenty of gluten that will stretch as the yeast works making the bread rise.
I use a mix of white and wholemeal strong flour but you can use just one or the other.
Granary flour is available which has nibbed wheat in it.
Rye flour is very good but the bread will be heavy.
Make your own mix by using half white and half wholemeal. To this you can add oats for keeping your cholesterol down, pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds, millet, the list is endless.
I make the above bread and it is delicious, makes wonderful crunchy toast that fills you up. Try it with homemade marmalade.

Basic Types of Flour
The three basic flour categories are:

Wholemeal - 100% extraction, made from the whole wheatgrain with nothing added or taken away.

Brown - usually contains about 85% of the original grain, some bran and germ have been removed.

White - usually 75% of the wheatgrain. Most of the bran and wheatgerm have been removed during milling.
The choice of flours for home cooking and baking
Plain Flour - also known as all-purpose. Use for shortcrust pastry, sauces and gravies where a raising agent is not required.

Self-raising - Flour to which a raising agent has been evenly mixed. Use for cakes, scones and puddings.

Soft Flour - a soft white flour which has been milled very finely to give sponges, cake and scones a higher rise and finer texture.

Strong Flour - a flour with a high protein content providing a high volume and open texture. Ideal for bread and all types of yeast cookery, Yorkshire puddings and puff pastry

depends what you want it to be like really.

chocolate bread is nice add cocoa to the mixture of flour




The consumer Foods information on foodaq.com is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for any medical conditions.
The answer content post by the user, if contains the copyright content please contact us, we will immediately remove it.
Copyright © 2007 FoodAQ - Terms of Use - Contact us - Privacy Policy

Food's Q&A Resources