COOKIES. …to cook in dry heat in an oven. The oven heats the air and the hot air cooks the food....
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Transcript of COOKIES. …to cook in dry heat in an oven. The oven heats the air and the hot air cooks the food....
COOKIES
…to cook in dry heat in an oven.
The oven heats the air and the hot air cooks the food.
Science principle: No lid is used during baking. A lid would trap the moisture as it was trying to evaporate. The evaporating moisture would then collect on the inside of the lid during condensation, and fall back into the food. That is moist heat…and is NOT baking.
Do not overcrowd an oven when baking, as it interferes with the circulation of hot air.
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The flour and liquid form the shape of the product. The flour and the eggs are known as the ‘strengtheners’.
Flour – all-purpose flour is used for most. Provides structure for cookie.
Whole-wheat flour can be substituted for 1/3 to ½ of the all-purpose flour. If substituted for all the flour, the cookies will be to dry.Measuring flour - Spoon or sift lightly into a dry measuring cup. Level. Too much flour results in tough, crumbly, dry cookies. Too little flour causes cookies to spread and lose shape.
Flour is usually purchased pre-sifted, bleached or unbleached. Bleaching
whitens the flour.
Gluten is the protein found in flour mixed with liquid. The more a dough is mixed, worked, or kneaded, the longer the strands of gluten become, and the more ‘elastic’ the dough becomes. When baked, elasticity provides a firm structure and light texture.
Cake flour: very low gluten content; pure white color
Pastry flour: very low gluten content; creamy white color; slightly less
delicate than cake flour
Lower gluten flours have just enough gluten to keep products from crumbling, but not
enough to create chewiness.
Bread flour: highest gluten content; creamy white color
All purpose flour: medium gluten content; medium white color; good for general production work
Gluten-free flour: People who have a gluten sensitivity or Celiac Disease cannot tolerate certain levels of gluten. If you simply take gluten out of your baking, you're likely to have
disappointing results. Gluten is sticky stuff which helps prevent your baked goodies from crumbling. It also traps
pockets of air, improving the texture of your bread, cakes or biscuits. Gluten-free flour may need to be mixed with guar or
xantham gums or cornstarch, etc. to restore stickiness.
• The liquid used in baking provides moisture and allows the gluten to develop.
• Milk or water are the most common liquids. Others are buttermilk, cream, molasses, honey, melted fats or oils, and juices.
Adding too much liquid creates a soggy product. Adding too little liquid creates a dry product.
Leavening – helps cookies to rise and adds structure
Baking soda – (bicarbonate of soda) – must be mixed with an acid (lemon juice, buttermilk, molasses) ingredient to release its CO2 which makes the baked goods rise.
Baking powder – includes baking soda and an acid plus a moisture absorber. Not interchangeable with baking soda.
Leavener should be fresh and not out of date.
Air is a physical method of causing food to ‘rise’. It can be used in two different methods:
The ‘creaming method’ adds air as fat and sugar are creamed together.
The ‘foaming method’ adds air as beaten egg whites are folded into a batter.
Butter or margarine; do NOT use soft margarines for baking, as they
contain added waterCooking oils; do not
substitute oils for solid fats
Solid shortening
Adding too much fat creates a crumbly product; adding too little creates a tough or chewy product. ‘Just
enough’ creates a ‘melt-in-your-mouth’ product.
Fats and Oils – adds tenderness and flavor – most of the time you will use only the solid form for baking cookies.
Butter, margarine, shortening – should contain more than 65% fat for baking.Softened Butter – let stand at room temperature approx. 30-45 minutes. Perfectly softened butter should give gently to pressure, but should be solid in appearance. If fat is too soft it will cause cookies to spread too much.
8. LEAVENING AGENT
2. TENDERIZER
7. PRESERVE TEXTURE
6. ENRICH
5. BINDER
3. COLOR
2 eggs whites can be substituted for 1 whole egg to reduce fat and calories.
1. FLAVOR
4. THICKENER
Granulated sugar is the
most common sweetener in baking. It is
either cane or beet sugar.
Molasses (a by-product of beet or cane sugar production.)
Honey
Powdered sugar is also
called confectioners
sugar.
Brown sugar must be packed into the measuring cup. It is an unrefined sugar
with a high moisture content OR white
sugar with molasses added. The amount
of molasses determines whether it is dark or light brown sugar. Either can be
used in most recipes.
Flavorings!Ummm....Yum!
Extracts & flavorings
Fruits & vegetablesFlavored chips
Nuts
Candies
Most of the time, you wouldn’t even need a recipe to follow. For most cakes and cookies, just follow standard baking procedure using the 5 step ‘creaming method”:
Creaming- refers to combining shortening and sugar.
Use an electric mixer to save time! Use medium speed on your mixer.
Air + egg whites = volume
Sifting eliminates lumps, helps in the even distribution of
ingredients, and adds air
Add 1/3 dry, then 1/3 wet…repeat ‘til all ingredients are used
An electric mixer at this point would break up the chips, raisins, nuts, etc.
Shiny aluminum – are highly recommended for cookies. They reflect heat and should be narrower than the oven so the heat can circulate.Dark non-stick – need to reduce oven temperature by 25 degrees because the dark sheet conducts heat and causes cookies to brown fasterInsulated sheet – help prevent browning and becoming too dark – may take longer to bake.
Baking pans for bar cookies – use exact size of pan called for in recipe
Greasing cookie sheets and baking pans.Only grease when called for in recipeDon’t grease non-stick cookie sheet even if recipe calls for greasing, it causes cookies to spread to muchCan use parchment paper or aluminum foil to place of greasing sheets.
Space cookies on the cookie sheet for baking, leaving
enough space so they won’t touch.
Preheating the oven to the correct temperature is critical! Adjust oven racks so you can bake in the middle of the oven! If rack is too low, food
gets too brown on the bottom; if rack is too high, food gets too
brown on top.
1. Drop cookies such as chocolate chip and oatmeal, are made from a soft dough dropped from a spoon
2. Pressed or Piped cookies , such as ladyfingers or macaroons, are piped through a pastry bag
3. Rolled cookies, such as sugar cookies, are rolled out and cut in shapes
There are 6 different categories of cookies:
4. Molded cookies are molded by hand into shapes, such as peanut butter cookies marked with fork tines
5. Refrigerator cookies are made when dough is rolled in logs and chilled; then sliced and baked
6. Bar or sheet cookies are made in long bars or fill sheet pans, and then are cut into bar shapes after baking
There are 6 different categories of cookies:
Cookies are removed from the oven, cooled for a couple of
minutes, removed from the pans with a spatula, and placed on a
wire rack for cooling.