All the terms and more that you ever wanted to know the meaning of.
http://www.nyx.net/~dgreenw/isthereaglo ... .food.html
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All the terms and more that you ever wanted to know the meaning of.
http://www.nyx.net/~dgreenw/isthereaglo ... .food.html
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Grubdog asks
[quote]
Can you explain to me what you mean by the term hydration.
[/quote]
If you look up the link that Bill has posted above you will find
[quote]
hydration: Several meanings in this context: 1) The weight of water in a a leaven or a dough, relative to the weight of flour. Therefore, a dough at 70% hydration is 41% water, and a leaven at 100% hydration is 50% water. 2) The capacity of a flour to absorb water (usually called absorption). 3) The quantity of water in flour (related to environmental humidity).
[/quote]
In this forum, and most baking fora you will find home bakers using
'hydration' to refer to the first of these meanings.
It is a way of comparing bread dough recipes, since one of the important variables that determines how a dough behaves is how much water is in it.
Put simply, to calculate the 'hydration' of a dough, divide the total weight of water/liquid in a dough, by the total weight of flour in the dough.
To confuse things a little we sometimes talk about the 'hydration' of a starter. This is the same idea, just dividing the amount of water in the starter by the amount of flour.
An example:
My standard recipe uses
200g starter
500g flour
320g water
10g salt
The starter is at 100% hydration, so that means that it contains 100g water and 100g flour.
Total water = 320g + 100g (in starter) = 420g
Total flour = 500g plus 100g (in starter) = 600g
Hydration = 420/600 = 70% (multiply by 100% to get the percentage)
To give you a bit of a guide: doughs which have hydration of 50% make a very stiff dough, 60% make a firm kneadable dough, 70% a sticky dough, 80% an incredibly sticky unkneadable dough, 100% a thick batter
does that help?
cheers
Dom
Thanks Bill!