9.10.2012

A primer on whole grains

What is a whole grain? At its simplest, it is a grain that contains the bran, germ and endosperm, though there are numerous points of contention surrounding this very basic definition. 

"We need to education consumers about whole grain," said Aaron Clanton (pictured), an instructor at AIB during the "Working with Whole Grains" educational session at All Things Baking. "That falls on all of us, the government included."

Clanton spent several minutes defining what counts as whole grain and what doesn't, fielding multiple questions throughout. Wheat, rye, corn rice, oats, barley, millet, sorghum (which Clanton confessed tastes reminiscent of dirt), teff, amaranth, buckwheat, quinoa, spelt, farro, bulgher and durum. Among the ingredients commonly misidentified as whole grain are soybeans, chickpeas, sunflower seeds, flax, arrowroot and pearled barley.

"Is all whole wheat whole grain?" one attendee asked. "All whole wheat is whole grain, but not all whole grain is whole wheat," he replied. 

"Is white wheat considered whole grain?" another chimed in. "That strain of wheat is white naturally," he said. 

"How many grains does a product need to be multigrain?" "Three."

Then it was Dave Kovacic's turn to field questions, as the director of technical services at Bay State Milling took the mike to talk about formulating with whole grains. 

He recommended an incremental approach to incorporating whole grains, starting with 10 percent whole grain flour and gradually working up. Starting at around 50 percent whole grain flour, formulas need adjustments to formulation and process.

His recommendations include:

  1. Consider a higher protein flour, as more protein equals added dough strength.
  2. Add vital wheat gluten (about 1 percent based on flour weight)
  3. Increase sugar or use alternative sweeteners, like honey or nondiastatic malt. Brown sugar in particular is a great complement to the nuttiness of whole grain flour.
  4. Increase the yeast for a better lift in baked products.
  5. Lower mixing speed and time to prevent the brans from rupturing and slow down the incorporation process.
  6. Slightly undermix the dough, so it feels tacky instead of normal. It will hydrate as you proceed through dividing and rounding.
  7. Lower dough temperature to increase tolerance.
  8. Reduce fermentation times to keep dough young.
  9. Increase proof times to keep the volume up. Don't overproof, as whole grain doughs have a low tolerance for overproofing.
  10. Reduce bake times for a better loaf volume, as whole grain dough tends to be dense. 
  11. Use a soaker (whole grains in pieces and parts that are hydrated by making a stiff mash before adding them to the dough) to prevent hydration.
  12. Increase the dough to pan ratio in the oven for a better oven spring.

"How much whole grain do I have to add before I can label my product whole grain? 51 percent?" someone asked. "If you're selling it to the school system, yes. If you're going to market it in your bakery as 100 percent whole grain, you need to use 100 percent whole grain flour." Clanton said. 

"What about whole grain flour versus other processed whole grain?" another attendee asked. "Almonst all grains can be ground into flour," Kovacic said. "It's better and easier to use than pieces and parts."

Once we'd surpassed the session end time by 15 minutes and a handful of us showed no signs of leaving, Clanton asked if there was another session after ours. "Nope," Kovacic said. Another hand went up almost instantly with a question about sprouted grain. I think we could have stayed in there all day drilling those two, but alas, there was more show yet to see.

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