ASHRAE REFRIGERATION SI CH 41-2010 BAKERY PRODUCTS《烘焙食品》.pdf
《ASHRAE REFRIGERATION SI CH 41-2010 BAKERY PRODUCTS《烘焙食品》.pdf》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《ASHRAE REFRIGERATION SI CH 41-2010 BAKERY PRODUCTS《烘焙食品》.pdf(8页珍藏版)》请在麦多课文档分享上搜索。
1、41.1CHAPTER 41BAKERY PRODUCTSIngredient Storage 41.1Mixing 41.2Fermentation 41.3Bread Makeup 41.3Final Proof . 41.4Baking 41.4Bread Cooling 41.4Slicing and Wrapping. 41.5Bread Freezing . 41.5Freezing Other Bakery Products 41.6Frozen Pre-Proofed Bakery Products 41.6Retarding Doughs and Batters. 41.7C
2、hoice of Refrigerants . 41.7HIS chapter addresses refrigeration and air conditioning asTapplied to bakery products, including items distributed (1) atambient temperature, (2) refrigerated but unfrozen, and (3) frozen.Refrigeration plays an important part in modern bakery production.Some of the major
3、 uses of refrigeration in the baking industry are Ingredient coolingDough and batter temperature control during mixingRefrigerating dough productsFreezing dough for the food service industry and supermarketsFreezing bread for later holding, thawing, and saleFreezing fried and baked products for sale
4、 to consumersRefrigeration methods and equipment needed to accomplishthese uses includeNormal air conditioningDough mixers with jackets through which chilled water, low-temperature antifreeze, or direct-expansion refrigerant passesCO2chips or CO2fog placed directly into dough mixer bowlsCooling tunn
5、els with refrigerated air flowing counterflow to the productMedium-temperature cool rooms for storage of refrigerated dough productsFreezing tunnels for doughKettles for fillingsSpiral freezer chambers in which the product remains for about20 min to 1 h and is subjected to air at about 34C for freez
6、ingHolding freezers: 23 to 29CTotal plant air conditioning is increasingly used in new plant con-struction, except in areas immediately surrounding ovens, in finalproofers, and in areas where cooking vessels prepare fruit fillingsand hot icings. Total plant cooling was first used in plants producing
7、Danish pastry, croissants, puff pastry, and pies, and has expanded tonew-construction facilities for frozen dough operations and generalproduction. Flour dust in the air should be filtered out because itfouls air passages in air-conditioning equipment, seriously reducesheat transfer rates, and is a
8、potential respiratory health hazard.INGREDIENT STORAGERaw materials are generally purchased in bulk, except in smalloperations. Deliveries are made by truck or railcar and stored in binsor tanks with required temperature protection while in transit andstorage.Flour. Flour is stored in bins at ambien
9、t temperature. Somebakeries locate these bins outside their buildings; however, insidestorage is recommended where outside temperatures vary greatly.This improves control of product temperature and decreases therisk of moisture condensation inside the storage bins. Pneumaticconveyance and subsequent
10、 sifting before use generally increaseflour temperature a few degrees. Smaller quantities of other flours,such as clear, rye, and whole wheat, are usually received in bagsand stored on pallets.Sugars and Syrups. Sugar is handled in both dry and liquid bulkforms by many large production bakeries. Alt
11、hough most prefer liq-uid, many cake and sweet goods plants produce their own powderedsugar for icings by passing granulated sugar through a pulverizer.Refrigeration dehumidifiers are sometimes used to minimize cakingor sticking of the powdered sugar for proper pneumatic handling.Liquid sucrose (can
12、e or beet sugar), generally with a solids contentof 66 to 67%, is stored at ambient temperature; however, it can becooled to as low as 7C without crystallizing out of solution. Cornsyrups and various blends of sucrose and corn syrups should bestored at 32 to 38C to improve fluidity and pumpability.
13、Unlikesucrose, corn syrups become more viscous when cooled. High-fructose corn syrups are best handled at 27 to 32C. Lower storagetemperatures cause sugars to crystallize, and higher temperaturesaccelerate caramelizing. Dextrose (corn sugar) solutions containing65 to 67% solids must be stored in hea
14、ted tanks at 54C to preventcrystallization. Many bakeries use high-fructose corn syrups.Because these syrups are stored at a lower temperature than conven-tional syrup, less thermal input is required during storage, and therefrigeration load during mixing is significantly reduced. Smaller-volume and
15、 specialized sugars are received in poly-lined bags andstored at ambient temperature.Shortenings. Shortenings are stored in heated tanks or a “hotroom,” where the temperature is maintained at 6 K above the Amer-ican Oil Chemists Society (AOCS) capillary closed-tube meltingpoint of the fat (AOCS 1999
16、, 2004). Lard, for example, should bestored at 49C to be totally liquid. Other shortenings need slightlyhigher temperatures. Fluid shortenings and oils are stored at roomtemperature, but they need constant slow-speed agitation to preventhard fats from separating to the bottom of the tanks.Yeast. Fre
17、sh yeast comes in 0.5 kg blocks packaged in cartons ofvarious sizes, in crumbled form in 25 kg bags, and in liquid creamform handled in bulk tanks. Refrigerated storage temperatures rang-ing from 7C to the freezing point of the product are required. Formaximum storage life, 1 to 2C is considered bes
18、t. Active dry andinstant dry forms of yeast are available that do not need refrigeration.Egg Products. Liquid egg products (whole, whites, yolks, andfortified) are commonly used in small retail and large cake andsweet goods bakeries. They generally come frozen in 15 kg contain-ers that must be thawe
19、d under refrigeration or cold-water baths.Where large quantities are needed, liquid bulk refrigerated handlingcan be an economic advantage. Storage temperatures for liquid eggproducts should be less than 4.5C, with 2 to 3C being the idealstorage temperature range. Dried egg solids, which need no ref
20、rig-eration, are also used. A shelf-stable whole egg that requires norefrigeration has been introduced. This stability was achieved byThe preparation of this chapter is assigned to TC 10.9, Refrigeration Appli-cation for Foods and Beverages.41.2 2010 ASHRAE HandbookRefrigeration (SI)removing two-thi
21、rds of the water from the eggs and replacing it withsugar, thereby lowering the water activity to the point that mostorganisms cannot grow.Other. Dried milk products, cocoa, spices, and other raw ingre-dients in baking are usually put into dry storage, ideally at 21C.Ideal storage is rarely achieved
22、 under normal bakery conditions.Refrigerated storage is sometimes used where longer shelf lives aredesired or high storage temperatures are the norm. This decreasesflavor loss and change, microbial growth, and insect infestation.MIXINGBread, buns, sweet rolls/Danish, yeast-raised doughnuts, andhoney
23、 buns are the most important yeast-leavened baked products interms of production volume. After scaling the ingredients, mixing isthe next active step in production. Proper development of the floursgluten proteins is what gives doughs their gas-retaining properties,which affect the volume and texture
24、 of the baked products. Tem-perature control during mixing is essential. Refrigeration is gener-ally required because of the heat generation and the necessity ofcontrolling dough temperature at the end of mixing. However,ingredient temperatures combined with room temperature mayrequire addition of w
- 1.请仔细阅读文档,确保文档完整性,对于不预览、不比对内容而直接下载带来的问题本站不予受理。
- 2.下载的文档,不会出现我们的网址水印。
- 3、该文档所得收入(下载+内容+预览)归上传者、原创作者;如果您是本文档原作者,请点此认领!既往收益都归您。
下载文档到电脑,查找使用更方便
10000 积分 0人已下载
下载 | 加入VIP,交流精品资源 |
- 配套讲稿:
如PPT文件的首页显示word图标,表示该PPT已包含配套word讲稿。双击word图标可打开word文档。
- 特殊限制:
部分文档作品中含有的国旗、国徽等图片,仅作为作品整体效果示例展示,禁止商用。设计者仅对作品中独创性部分享有著作权。
- 关 键 词:
- ASHRAEREFRIGERATIONSICH412010BAKERYPRODUCTS 烘焙 食品 PDF

链接地址:http://www.mydoc123.com/p-455966.html