Bread is the
most widely eaten food. It provides a larger share of
people's energy
and protein than any other food and is often called the
staff of life.
Bread is
made by baking dough that consists chiefly of flour or grain
meal mixed
with water or milk. The people of many Western countries
eat bread baked
mainly as loaves or rolls made with wheat flour. In
some other parts of
the world, people eat thin, crisp sheets of bread
called flat bread.
Flat bread is made either from such grains as barley,
corn, oats, rice,
rye, and wheat, or from flour milled from these grains.
In many
parts of the world, people make bread by hand much as
ancient bakers
did. In the United States and many other industrial
nations, however,
most bread is made by machine in commercial
bakeries.
Kinds of
bread. Bread may be divided into three main types:
(1) yeast bread, (2)
quick bread, and (3) flat bread. Yeast bread is
raised (puffed up) by
yeast. Quick bread requires less preparation
time before baking than
yeast bread. It is raised by the use of baking
powder or some other
leaven, a substance that raises dough. Flat
bread contains little or no
leaven. It takes about as long to prepare
before baking as quick bread.
Yeast bread
includes pan bread, hearth bread, and other yeast
leavened goods. Pan
bread, which is baked in a container, includes
bread made with white
wheat flour and such specialty breads as
raisin bread and whole-wheat
bread. Hearth bread, which includes
French bread and most rye bread, is
baked on a flat pan or placed
directly on the hearth (floor) of an oven.
Other yeast-leavened goods
include hamburger and frankfurter rolls and
brown-and-serve (partially
baked) rolls.
Quick bread
includes corn bread, doughnuts, muffins, and pancakes.
Most quick bread
is baked at home or in local bakeries and
supermarkets.
Flat bread
is a major food in many parts of the world. Central
Americans eat
various flat breads made from corn or wheat flour,
called tortillas.
People in the Far East make several types of flat
bread from rice flour.
The people of India eat a flat bread called
chapatti, which includes
coarsely ground wheat. In the Middle East,
a flat bread called pita
bread is made from durum wheat.
How yeast
bread is made. Both commercial bakers and home bakers
make bread from a
dough that consists of at least four ingredients-
flour, water or milk,
salt, and yeast. The dough may also contain eggs,
shortening, sugar, or
other foods.
Most
commercial bakers in the United States and many other
countries use
enriched dough for white bread. They enrich their dough
by adding
vitamins and minerals, or they use already enriched flour.
Most
commercial dough also contains substances called dough
conditioners and
shelf-life improvers. Dough conditioners, such as
chlorine dioxide and
potassium bromate, help give bread a smooth,
even texture. Shelf-life
improvers include monoglycerides, which help
keep bread from becoming
stale, and calcium propionate, which
reduces the growth of mold and
bacteria.
Dough is
made into bread by one of two processes, conventional
bread making or
continuous bread making. Conventional bread
making is used by most
bakeries. Home bakers also use variations of
conventional bread making.
Continuous bread making is used by only
the largest bakeries.
In
conventional bread making, the ingredients are mixed by one of two
chief
methods, the sponge-and-dough method or the straight dough
method. In
the sponge-and-dough method, the ingredients are
combined in two stages.
The first stage mixes all the yeast and about
two-thirds of the flour
and water or milk. This mixture is called a
sponge. Bakers let the
sponge ferment (rise) at about 85 °F (29 °C)
for up to 16 hours. Then
they add the rest of the ingredients, and the
mixture ferments again for
a short time. In the straight dough method,
all the ingredients are
combined at once and fermented for about 3
hours at 85 °F (29 °C).
After either
of these fermenting processes, the dough is divided into
pieces and
shaped. It is then fermented again for a short time in a
process called
proofing and baked in an oven at about 450 °F
(232 °C).
Continuous
bread making uses highly specialized equipment to mix
the ingredients
and prepare the dough for baking. In the most common
method, all the
ingredients except the flour are first combined to form
a mixture called
a broth. After fermenting in a tank, the broth is
pumped to a mixer and
the flour is added. In the mixer, the ingredients
are combined under
pressure to form dough. The dough is then
divided, shaped, and sent to
an oven for baking. This process
produces bread of uniform shape,
texture, and quality.
After bread
has been baked, it is removed from the oven to cool. In
commercial
bakeries, the loaves are placed in cooling machines
where their
temperature is reduced to about 100 °F (38 °C). The
bread may then be
sliced and wrapped in paper or plastic film.
The food
value of bread. Enriched white bread provides important
amounts of
protein, starch, iron, and three B vitamins--niacin,
riboflavin, and
thiamine. Milling removes from wheat most of these
substances, which are
naturally present in the grain.
Whole-wheat
bread provides almost all the natural vitamins and
minerals of wheat,
including niacin, riboflavin, thiamine, vitamin E, and
iron and calcium.
Whole-wheat bread also contains bran, an important
source of fiber.
White bread has little fiber.
History.
Prehistoric people made flat bread by mixing grain meal with
water and
baking the resulting dough on rocks that they had heated.
Historians
believe the Egyptians learned to make yeast bread about
2600 B.C. The
ancient Greeks learned bread making from the
Egyptians and later taught
the method to the Romans. By the A.D.
100's, the Romans had taught the
technique to people in many parts
of Europe. In the Middle Ages, most
European cities had bakeries.
For hundreds
of years, most people ate whole-wheat bread or other
kinds of
whole-grain bread. White wheat flour was extremely
expensive because
milling it required hours of hand labor. During the
late 1800's, millers
developed machinery that milled white flour
inexpensively. By 1900,
white bread was a common food.
Commercial
bakeries were established in the American Colonies as
early as 1640. But
until the 1900's, most bread was baked at home.
Both homemade and
commercial bread were made by hand. During
the 1920's, many United
States bakeries became mechanized.
In the
1930's, U.S. public health officials reported a large number of
cases of
beriberi and pellagra. These diseases are caused by a lack
of B
vitamins. In 1941, many U.S. bakeries agreed to begin enriching
white
bread with B vitamins and iron to fight the diseases. Almost all
the
nation's bakeries have sold enriched white bread since the
mid-1950's,
and beriberi and pellagra are now rare in the United
States.
Kay Franzen
Jamieson, Ph.D., Food Consultant. |