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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 12 Pastry Doughs

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Page 1: Day 2 pastry doughs

© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Chapter 12

Pastry Doughs

Page 2: Day 2 pastry doughs

CHAPTER

12

© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Introduction to Pastry Doughs• Pâte

• Non sweet pastry dough– Pie dough, Pâte Brisée, Pâte à Foncer

• Sweet pastry dough– Pâte Sucrée, Pâte Sablée, Sablé Breton

• Puff Pastry, Pâte à Choux

Page 3: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Introduction to Pastry Doughs• Ingredient Functions for Pastry Dough

– Flour

– Fat

– Water

– Sugar

Page 4: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Introduction to Pastry Doughs• Ingredient Functions for Pastry Dough

– Flour• Pastry flour

• Low-protein bread flour

• Ratio of sugar

• Hydration rate

Page 5: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Introduction to Pastry Doughs• Ingredient Functions for Pastry Dough

– Fats• Effects on flavor, texture, leavening and mouth feel

• Common Fats

• Melting point of the fats

Page 6: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Introduction to Pastry Doughs• Ingredient Functions for Pastry Dough

– Liquids• Common liquid: water and/or milk

• Dissolves water-soluble ingredients

• Transformation into steam

• Aids from acids such as lactic (buttermilk)

Page 7: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Introduction to Pastry Doughs• Ingredient Functions for Pastry Dough

– Eggs• Hydration

• Structure

• Texture

• Leavening

• Flavor

• Color

Page 8: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Introduction to Pastry Doughs• Ingredient Functions for Pastry Dough

– Sugar• Powdered, Superfine and Granulated sugar

• Effects of the size of the sugar grain

• Hygroscopic property

• Maillard Reaction

Page 9: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Introduction to Pastry Doughs• Ingredient Functions for Pastry Dough

– Leavening Agents• Chemical leavening

• Physical leavening

Page 10: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Introduction to Pastry Doughs• Ingredient Functions for Pastry Dough

– Salt• Improves flavor and shelf life

• 1.5 to 2% of flour weight

Page 11: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Introduction to Pastry Doughs• Ingredient Functions for Pastry Dough

– Other Ingredients• Lemon juice, vinegar

• Nut flours

• Spices

• Flavoring extracts

Page 12: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

• Pie dough, Pâte Brisée, Pâte à Foncer

• Balancing of sweetness of the filling

• Balancing of tenderness, flakiness and crispiness

• Mixing methods

Pastry Dough – Unsweetened

Page 13: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

• Pie Dough– Mealy dough / Flaky dough

– Degree of the fat incorporated into the flour

– Pastry Flour

– Hard fat: butter, shortening, margarine, lard

– Ice cold Water

– Sugar

Pastry Dough – Unsweetened

Page 14: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Pastry Dough – Unsweetened• Pie Dough

– Mealy Pie Dough• Fat is mixed in until it resembles coarse cornmeal

• Top and Bottom of the pies

Page 15: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Pastry Dough – Unsweetened• Pie Dough

– Flaky Pie Dough• Flour and Fat are mixed until the size of hazelnuts

• For lattice

• For drier fillings

Page 16: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Pastry Dough – Unsweetened• Mixing Pie Dough

– Use of cold fat

– The amount of water

– Mixing by Hand

– Mixing by Machine

Page 17: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Pastry Dough – Unsweetened:Mixing Pie Dough

• Precautions for Mixing– Temperature of the ingredients

– Mix the flour/fat phase to a proper stage

– Sufficient mixing

– Proper amount of water

Page 18: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Pastry Dough – Unsweetened• Pâte à Foncer

– Lining pastry

– Sweet and savory applications

Page 19: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Pastry Dough – Unsweetened• Pâte Brisée

– Similar to pâte à foncer, but with eggs

Page 20: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Pastry Dough – Unsweetened• Review of Unsweetened Dough

– Rest the dough for at least 4 hours

– Minimize waste when cutting

Page 21: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Sweet Pastry Dough• Enriched with sugar and fat

• Pâte Sucrée, Pâte Sablée and Pâte Sablé à Breton

Page 22: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Sweet Pastry Dough• Ingredient Functions for Sweet Pastry Dough

– Flour: low-protein bread flour, all-purpose flour

– Unsalted butter

– Sugars

– Eggs

– Salt

– Leavening agents

Page 23: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Sweet Pastry Dough• Mixing Methods

– Sanding method• Dry ingredients and hard fat are blended, then liquid is

added

– Creaming Method• Minimum incorporation of fat and sugar

• Hard or soft butter

Page 24: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Sweet Pastry Dough• Pâte Sucrée

– Creaming or sanding method

– Crisp texture, good shelf life

Page 25: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Sweet Pastry Dough• Pâte Sablée

– Delicate, rich and crumbly texture

– Baking soda

– Cooked egg yolk

Page 26: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Sweet Pastry Dough• Pâte Breton

– Start with whipping egg yolks and sugar

– Add soft butter, mix to an incorporation

– Add sifted dry ingredients, mix until incorporation

• Pâte à Sablé Breton– Used for tarts and petit four bases

– Not suitable for lining molds

Page 27: Day 2 pastry doughs

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© 2009 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved.

Conclusion• A variety of baked goods can be produced from

a selection of sweetened and unsweetened pastry dough

• Understanding the formulation and characteristics of each dough is important to the success of the formula.