The Savory Secrets of Baked Bread

Research team has discovered how gluten and starch affect dough behavior

Written byAmerican Institute of Physics
| 4 min read
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Newswise — WASHINGTON, D.C., October 12, 2015 -- The simple act of baking bread has sustained tummies and delighted palates since ancient times, and modern bread-making has become both an industrial-scale venture that defines commercial enterprise as well as a small-batch artisanal movement aimed at filling urban areas with steaming loaves, wherever hipsters sip lattes.

Yet for all our love of the simple slice, we have never had a solid understanding of much of the science behind squishy dough, like the interplay between a dough's microstructure and its rheology -- the way in which it deforms and flows. Understanding this science would help bakers improve bread recipes intended for ovens both big and small.

This month, during The Society of Rheology's 87th Annual Meeting, which is being held Oct. 11-15, 2015 in Baltimore, Md., a team of researchers from Belgium and the Netherlands who really know bread will describe how gluten and starch affect the overall dough behavior, as well as the optimal amount of glucose oxidase enzyme to use to enhance bread-making performance.

"Wheat flour dough consists of a continuous gluten protein phase in which starch particles, lipids and gas cells are all dispersed," explained Mathieu Meerts, a Ph.D. researcher within the Department of Chemical Engineering at KU Leuven, a university in Belgium.

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