I’m tired of guessing which country the author is from when they use cup measurement and how densely they put flour in it.

  • Allero@lemmy.today
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    21 hours ago

    I am currently pursuing engineering PhD working on bakery products.

    Sometimes baking is indeed an exact science :D

    It’s just that the typical home baker has to guess and assume a lot of things. But then, a chance of failure is naturally expected.

    • BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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      19 hours ago

      In the industrial realm, baking is quite scientific, I’m sure. It’s a much more controlled, and measureable environment than a home baker’s.

      Take our ovens (please!) - you want 450? OK, how about I give you 420 to 475 as I cycle on and off? Lol

      Even in the industrial realm you’ll deal with the variability in your ingredients (e.g. moisture content of flour), but you’ll have the capability to measure that, and have systems to compensate for it automatically. (Yes, I’m jealous!)

      • Allero@lemmy.today
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        19 hours ago

        Hehe, yes, we have those and even more, because while industry can still afford some slack (but can measure moisture, humidity while proofing, precise temperature, air contamination etc.), we scientists cannot :D

        We have industrial-scale ovens and proofing chambers that cycle in the range of ±5 degrees and can control humidity through steam injection, professional-grade planetary mixers and big stationary 100+kg dough mixers, automatic devices to measure moisture content (although compensating for it goes manually), devices to measure gluten deformation, sugar content on all phases, structural properties of dough and finished product, microbial contamination of flour, dough and products, leavening activity of yeast and gas retention of dough, also рН meters and automatic titrators, chromatographs, colorimeters, ultra-precise scales…and that’s only what directly relates to the baking process :D

        …although yep, very regular baking takes a while under those circumstances