Submitted by guerrillafood on October 28, 2007 - 9:44pm
Can anyone point me to some reference material where I can find out what the different types of flours are in Europe? When I lived in Germany I remember recipes calling for 505, 550 etc. types of flours. And we all have heard of Italian "00" flour. None of the bread books I have even make mention of these.
Thanks guys and gals!
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European flour types
guerrillafood
I think we're talking about ash content.
here's some reference guidelines.
Ash content of a flour
“you can’t deduce the percentage of starch in the flour from the name: ”TYPE 405”.
This indicates the grinding degree and means:
That 405 mg ( milli grams...very small number) of minerals are left in the ashes after the burning test.
Baking Science and technology
The ash test is to determine the amount of mineral elements present in the flour, thus indicating the amount of bran still remaining in the flour after the milling process.
The lower the mineral content means a more refined flour.
Here’s how they do it
.
Modern Cereal Science and Technology
ASH: this is determined on a 4gm sample in a silica dish which is incinerated overnight at 585 C. After cooling, the dish and ash are weighed , the ash brushed out, the dish re weighed and the weight of ash determined by difference. Results are reported as a per cent.
Examples:
All purpose and bread, type 55
High gluten, type 65
Light whole wheat; type 80
Whole wheat; type 110
Dark whole wheat; type 150
You see the pattern; the finer the flour, the lower the ash content. Pastry , having the lowest number and all whole wheat, the highest.
Same with rye flour.
Type 70 or 80 is light rye, medium rye is type 85, light pumpernickel is type 130 and dark pumpernickel rye is type 170
Hope this is of help
Baker Henry in Vancouver Canada
Wow, I printed that out and
Wow, I printed that out and am going to read it as I go to bed. Thanks Baker Henry for your help.
Me too
considering that I'll be getting up in four hours, me too
Some more flour info
Man Thanks! I printed that
Man Thanks! I printed that out. Now I have something to read at work when things get slow. Thanks God I work in food. I can always read about the things I love at work, and it looks like I'm doing "research"; which I guess I am. But who knew you could actually enjoy your field of work?
another resource for flour grading
...is Flour - a Treatise at www.theartisan.net/MainCommFrm.htm. This link may not take you directly to the page, however, click on "The Flour Treatise" in the menu and you'll see it.
European flour types - American equivalents
Where can I find a list of Amerian flours to substitute for the various types of German flours? I fully understand that these substitutes will not be "perfect" - close is good enough for a starting point.
Thank you,
Pat
Flour Mill
Check out these guys, really useful:
http://www.federationflourmills.com
Italian Flour
Has everyone forgot about Italian flour? www.theitaliandeli.co.uk has all the information you need on Italian flour, the website is like my bible for all my Italian baking and cooking!
Swiss Flour Types
For information on flour types in Switzerland, one can look on http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mehl#Mehltypisierung under Typisierung in der Schweiz.
I think Halbweissmehl in Switzerland is what I need for High Gluten flour. Can anyone confirm this?
Thanks