Literature DB >> 24188236

Cookie- versus cracker-baking--what's the difference? Flour functionality requirements explored by SRC and alveography.

Meera Kweon1, Louise Slade, Harry Levine, Diane Gannon.   

Abstract

The many differences between cookie- and cracker-baking are discussed and described in terms of the functionality, and functional requirements, of the major biscuit ingredients--flour and sugar. Both types of products are similar in their major ingredients, but different in their formulas and processes. One of the most important and consequential differences between traditional cracker and cookie formulas is sugar (i.e., sucrose) concentration: usually lower than 30% in a typical cracker formula and higher than 30% in a typical cookie formula. Gluten development is facilitated in lower-sugar cracker doughs during mixing and sheeting; this is a critical factor linked to baked-cracker quality. Therefore, soft wheat flours with greater gluten quality and strength are typically preferred for cracker production. In contrast, the concentrated aqueous sugar solutions existing in high-sugar cookie doughs generally act as an antiplasticizer, compared with water alone, so gluten development during dough mixing and starch gelatinization/pasting during baking are delayed or prevented in most cookie systems. Traditional cookies and crackers are low-moisture baked goods, which are desirably made from flours with low water absorption [low water-holding capacity (WHC)], and low levels of damaged starch and water-soluble pentosans (i.e., water-accessible arabinoxylans). Rheological (e.g., alveography) and baking tests are often used to evaluate flour quality for baked-goods applications, but the solvent retention capacity (SRC) method (AACC 56-11) is a better diagnostic tool for predicting the functional contribution of each individual flour functional component, as well as the overall functionality of flours for cookie- and/or cracker-baking.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24188236     DOI: 10.1080/10408398.2011.578469

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr        ISSN: 1040-8398            Impact factor:   11.176


  6 in total

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Journal:  Foods       Date:  2021-04-21

2.  Physical Properties of Flours Obtained from Wasted Bread Crusts and Crumbs.

Authors:  Juan Fernández-Peláez; Priscila Guerra; Cristina Gallego; Manuel Gomez
Journal:  Foods       Date:  2021-01-31

3.  Microalgae as Functional Ingredients in Savory Food Products: Application to Wheat Crackers.

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4.  Solvent Retention Capacity and Gluten Protein Composition of Durum Wheat Flour as Influenced by Drought and Heat Stress.

Authors:  Maryke Labuschagne; Carlos Guzmán; Keneuoe Phakela; Barend Wentzel; Angeline van Biljon
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2021-05-17

5.  The Creaming of Short Doughs and Its Impact on the Quality Attributes of Rotary-Molded Biscuits.

Authors:  M Teresa Molina; Sandra M Vaz; Pedro Bouchon
Journal:  Foods       Date:  2021-03-15

6.  Quality Assessment of Cookies Made from Composite Flours Containing Malted Barley Flour and Wheat Flour.

Authors:  Marko Jukić; Gjore Nakov; Daliborka Koceva Komlenić; Nastia Vasileva; Franjo Šumanovac; Jasmina Lukinac
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-12
  6 in total

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