Article contents
The Chemistry of Strength of Wheat Flour
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 March 2009
Extract
Attention is drawn to the complexity of the ideas comprised in the term strength as applied to flour, and the necessity of investigating each idea separately.
The chemical composition of the gliadin and glutenin of strong and weak flours has been investigated, and it is shown that they are identical in all the flours examined. It is suggested therefore that the difference between strong and weak flours is connected rather with the physical properties of their gluten than with the chemical composition. Since it is well known that the physical properties of proteids are profoundly affected by small quantities of acids, alkalis, and salts, the amounts of these substances in strong and weak flours were determined. In the few cases examined, it was found that strength was associated with a high ratio of proteid to salts, and weakness with a low ratio. It is suggested that the variation of this ratio may be the explanation of the different physical behaviour of the gluten of strong and weak flours, and that this is the factor which determines that component of strength which governs the shape of the loaf, and its power of retaining gas. This point is receiving further investigation.
The factor which primarily determines the size of the loaf which a flour can make is quite distinct. The size of the loaf is shown to depend in the first instance on the amount of sugar contained in the flour together with that formed in the dough by diastatic action. It is proposed to measure this by incubating the flour with yeast and water, and collecting the carbon dioxide evolved during 24 hours. Particular attention should be paid to the rate of gas evolution in the later stages of the fermentation, as this is shown to be more directly connected with the size of the loaf.
Taking Humphries and Biffen's definition of strength as “the capacity for making large well-piled loaves,” and applying the above ideas, it is stated that the largeness of the loaf depends chiefly on the capacity of the flour to give off gas when fermented with yeast, especially in the later stages of dough fermentation, and the suggestion is made that shapeliness, and probably gas retention, are dependent on the physical properties of the gluten as modified by the presence of varying proportions of salts.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1907
References
page 139 note 1 Humphries, and Biffen, , Journ. Agric. Sci. Vol. II. Pt. I. p. 1.Google Scholar
page 139 note 2 Jago, , The Science and Art of Bread Making, London, Simpkin, Marshall & Co., 1895.Google Scholar
page 140 note 1 Humphries, A. E., The Improvement of English Wheat, published by the Millers' Association, 56, Mark Lane, E.C.Google Scholar
page 140 note 2 Le Froment et sa mouture, Gauthier-Villars, Paris, 1903.Google Scholar
page 140 note 3 Minnesota Expt. Stn., Bulletin 63, 1899.Google Scholar
page 141 note 1 “La valeur boulangère du Froment,” Archives Teyler, II. IX. 3, 4.Google Scholar
page 141 note 2 Journ. of Board of Agr. XI. 1904, p. 321.Google Scholar
page 141 note 3 Report of Home-Grown Wheat Committee, 1905–6.
page 141 note 4 Journ. Amer. Chem. Soc. XXV. 1903, p. 343.Google Scholar
page 148 note 1 The Science and Art of Bread Making.
page 148 note 2 Le Froment et sa Mouture.
page 148 note 3 Quoted from Bruyning's Monograph.
page 148 note 4 Monograph in Archives Teyler.
page 148 note 5 Landwirtschaftlich und gewerblich wichtiger Stoffe, Paul Parey, Berlin, 1898.Google Scholar
page 153 note 1 Landwirtschaftliche Jahrbücher, XXXI. 1902.Google Scholar
page 159 note 1 Minnesota Agric. Expt. Stn., Bulletin 62.
- 9
- Cited by