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High Altitude Cooking and Baking | Part 2 

Jacob Burton
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Watch the full three part series and read the show notes by going here: stellaculinary....
Taking into consideration what we learned in our previous video, which explained the science behind atmospheric pressure and water's boiling point at various altitudes, let's take a look at how this effects baked goods, especially cakes.
First, let's stop for a second to think about what a cake is. At it's technical core, a cake is a starch gel. The flour is hydrated with liquid and fat is added to "shorten" the gluten strands, which yields a more tender product. But for the hydrated starch to actually set as a gel, it must reach a temperature ranging from 190-205°F/87-96°C.
As the cake bakes at altitude, the water contained in the batter will begin to evaporate at a lower temperature, yielding a drier product than the same recipe at sea level.
Another fact in play is cakes will also expand (rise) faster at altitude since they have less atmospheric pressure to fight against. Now consider what I just mentioned above; for a cake to fully set, the starch must gel at the same moment the cake has reached the apex of it's structural expansion. If the cake expands too much, it will collapse under it's own weight. If the cake doesn't expand enough, it will have a dense texture.
When a cake recipe gives you a time and temperature for baking...
Continue Reading: stellaculinary....

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7 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 23   
@chikngreez
@chikngreez 8 лет назад
This is an incredibly helpful, insightful, and concise series. It makes all too much sense.
@daylight1440
@daylight1440 4 года назад
Can you help me with quick breads? Every time I make banana bread the center is undervalued and the outer is overbaked. Then I let it cool and the center takes a slight dip. I’m in Denver at a mile high.
@jfsfrnd
@jfsfrnd 9 лет назад
I live at 7000 feet. I adapted (an already adapted, but done badly) sea level spritz cookie recipe - the taste is perfect - but the cookies end up hard. What can I do to make them soft - not chewy - but soft and crumbly like spritz.
@JacobBurton
@JacobBurton 9 лет назад
How much sugar is your recipe? Remember, sugar is hygroscopic, so it will bind with the water in you cookies, recrystallize as they cool, making them hard. Try swapping half your sugar amount with corn syrup, which won't crystallize when it cools. You can also try upping the fat content a bit, but the corn syrup should do the trick.
@jared7494
@jared7494 9 лет назад
I wish there more videos like this on youtube! Most better then watching kittens lol. Thanks for the help you did very well at explaining this concept simply.
@jabbaquest117
@jabbaquest117 4 года назад
Can you please talk about how to make meringue in high altitude? I live in Denver and nothing seems to work for me. Trying to make a souffle pancake
@chefalbino
@chefalbino 10 лет назад
i work at 6135 feet :-) and the soufflee rise very nice ;-) thx
@JacobBurton
@JacobBurton 10 лет назад
Pics or it didn't happen. ;-) Glad you enjoyed the video.
@RedDevil1848
@RedDevil1848 9 лет назад
Wow - I really wish I found your videos earlier - I live in Calgary (3400 feet). I love cooking but gave up on baking and pasta making because I though the altitude was screwing me over.... Im going to try it again now. Quick question, are all cook book recipes recalculated for sea level or is there anything that would indicate what altitude?
@JacobBurton
@JacobBurton 9 лет назад
Ian Dingle Most cook books are written for below 3000ft elevation, since that's where the majority of people using the books live.
@suzicafran4624
@suzicafran4624 6 лет назад
Ian Dingle z
@AnnabelleC0306
@AnnabelleC0306 4 года назад
Thank you.
@claudetteleblanc5273
@claudetteleblanc5273 2 года назад
Jacob, now I understand why my bread fell. I understand that I need to up my heat temperature. The thing is, my bread machine has preset cycles. And can't adjust my heat. What to do? Thank you.
@citizenschallengeYT
@citizenschallengeYT 3 года назад
well done. This gets me to thinking, have you worked with dutch ovens and baking - particularly high altitude. How much pressure is built with the lid on? (ps. we're at ~7,500')
@butterflybeatles
@butterflybeatles 8 лет назад
So, do you need more water to cook rice if I live in the Andes?
@kaitlynroberts7896
@kaitlynroberts7896 4 года назад
Hey is there a part 3!!?? I can’t find it!!
@JacobBurton
@JacobBurton 4 года назад
Yep. I did a horrible job of naming it. Fixed the title. Here's a direct link: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ypiSP-dyBpI.html. Also, you can find all three plus notes on the wrap up page here: stellaculinary.com/podcasts/video/high-altitude-baking-cooking-the-science-tips-tricks Thanks for watching.
@memaacalifornian5517
@memaacalifornian5517 4 года назад
Can we use same measurements for breadmaker...and using almond flour...trying to make low carb bread and they keep coming out flat😩
@JacobBurton
@JacobBurton 4 года назад
The reason why it's coming out flat is because almond flour doesn't have any gluten. Gluten gives your bread structure, allowing it to trap gas, rise, and not be flat. If you're trying to make gluten free bread, I recommend using the brand Cup4Cup. You'll never be able to match real bread flour, but Cup4Cup is the closest I've come to replicating my recipes without gluten.
@SilverCottage
@SilverCottage 4 года назад
This is SO COMPLICATED! First of all, you need to be a math wizard to follow these instructions. I've listened to all three videos and, while it is vaguely interesting, as far as an explanation of why cooking and baking is so hard at altitude, it is not information I can easily USE. I am terrible at math, and I am not the only one. The reason I turn to youtube videos is to watch how things are made, done, etc., so I can learn. but this guy is not producing anything at all! he is just yapping about the concepts BEHIND the topic. Not useful.
@MarcosElMalo2
@MarcosElMalo2 4 года назад
If you can’t use math, buy packaged mixes and follow their high altitude directions. No math needed.
@MajimeTV
@MajimeTV 2 года назад
Because baking is a science and no recipe can be adapted 1 for 1. He is explaining how to prevent things and why certain things, like less atmospheric pressure and leaveners causing breads to rise quicker than they can form structure, and using less sugar to prevent breads going hard. You need to figure this out by a ratio of your ingredients, using math, otherwise it’s trial and error
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