Cookbook:Mixing
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Mixing is the process of combining ingredients together, usually to make a well-distributed mixture, and is an important step in cooking. The techniques used in combining ingredients contribute significant textural changes and greatly influence the quality of the final product—it is important to use the correct mixing technique for the task at hand in order to achieve the desired results. In sauce making, for example, the emulsification, incorporation of hot liquid and starch, mounting of a sauce with butter, and more are special skills that must be mastered by every cook. In baking, such procedures as the folding of egg whites or whipped cream into cake batter, mousses, and moulds are special skills. The mixing of batters in general is a science in itself.
Stirring
[edit | edit source]Folding
[edit | edit source]Folding is a way of gently mixing ingredients, used to incorporate ingredients into a batter or other mixture. Use a wooden spoon or broad spatula and mix the ingredients a spoonful at a time. The technique is often used when one of the ingredients (e.g., egg white or cream) has been whipped, and strenuous mixing would risk driving out the air that has been incorporated. Similarly, if a delicate ingredient, such as cooked fish, is to be mixed, folding will prevent the pieces being broken up.
Sifting
[edit | edit source]Sifting separates dry-ingredients into smaller and larger particle sizes. Smaller-finer particles fall through a mesh, when it is shaken or scraped.
Bran and germ are available to use seperately, when removed from their flour.
Sifting is used to mix dry leavening ingredients more completely into flours and meals.
Sifting can break dry lumps.
Doughs and batters made from finer flour may raise more evenly.
Beating
[edit | edit source]Beating is vigorously mixing the ingredients, often with an electric mixer. Some recipes and ingredients that often require beating are whipped cream, egg whites, and butter. Beating butter is sometimes referred to as creaming.
Creaming
[edit | edit source]Creaming is a form of beating that combines sugar with solid fat. The sugar's sharp particles cut into the butter, introducing air bubbles. It is the most important step for cookies and cakes because it allows them to rise. It can be done by hand using a wooden spoon or spatula; or mechanically, using the paddle attachment of a mixer.
Whipping
[edit | edit source]Whipping is a technique where a food is mixed very vigorously in order to incorporate a large amount of air. This results in a fluffy and/or foamy product. It can be done by hand using a whisk, or with a mixer fitted with a whisk attachment. The foam produced by whipping must be stabilized by a fat, protein, or other gelling agent—otherwise, it will dissipate. Some of the most commonly-whipped ingredients include cream (see: whipped cream) and eggs, especially egg whites (see: meringue).
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Whipping egg whites
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Whipping a meringue
Blending
[edit | edit source]Blending is a process involving items being put in a blender.
Cutting
[edit | edit source]Cutting involves using a sharp object to cut the item.
Kneading
[edit | edit source]Kneading is a process in which a dough is repeatedly worked in order to combine everything thoroughly, increase water absorption, and, in the case of wheat-based doughs, develop gluten. It can be accomplished using your hands or a mixer fitted with a dough hook. Longer kneading times are required for significant gluten development.
Tossing
[edit | edit source]Other techniques
[edit | edit source]Avoiding lumps: Mixing hot liquids with dry flours or meals
[edit | edit source]To mix wet and dry ingredients without forming lumps; consider mixing order, quantity and temperature.
Adding dry ingredients like flours and other powders directly into hot liquids will almost always form lumps. This is because the fine particles begin to cook immediately when they touch the hot liquid, and stick together. To prevent lumping, first stir small quantities of cold liquid into the dry ingredients until they are uniformly wet and smooth; only after this should you stir hot liquid into the wet mixture. Do not use more liquid than a recipe calls for. For example, if the recipe calls for 2 cups of hot liquid, but you used a ½ cup cold, then subtract 1/2 from 2; now you will only need 1½ cups of hot liquid.
- Mixing order
Add wet ingredients into dry ingredients, not dry into wet.
- Quantity
Add a small amount of wet ingredients, and mix thoruoughly before adding more.
- Temperature
Add a small amount of cool wet ingredients, and mix it well, before adding hot wet ingredients. Avoid adding hot wet-ingredients directly to dry meals or flours.
References and links
[edit | edit source]- Julia Child's Baking Tips
- https://nielsenmassey.com/betteryourbake/how-to-whip-ingredients/
- http://www.welike2cook.com/2012/01/tow-whipping.html
- https://www.cooksinfo.com/whip
- https://www.bakingnook.com/whipping-vs-beating/
"The method of adding the butter to the flour is either the cutting-in method, where a corne (see page 196) or a pastry cutter is used to reduce the butter to smaller and smaller pieces, or the sabler method (sablage), also called the sanding method, where the two ingredients are rubbed together between the palms of the hands, resulting in a very fine, even textured result that makes for a more homog- enous dough once the liquids (e.g., eggs) are worked in"[1]
"An alternative method is the crèmer method or creaming method. This can be applied mainly to sweet shortcrusts. Ideally, the butter or fat should be cold, but if your butter is at room temperature or softer you can first cream the but- ter with the sugar and liquid before gradually incorporating the flour by cut- ting it in, using a corne."[1]
- ↑ a b The Chefs of Le Cordon Bleu (2011-12-02). Le Cordon Bleu Patisserie and Baking Foundations. Cengage Learning. ISBN 978-1-4390-5713-1.