Some time ago, I had the ridiculous idea of baking flour on it's own. I then found out that it turns yellowish and that the proteins inside might get destroyed. Can baked flour be used to make bread, and if so, will it be gold-coloured? Does this have any effects on the quality of the bread?
2 Answers
As you mentioned in your own post, the toasting process will deactivate the flour's proteins. They won't actually be destroyed, but they will lose their binding capacity.
This means that bread is the worst application for toasted flour. If you tried to make a bread out of toasted flour only, you'd run basically into the same problems as in using a gluten-free flour. To get around the problem, you could either use a not-completely-toasted flour, or a mixture of toasted and untoasted, or a mixture of toasted flour and vital wheat gluten, or follow a recipe for gluten-free bread. In all cases, you'll get an inferior texture when compared to normal bread.
The taste can be expected to be nuttier than when made with normal flour. The color will be darker, but I doubt that it will be "golden", it's more likely it will be on the beige-brown spectrum. If all you want is a different color, you should use a food coloring substance, not manipulate the flour.
If you want to experiment with toasted flour, there are many other products which will be a much better choice. The traditional ones are dark roux and flour-based drinks, but you could in principle make anything that works well with gluten-free flour and where you'd appreciate the toasted aroma.
-
Yes! The heating denatures the proteins in the flour. You can also see this effect if you get flour that gets too hot in the milling process. This is one of the reasons you shouldn't use Indian (the subcontinent) chakki flours for western bread making, even though they work fine for Indian breads.– bob1Commented Apr 12, 2023 at 23:11
In Brazil we love farofa, which is toasted cassava flour. It's possible to do it with other kinds of flours, although I'm not sure if regular wheat flour would be appropriate because it's too finely ground.
-
I thought that farofa is used as a kind of spice to add on top of other food. Is it really an ingredient for bread baking? Does it get mixed with wheat flour for making bread?– rumtscho ♦Commented Apr 13, 2023 at 7:45
-