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#1 | |
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Assistant Cook
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All-Purpose Flour as a Substitute
I have not baked any cake yet but reading some recipes, I found out that there are different flours mentioned in baking. If I have only an all-purpose flour, what can I add to it in order to come up with the following
1. self-rising flour 2. baking flour 3. bread flour 4. cake flour |
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#2 | |
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Certified Pretend Chef
Site Moderator
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The easiest answer is to look for a recipe that calls for AP flour rather than adapting another recipe.
Self-rising flour contains baking powder and salt. The other flours are flours with different degrees of 'hardness' determined by the protein levels in the wheats. Cake flour is very low in protein and produces a soft cake texture, while bread flour is very high in protein and produces a chewy bread. I wouldn't expect to see any cake recipe calling for bread flour. I'm not sure what baking flour is. If you're baking bread, you'd use bread flour. If you're baking a cake, you'd be using cake flour.
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"If you want to make an apple pie from scratch, you must first create the universe." -Carl Sagan |
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#3 | |
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Certified Executive Chef
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Most people here use just plain flour (AP) or self-raising. It is only recently that bread flour has become readily available so self-raising flour was used for bread making as well as for cakes. Plain flour was really only used when specified or in general cooking such as for coating fish/meat or making a roux. Things change as manufacturers produce more item-specific goods.
Oh, and Welcome to DC!
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Too many restaurants, not enough time...
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#4 | |
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Executive Chef
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Yeah Phex, flour is flour, but not exactly.
Some wheat flours have more or less protein. The more they have, in general, the better they are for bread. Just a broad generalization. The softer they are, the less protein they have, the more they are good for cakes and similar products. And yes, self rising flour contains leavening in the form of baking powder. So one does not have to worry about how to make the stuff rise. Baking flour, no idea what that is. Would probably not try to take a flour and make it a self rising one. Would look at the recipe and add what it says. Just my two cents. Take care.
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Before criticizing a person, walk a mile in his shoes - then you are a mile away and you have his shoes! |
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#5 | |
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Assistant Cook
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Thanks for the help. I'll just visit the grocery store again to find the right flour and reserve the AP flour for another time :)
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#6 | ||
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Assistant Cook
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Quote:
For self-rising flour if you don't have it use 1 cup AP flour plus 1 teaspoon baking powder, 1/2 teaspoon salt and 1/4 teaspoon baking soda. Hope that helps |
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#7 | ||
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Shirley Corriher Wannabe
Site Moderator
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Quote:
Cake flour sub is made by removing 2T from the cup of AP flour and replacing them with cornstarch. Your recipe will get fouled up if you just use less flour.
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Less is not more. More is more and more is fabulous. |
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#8 | |
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Assistant Cook
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Thanks for the info. I have always done that and never had a problem but I will
do that next time, that sounds right |
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#9 | |
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Shirley Corriher Wannabe
Site Moderator
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Baking 911 is an excellent reference source for flour info.
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Less is not more. More is more and more is fabulous. |
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#10 | ||
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Certified Executive Chef
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Quote:
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