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Re: GLUTEN
posted at September 23, 2011 11:56 PM EDT
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Posts: 1
First: September 23, 2011 Last: September 23, 2011 |
Gluten (from Latin gluten "glue") is a protein composite found in foods processed fromwheat and related species, including barley and rye. It gives elasticity to dough, helping it to rise and to keep its shape, and often giving the final product a chewytexture. Gluten is the composite of a gliadin and a glutelin, which is conjoined with starch in the endosperm of various grass-related grains. The prolamin and glutelin from wheat -gliadin, which is alcohol soluble, and glutenin, which is only soluble in dilute acids or alkalis - compose about 80% of the protein contained in wheat seed. Being insolublein water, they can be purified by washing away the associated starch. Worldwide, gluten is a source of protein, both in foods prepared directly from sources containing it, and as an additive to foods otherwise low in protein. The seeds of most flowering plants have endosperms with stored protein to nourishembryonic plants during germination. True gluten, with gliadin and glutenin, is limited to certain members of the grass family. The stored proteins of maize and rice are sometimes called glutens, but their proteins differ from wheat gluten by lacking gliadin.
[edit]ExtractionGluten is extracted from flour by kneading the flour, agglomerating the gluten into an elastic network, a dough, and then washing out the starch: starch granule disperses in cold water, the dispersed starch will be sedimented and dried. If a saline solution is used instead of water, a purer protein is obtained, with certain harmless impuritiesgoing into solution with the starch. Where starch is the prime product, cold water is the favored solvent because the impurities stay with the gluten. In home or restaurant cooking, a ball of wheat flour dough is kneaded under water until the starch disperse out. In industrial production, a slurry of wheat flour is kneaded vigorously by machinery until the gluten agglomerate into a mass. This mass is collected by centrifugation, then transported through several stages integrated in a continuous process.[1] Approximately 65% of the water in the wet gluten is removed by means of a screw press; the remainder is sprayed through an atomizer nozzle into a drying chamber, where it remains at an elevated temperature a short time to evaporate the water without denaturing the gluten. The process yields a flour-like powder with a 7% moisture content, which is air cooled and pneumatically transported to a receiving vessel. In the final step, the collected gluten is sifted and milled to produce a uniform product.[2] [edit]Uses[edit]Bread productsGluten forms as glutenin molecules cross-link to form a sub-microscopic network attached to gliadin, which contributes viscosity (thickness) and extensibility to the mix.[3] If this dough is leavened with sugar,fermentation produces bubbles of carbon dioxidewhich, trapped by the gluten network, cause the dough to rise. Baking coagulates the gluten, which, along with starch, stabilizes the shape of the final product. Gluten content has been implicated as a factor in the staling of bread, possibly because it binds water through hydration.[4] The development of gluten (i.e., enhancing its elasticity) affects the texture of the baked goods. Gluten's attainable elasticity is proportional to its content of glutenins with low molecular weights as this portion contains the preponderance of the sulfur atoms responsible for the cross-linking in the network.[5][6]More refining (of the gluten) leads to chewier products such as pizza and bagels, while less refining yields tender baked goods such as pastry products. Generally, bread flours are high in gluten (hard wheat);pastry flours have a lower gluten content. Kneading promotes the formation of gluten strands and cross-links, creating baked product that is chewier in proportion to the length of kneading. An increased moisture content in the dough enhances gluten development,[7] and very wet doughs left to rise for a long time require no kneading (see no-knead bread). Shortening inhibits formation of cross-links and is used, along with diminished water and less kneading, when a tender and flaky product, such as a pie crust, is desired. The strength and elasticity of gluten in flour is measured in the baking industry using afarinograph. This gives the baker a measurement of quality for different varieties of flours in developing recipes for various baked goods. [edit]Added glutenGluten, when dried and milled to a powder and added to ordinary flour dough, improves a dough's ability to rise and increases the bread's structural stability and chewiness.[8] Gluten-added dough must be worked vigorously to induce it to rise to its full capacity; an automatic bread machine or food processor may be required forkneading.[9] The added gluten provides supplemental protein to products with low or nonexistent protein levels. |
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Re: GLUTEN
posted at September 29, 2011 7:41 AM EDT
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Re: GLUTEN
posted at October 14, 2011 7:16 AM EDT
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Posts: 34
First: September 21, 2011 Last: January 5, 2013 |
In Response to GLUTEN: What is it,what is it for or why do you eat it... Posted by strebor7 Check out this site http://www.celiaccentral.org/Resources/Gluten-Free-Food/54/?gclid=CKywydmF6KsCFREj7AodywNdIQ |
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Re: GLUTEN
posted at May 25, 2012 12:21 PM EDT
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Re: GLUTEN
posted at July 18, 2012 3:02 AM EDT
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Posts: 12
First: July 18, 2012 Last: July 27, 2012 |
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