Can anyone weigh in (hah hah) on flour additives. I bought a number of bags of flour in France to try out, and I was a little surprised to see: emulsifier E471, a handing agent (traitement de la farine), absorbic acid and enzymes on the ingredient list, along with something I don't understand -- levain de ble desactive; inactive leavening? Is that added gluten?
Anyway, the flour is very nice and I am making a baguette for dinner. It is a nice golden color, a less fine ground than Italian Tipo 00, and it has a lot more body than Italian general purpose flour. I am guess that it has less gluten than American bread flour. It's really nice, but why the processing and additives?
One other fun thing to point out. In the land of bread, there is a great range of flours in the supermarket. General purpose, bread, cake, crepe, pain campagne (a mix of wheat and whole wheat for natural rising), whole wheat, and "high extraction." The crepe flour is great, and it is "guaranteed to not be lumpy." How stores allocate shelf space says a lot about country's priorities. In Italy, it's pasta, fresh vegetables, and olive oil.
Any input on flour additives?
James
Anyway, the flour is very nice and I am making a baguette for dinner. It is a nice golden color, a less fine ground than Italian Tipo 00, and it has a lot more body than Italian general purpose flour. I am guess that it has less gluten than American bread flour. It's really nice, but why the processing and additives?
One other fun thing to point out. In the land of bread, there is a great range of flours in the supermarket. General purpose, bread, cake, crepe, pain campagne (a mix of wheat and whole wheat for natural rising), whole wheat, and "high extraction." The crepe flour is great, and it is "guaranteed to not be lumpy." How stores allocate shelf space says a lot about country's priorities. In Italy, it's pasta, fresh vegetables, and olive oil.
Any input on flour additives?
James
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