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THE SCIENCE OF BAKING
(PART ONE OF A TWO PART SERIES) Ever thought of baking as a science? Webster.com defines Science as being "a system or method reconciling practical ends with scientific laws". Well, that is what baking is. While the average home baker may use a recipe, a professional baker will probably use formulas (ingredients are written in pounds and ounces instead of cups and spoons, therefore the ingredients are weighed instead of measured) for baking. Regardless of how you measure the ingredients, you follow a certain method(s) to mix together a certain amount or percentage of ingredients together to yield an end result. The ingredients in baking recipes usually serve important purposes. For instance, baking soda produces gas for leavening when combined with an acidic ingredient such as vinegar or lemon juice. If you will take notice of your recipes that uses baking soda as the only leavening agent, you'll see that somewhere in the recipe there is an acid. It may be as obvious as the vinegar or lemon juice or it could be hidden in an ingredient you wouldn't normally consider acidic. Molasses would be such an example. Go ahead, take a moment or two and look through your recipes that include baking soda and see if you can determine the acidic ingredient! Go To Page: 1 2
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