Yeast Bread Vocabulary
yeast
a microscopic single celled plant that produces the leavening gas carbon dioxide through the process of fermentation (available in three forms: compressed active dry yeast and quick rise yeast)
starter
a mixture of flour yeast sugar and warm liquid that begins the leavening action. A portion of the starter is used to leaven dough
kneading
a process of working with dough with your hands to thoroughly mix ingredients and develop gluten motion is rhythmically repeated until dough is smooth and elastic
brioche
a type of yeast that is baked in a special fluted pan
peel
a wooden board that a baker uses to slide breads onto the oven floor or hearth
freezer dough
after dough is mixed and kneaded it is frozen either before or after shaping
baking soda
an alkali that releases CO2 when added to flour and heated
leaven
causes dough to rise
croissants
crescent shaped flaky yeast rolls
cool rise dough
dough that is prepared in recipe that is designed to rise slowly in the refrigerator
gluten
elastic substance that forms when a certain proteins in what flour combine with liquid
quick rise yeast
highly active yeast strains that are dried they are made into granules smaller than those in active dry yeast allowing them to act more quickly
crumb
internal texture of a bread roll
regular yeast dough
mad by combining yeast and other recipe ingredients into one mixture
compressed yeast
made from fresh moist yeast cells that has been dried and made into granules
baking powders
made of a dry acid or acid salt backing soda and starch or flour most are double acting; they release some CO2 when moistened but release more CO2 when heated
Traditional Mixing Method
method of mixing yeast bread ingredients then warm requires fast rising yeast yeast mixed with some of the dry ingredients then warm liquid (120 deg to 130 deg) is added to the dry ingredients
Quick Rise Mixing Method
method of mixing yeast breads ingredients which requires fast rising yeast yeast mixed with some of the dry ingredients then warm liquids is added to dry ingredients
crust
outer surface of bread roll cake muffin
refrigerator dough
prepared from recipes designed to slowly rise in the refrigerator
fermentation
process that takes place when yeast cells act upon sugars to produce CO2 and alcohol. Results in dough rising (leavening)
batter mixing methods
recipe uses less flour so yeast mixture is thinner than dough
oven spring
the dramatic rising that takes place in dough during the first minutes of baking
rolled in Fat yeast dough
the fat is combined into dough with a rolling and folding action. Dough is made of many this alternating layers of fat and dough
mixer method
yeast is added to dry ingredients and then warm liquid is added and mixed using the electric mixer the remaining flour is stirred by hand
active dry yeast
yeast made from an active yeast strain that has been dried and made into granules