Basic Commodities in Bakery — Flour, Gluten, Raising Agents, Fats, Oils, Sweeteners & Liquids

Food Production · Part 4 · Module 31

Basic Commodities in Bakery — Flour, Gluten, Raising Agents, Fats, Oils, Sweeteners & Liquids

By Tourism369 · Food Production Operations & Management · UGC NET Paper 2

Flour comes from the word “flower” — the best part of the meal. Yeast is killed at 60°C. Rapeseed (Canola) is the healthiest oil. Cake flour has just 7.5% protein. Here is the complete guide to bakery commodities and their functions.

🌾 Flour — The Foundation

Flour comes from the word “Flower” = best part of the meal. Obtained from milling grains and pulses. In bakery, “flour” always means refined flour unless specified as whole wheat. Wheat = member of grass family, botanically named Triticum.

3 commercial wheat species: Triticum vulgare (baker’s flour) · Triticum durum (pasta) · Triticum compactum (club wheat, low gluten). Grain structure: 3 layers — Bran + Germ + Endosperm.
📊 Flour Types & Protein Content
FlourProtein %Key Use
Whole Wheat (Atta)13.3%Whole wheat bread, rotis, chapati
Semolina (Suji)12.3%Pasta, porridge, rava dishes
Strong/Hard Flour11.8%Bread, puff pastry, flaky pastry
All-Purpose Flour10.5%General baking — blend of flours
Soft/Weak Flour9.7%Delicate pastries, biscuits
Cake Flour7.5%Sponge cakes, chiffon cakes

Gluten-free flours: Amaranth · Rice flour · Pulse flour · Chickpea (Besan) · Maize (Masa Harina) · Buckwheat (Kuttu) · Chestnut · Barley · Millet · Soya bean · Sunflower

🫧 Raising Agents (Leavening Agents)
Baking Powder
Single-acting agent — reacts on contact with liquid. Used in cakes, scones, puddings, biscuits. Store in airtight containers (moisture triggers reaction). Cannot be stored once opened in humid conditions.
Bicarbonate of Soda (Baking Soda)
Also: cooking soda. Reacts in presence of acidic medium. Used in biscuits, batters, puddings. Shelf life: ~3 years if stored in cool dry place.
Cream of Tartar
Fine white powder. Extracted from tartaric acid that crystallises in wine casks during grape fermentation. Also called potassium salt. Store in airtight container — absorbs moisture.
Yeast — “Tiny Living Fungus”
Thrives on sweetness, warmth and moisture. Excretes CO₂ (causes bread to rise) + alcohol (adds flavour, evaporates during baking). Two forms: Compressed (fresh) + Active Dry (half the weight = same effect).
Storage: 5°C · Slow action: 15–20°C · Best growth: 20–32°C · Reaction slows: 38°C · Yeast KILLED at 60°C
🧈 Fats in Bakery
White Compound Fat
General purpose fat for pastry and enriching bread.
Yellow Fat
Softer consistency. High-grade fat blended with margarine or butter for cakes.
High Ratio Fat
Contains lecithin for increased emulsifying power. Used in high liquid-sugar recipes with special high-ratio cake flour.
Lard
Rendered fat of pigs. Valued for flaky pie crust. Largely replaced by modern shortenings.
Clarified Butter
Water and milk solids removed → more stable, higher smoke point. Properties don’t change during cooking.
Margarine
Emulsion of water + oil. Mainly vegetable oils, sometimes animal + vegetable mix. Saturated by hydrogen addition (increases melting point). Used mainly in pastry work. Gives structure and volume to baked products.
🛢️ Cooking Oils — Smoke Points
OilSmoke PointNotes
Corn Oil230°CBest for deep frying
Cotton Seed OilHighCommonly used in cooking
Groundnut (Peanut) Oil225°CSuitable for deep frying
Sunflower OilHighMade from sunflower seeds
Palm OilHighReddish (beta-carotene) — fades when heated
Rapeseed (Canola)HighHealthiest of all cooking oils
Olive Oil165°C (Low)Mediterranean. NOT suitable for deep frying.
🍬 Sweeteners in Bakery

Sugar functions: provides sweetness · alters texture · gives colour · delays egg protein coagulation · promotes aeration · lowers freezing point (ice creams) · delays staleness.

Granulated Sugar
Standard white sugar from sugarcane. Used for whipping eggs, sugar syrups, sabayon.
Castor Sugar (Breakfast Sugar)
Small, evenly graded crystals. Common for tea and coffee.
Icing Sugar
Granulated sugar ground to fine powder + small % corn starch (keeps it free-flowing). Used as icing and garnish.
Demerara Sugar
Dark brown granulated sugar.
Liquid Glucose
From corn slurry by acid hydrolysis. Contains dextrin gum — retards crystallisation of sugar.
Treacle
Leftover of sugarcane refining. Stronger than golden syrup but weaker than molasses.
🎯 UGC NET Key Points — Part 4 Module 31
◆ Flour = from “Flower” = best part of the meal
◆ Triticum vulgare (baker’s flour) · Triticum durum (pasta) · Triticum compactum (low gluten)
◆ Cake flour = 7.5% protein (lowest) · Whole wheat = 13.3% protein (highest)
◆ Yeast: CO₂ causes rise · Alcohol adds flavour (evaporates) · Killed at 60°C
◆ Active dry yeast = half weight of compressed yeast for same effect
◆ Cream of tartar = from tartaric acid in wine casks during grape fermentation
◆ Rapeseed/Canola = healthiest cooking oil
◆ Olive oil = lowest smoke point (165°C) — NOT suitable for deep frying
◆ Corn oil = 230°C smoke point · Groundnut = 225°C
◆ Liquid glucose contains dextrin gum — retards crystallisation of sugar
◆ Icing sugar = granulated sugar + small % corn starch (prevents caking)
Continue Learning

Next: Module 32 — Bread Fabrication

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