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Fats and Oils in Baking
Fats and oils play a variety of roles in baking. They make the crumb-or
interior of a baked good-soft and easy to chew. They provide lubricity
both in the manufacturing process (for example, the release of product
from baking containers) and in the moist feeling in the mouth when
consumed. Fats and oils are critical to the structure of baked goods,
contributing to such factors as the pliability, rise, flakiness, strength
and airiness of the product during manufacturing and freshness after
manufacturing.
These different characteristics allow the baker to manipulate his
ingredients to produce foods with unique textures, appearances and
performances. The table shows the fat contents
of various baked goods and the chart shows the
basic structures of fats used in baking.
The way a baking fat or shortening is formulated affects its
plasticity, a property that describes how soft or pliable it is at given
temperatures. These baking fats must strongly resist the hydrolytic
effects of water as it "bakes out" of doughs, yet simultaneously
must strongly cling to or wet the expanding dough's wall structures to
provide gas-tight bags, stretchable films, and energy.
The wetting action comes from surfactant mono- and diglycerides. The
gas-tight structures and stretchable films are a result of the combination
of the fat with protein and starch. Fats remove energy from the dough
(through crystallization) as they cool, and lose energy derived during the
dough kneading process. The greater the percentage of saturated fatty
acids in the base fat or oil being used, the higher the melting point and
the more energy that has to be transferred to the fat to disrupt (melt)
the solid crystals. These saturated fatty acids may be naturally
occurring, or they may have been produced by hydrogenation during the oil
refining process.
Today most bakers use hydrogenated vegetable shortenings in their
formulas. These products have replaced tallows and lards that were used
almost exclusively until the early 1900s when hydrogenated oils were
introduced. These hydrogenated, semi-solid (plastic) fats and shortenings
may be produced from a single oil, or they can be blends of oils. With
both saturated and unsaturated fattyacids present in such processed fats,
melting occurs more gradually. This allows food surfaces to be coated and
provides a continuous coating effect in your mouth (mouthfeel) when eating
traditional baked goods.
Bakers select fats of different melting characteristics for different
baked foods and end uses. Harder or higher melting fats are used in cakes,
doughnuts, and cookies, so that they do not become soggy if the fat
formula (emulsion with water) breaks down. Icings and coatings such as
glazes use fats which melt at even higher temperatures to achieve hard,
crisp glazes or coatings.
Shortening Ability
There is a reason that hydrogenated vegetable products and lards used
for baking are called shortenings. They reduce the amount of binding
between gluten proteins and carbohydrates, softening and tenderizing the
baked foods' texture. This results in a shortening of the time it takes to
chew and swallow the baked goods. These semi-solid, plastic or partially
hardened fats also trap air during the whipping process, helping to
establish the grain or cell structure of the product.
The addition of fat to the product to be baked gives the product a
greater volume, which enhances keeping qualities. The ratio between liquid
and solid components in a fat have a direct affect on this parameter.
During proofing and kneading, the liquid portion is retained within a
matrix by the solid fat component, thus strengthening the dough during
proofing and handling. During baking, the fat works as a lubricant on the
gluten structure. This makes it more extensible and, also, reduces CO2
diffusion out of the dough. This enhances the formation and size of
loaves. In fact, doughs with added fats tend to expand for a longer period
than those with only the fats (lipids) derived from the cereal itself.
Emulsifiers
In the distant past, someone discovered that adding eggs to flour
improved the quality of their baked foods. At that time, no one knew that
lecithin in egg yolks acted as the emulsifier to hold their dough
together. The most common type formed in baking, however, is the
oil-in-water emulsion, in which the fat is surrounded by water molecules.
To form an emulsion, surfactant materials (wetting agents) are necessary.
The most common emulsifiers used in the baking industry today are mono-
and diglycerides, lecithin, and the lactylated mono-diglycerides.
Manipulating the ratio of fat solids and emulsifiers affects the
extensibility of the dough used for breads and cakes even at
protein-setting temperatures.
Chemically leavened cakes and cookies contain fats in emulsified form
to help retain aeration and gasification in the batter. The form of the
fat makes a difference here. The balance of liquid to solid fat can limit
cookie batter spread, with solid forms controlling spread better than
liquid types. Cake volume typically decreases when using liquid fats
unless a significant amount of emulsifier is added to maintain foam
stability. High fat (high solids) yields a tender crumb, while high oil
(high liquid) yields moister, fresher perceptions.
Puff pastry requires shortening made with high solids, high
melting-point fats to produce flaky layers. These pastries leaven mostly
by steam, and the fat must be retained unmelted during proofing and long
enough into baking to maintain the layering of the pastry, separated by
fat. Emulsifiers make the layers of dough more extensible.
Lubricant Function
During the baking process, one of the processes which occurs is that
moisture is driven off from the food being baked. Cakes, breads, and
muffins generally have approximately 30 percent moisture after baking.
This water is integrally bound to the starch and protein in the dough, so
that it will not be available to the senses of the person eating the
product. When a bite of a piece of pound cake is taken, the fats that were
used in the dough melt and coat the tongue. The resulting cooling and
coating sensation is perceived as "moistness".
Release Agents
Fats play a major role in ensuring that baked foods release cleanly and
can be easily removed from their cooking trays or pans. The fats may be
part of the food, or they can be applied to the tray "greasing the
pan," so to speak.
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Deep-Fat Frying
Fats and oils are used in both industrial and foodservice
applications to fry a wide range of products including doughnuts
and other pastries, snacks, coated products, prepared foods and
nuts. The oil acts as a heat-transfer medium, moving energy in the
form of heat into the food and pumping a portion of the water out.
Frying is, in essence, a dehydration or drying process. The rate
of this heat transfer is a function of the surfactants in the oil.
High levels of surfactants (soaps, polymers, etc.) may result in
excessive contact between the oil and food, yielding a product
which may be improperly cooked, dark in color, and excessively
oily.
Different types of fats are used for frying different foods.
Tallows or tropical oils were traditionally used to produce
doughnuts and other pastries because of their highly desirable
flavors and optimum surfactant contents. Most pastry fryers have
switched to hydrogenated vegetable shortenings. These fats are
fairly hard. Frying doughnuts in liquid oils may cause
"cracking" of coatings or glazes because they do not
solidify in the same manner as more saturated fats.
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Snacks, such as chips or nuts, are most often fried in liquid oils
which have been lightly hydrogenated for stability. Frying a chip in a
hard fat would give it a glassy appearance and undesirable taste. Many
chip manufacturers favor cottonseed oil because of its performance and
unique flavor characteristics. Nut producers often fry in oils from the
nuts they are frying. And several snack producers now use oils very low in
saturated fats, which are inherently less stable, so they can declare the
product to be "low in saturated fat." Manufacturers of coated
products tend to fry in harder, hydrogenated fats, as coated products are
very abusive to the oil.
The selection of the frying oil or fat for each and every operation
depends on a variety of factors, including cost, desired food quality and
marketing niche. The most important issue is the food, however. If it
doesn't taste good and meet the buyer's expectations, the manufacturer or
operator won't be in business very long.
Control of Fried Food Quality
There is a direct relationship between food and oil quality. As an oil
degrades, the quality of the food produced in that oil changes. This
relationship may be seen in the Frying Oil Quality
Curve developed by Libra Laboratories.
As an oil degrades from "Break-In" to "Runaway,"
the ability of that oil to produce high-quality food changes. The changes
in food quality are reflected in the changing chemistry of the frying
medium, especially changes in surfactant load. The goal for the food
processor is to maintain his oil at the top of the curve for as long as
possible, so that the best quality food is the result.
In 1967, Robertson proposed the following principles for oil
maintenance.
Proper design, construction, and maintenance of equipment. As with
any process, frying is most efficient when using the proper system. Most
fryers are built to order, although it is possible to purchase used
equipment. To ensure the best use of a system, it should be product
specific and maintained according to the manufacturer's instruction.
Purchasing equipment which may be used for multiple products or styles of
products may be less expensive initially, but it's really not possible to
operate such systems at peak efficiencies. When purchasing a system, look
closely at the manufacturer's technical support program.
Proper operation of equipment. Good suppliers provide detailed
operating instructions and will take the time to train operators. As part
of operations, process development must also be considered. If a process
calls for a fryer to operate at 380°F + 5°F, that is the temperature at
which it should be run. Raising oil temperatures to counteract a perceived
problem with product quality only damages the oil and accentuates the
problem.
Properly clean equipment. Drain the oil, rinse the fryer to remove
gross contaminants, boil out the unit with a caustic cleaner, drain and
neutralize the caustic cleaner, rinse the fryer with an acidic solution to
neutralize residual caustic, and rinse to remove residual salts and soaps.
Be sure that the unit drains properly so no water remains in the system.
If necessary, workers must scrub residual polymer from side walls, heater
tubes, and other areas where it accumulates without scratching surfaces.
Minimize exposure to ultraviolet (UV) light. Ultraviolet light will
catalyze the degradation of triglycerides. UV light attacks double bonds
in the unsaturated fatty acids producing by-products, which can act as
pro-oxidant materials. These can lead to undesirable off-flavors and can
compromise shelf-life.
Keep salt and other metal sources from the oil. Metals are strong
catalysts and pro-oxidants. A tiny bit of copper can "turn" the
contents of a fryer. Oxidative ability varies between metals. Sodium and
calcium are weak compared to copper and other transition and heavy metals
(i.e. -Cu > Brass > Fe > Zn > Stainless Steel > Mg > Ca
> Na).
Filter regularly. Particulates from fried foods can darken oil,
contribute bitter flavors to food, impede heat transfer, and ruin the
appearance of foods.
There are two basic kinds of filtration being used in the industry
today; passive and active. Passive systems simply remove particulates by a
sieving action; active systems contain materials which react with soluble
components in the oil, removing them. There are a number of active systems
on the market today, which are gaining increased acceptance in both
industrial and foodservice applications as they save operators money when
properly used.
Monitor food quality. The food is what people eat, not the oil, so
all programs that control quality must emphasize the food.
OIL DEGRADATION
When subjected to stress in the food production process, fats and oils
are changed. These stresses can produce undesirable reactions and reaction
products, which can compromise the performance of the fat or oil as an
ingredient or in deep-fat frying, or produce off-odors and flavors which
can render a food or the oil unusable. Many things which can initiate
degradation reactions, including heat, light (especially UV), metals,
salts, water, and other foods. One of the roles of packaging is to protect
fats, oils and foods from these reactions.
Oxidation: The primary degradation reaction for fats and oils is
oxidation, also known as rancidity. Oxidation of fats and oils can yield
off-flavors which will cause the food to be rejected by the consumer.
These off-flavors and odors are the result of the formation of
hydrocarbons, ketones, aldehydes, epoxides and alcohols. Oxidation
reactions may be initiated in the presence of metals, light, heat and
especially peroxides. Not all metals have the same effect.
Copper is the greatest initiator. In fact a single copper penny in a
fryer can destroy all the oil in short order. In foods containing fats,
the rate at which these off-flavor-producing reactions occur is one of the
primary factors in determining shelf-life. In baked goods, the other
factor which compromises shelf-life is staling. These two degradation
reactions are often lumped together, but they are different. Rancidity and
off-flavors result from oxidation of the fats, whereas staling is related
to moisture migration and loss of water from the food. Staling and
rancidity reactions may, however, be synergistic.
Unsaturated fatty acids must be protected from oxygen. This may be
accomplished using antioxidants and/or by packaging. Some of the
antioxidants commonly used are BHA and BHT, tocopherols, and TBHQ,
frequently with citric acid or a derivative added as a metal chelating
agent. No single antioxidant works in all systems. If a processor decides
that antioxidants will give him added shelf-life or more security, it is
essential that studies be conducted to ensure that the additive will not
compromise the product.
Hydrolysis: When water is introduced to an oil, the ester bonds
between the glycerol backbone of the triglyceride and the fatty acids are
hydrolyzed producing diglycerides, monoglycerides and free fatty acids.
The mono and diglycerides are emulsifiers, which further promote
hydrolysis reactions. As part of the reaction, water molecules also are
split and the resulting hydrogen and hydroxyl groups are added where the
bond was broken. Hydrolysis is very common in deep-fat frying where the
water released from the cooking food acts to initiate the reaction. Traces
of caustic cleaners may also encourage hydrolysis.
Polymerization: Heating oils results in a series of reactions in
the bulk oil (see Fritsch diagram). The
breakdown products in the oil react with one another to form a wide range
of compounds including both oxidative and thermal polymers. It is believed
that polymers are formed by direct linkage of carbon to carbon atoms or
through oxygen bridges. These are very stable entities, not subject to
distillation (escape in the form of steam). They accumulate in the oil and
eventually begin to plate-out on fryer walls, forming the brown
shellac-like material visible on dirty fryers. Polymers make up the
largest single group of compounds in degrading oils, and are considered by
many to be the best indicator of oil degradation. Polymers also contribute
to foaming, increased viscosity and darkening of the oil.
Pyrolysis: One of the compounds that forms when oils are overheated
or pyrolized is acrolein, a pungent irritant, which can make the working
environment quite uncom-fortable. Acrolein is formed from the glycerine
left from the hydrolysis of triglycerides.
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