We should all hate Jack, for writing recipes in cups and then calling paying subscribers stupid for not weighing their flour. Hate Jack. He deserves it.
@@dylanbystedt I guess my hearing is bad since I didn't hear him call anyone stupid! Recipes are generally written in cups because, get this, not everyone has scales.
I don't shave off the cup when I measure,just finished making the Jamaican Easter bun and it came out fine except I didn't use the amount of sugar they recommended, don't like stuff too sweet
This is my favorite cooking resource. They are good a such a wide variety of things, from various food types to tools to use in the kitchen, unlike many of my other favorites who focus on one thing like mexican food or BBQ. They are also entertaining - the shows are put together very well and the various personalities are fun to watch.
Does your scale not have the option to switch between units? All of mine have, but then again I'm in the US, and that might not be as necessary in the rest of the world.
@@lji_btrfly Did you watch the video? A volumetric measure of flour is going to be slightly weight with each scoop. Not a big deal for a small amount but gets magnified when using several cups.
@@lji_btrfly If it's so easy to convert, then ATK should have no problem providing gram weights for all of their paying subscribers. Commenters on their site, including me, are always asking for it, but it seems like some executive in their organization doesn't want to provide it. I convert all the weights to grams myself, but it becomes cumbersome in recipes with multiple dry ingredient weights. And really, there is no reason for the conversion to not be built into the website.
I have been baking for so long that I don't use a scale or measuring cups. Been baking since I was 8 years old. Most of the measuring tools are not going to work when it really matters because the elements around you change and so should your ratios. That is why it is good to know what your dough is supposed to feel like. Happy baking.
It really depends on what you're baking. I make biscuits a lot and just use eye measures for most of it. Similar with bread dough--enough flour to bring the dough together. However, if I'm making a chiffon cake or angel food cake, then everything gets measured very carefully--including the egg whites which are measured by cups rather than by count.
@@nancy9478 That's probably the most accurate way to take a measurement. For cakes and other "fussy" baked products, I'd encourage others to follow your example. For thickening gravy or throwing together a biscuit dough, I'd just use an eye measure. It really comes down to how much precision is required for the final product.
@@nancy9478 If you are not familiar with how it should feel when you're kneading it. You should use a measuring tool until you have the feel for it. Once you know the feel, you will start getting consistent results.
In the American South, we also have low-protein flour for biscuits and soft rolls. Cake flour is close but not quite right. "My brand" is White Lily, and I even have a little round aluminum biscuit pan with their lily logo on it. It was my Grandmother's and though I don't use it near as much as she or my mother did it still gets used!
You might be able to mix all-purpose with cake flour. Another factor is that if you measure via weight from White Lily, it might come closer. You can get the conversion often from the side of the flour bag (ex: 1/4 c. is 30g, so 120g is 1 c. or around 4.25 oz)
I love watching Jack Bishop's talks about all-things-food! I don't even care about flour types - I know the difference between "self rising" and "not self rising" and that's all I realistically need - but I watched AND ENJOYED this video because Jack is great and we always learn other things in his vids, too. Thanks!
Another tip: always store your flour in the freezer or in an airtight container. Trust me, you don't want to open the flour bag in your cabinet up only to find little weird mites in there having a field day. (Has happened to me even in a spotless, 35th floor apt in NYC.)
@@pamelaspooner7183 Exactly--that's why the advice to never eat raw flour. And if they do happen to hatch (even if it seems gross), you can just sift them out.
Thanks so much for these educational videos! Personally, I too would love for recipes to include measurement quantities available in grams whenever possible. However, I AM grateful for any weight specifications provided.
Ludo for your comment on cups !! Always cooked in weight and always frustrated with the approximation of cup especially with some more rough ingredient. So many thanks to voice your professional opinion on cup, cups are gone , weight it is
Thank you so much - I am a new to the game baker and I have been baking like a twirling dervish!!! I have a very small kitchen and the information in this video is invaluable. I will keep my scale front and center when baking now, especially when making breads....
Find it funny how they covered the branding on 2 of the 3 king Arthur flours. Then the specifically mentioned the brand. The cake flour in the video is swans down. I personally use king Arthur. Their unbleached and unenriched cake flour is absolutely amazing. I keep all 3 types of flour in my kitchen. I always use a scale too.
I generally avoid bleached flour (or bleached anything) when possible, so, like you, I turn to King Arthur's unbleached cake flour. My cakes are probably not quite as tall or light as someone's with bleached cake flour, but I'll sacrifice those couple of millimeters to avoid eating bleach.
Why are the King Arthur labels digitally blanked out (but partially visible on a few shots) on the whole wheat and bread flours, but shown on the all-purpose flour? Is it an ATK recommendation thing? Seems very odd...oh well, I use KA for all my flours and have no complaints.
Hello, new subscriber here. This video was very informative. I was taught to tap the top of my cup with a flat edged knife to make sure there are no air pockets but I'm going to try measuring next time. Thank you for the education!
@@CorwynGC He meant "accurate" and not "precise". Accuracy means how close the taken measurement is to the real measurement. Precision refers to how close diferent measurements of the same real measurement are between them. This person clearly meant the first thing.
@@barcham I guess the billions of families, for centuries, who never used a scale, also "love their cook too much to complain and simply don't know what properly prepared food tastes like" either? Hmmm 🤔
@@frankhughes001 Oh, by the way... I think it is safe to say that, after a lifetime of eating fast food, most Americans haven't the slightest idea what properly prepared food tastes like. 😎
I used King Arthur Brwed flour for Thanksgiving dinner rolls this year and they were FANTASTIC! My first two attempts were epic fails. MAIN LESSON - SCALD THE MILK!!!!! It makes a HUGE difference. I love ATK. its the NPR of cooking.
And for Canadian viewers, our general purpose flour has around 13% protein. So please be careful when following American recipes as they will not come out the same if you make them here in Canada with our GP flour.
Yes, ATK, I would love to see your recipes include gram weights. I generally jot down ingredients and convert everything to grams before I start, but how nice it would be to skip that step!
I actually used to use 1 cup of flour = 120 g (pretty standard, actually what King Arthur's uses), but apparently ATK uses a 5 oz standard, which is closer to 141g... eek. 125g and 128g also have been said. Gold Medal also says 120g (source: serving size on their USDA label says 1/4 c = 30). Apparently many people use the 4 1/4 (four and a quarter) standard... I did use oz whenever I use an ATK recipe though. Still, I agree, I would prefer grams because it's a more accurate measurement. I'm thinking if you use an ATK recipe, you should measure by weight
@@JoeStuffzAlt Wow, TY. Just starting my research into baking. Haven't baked ANY bread as of yet, but have all the gear. Baking is ENORMOUSLY complexed and exact!
@@optionout A lot of the better bread recipes have weighted measurements. When in doubt, I would say use the flour manufacturer's measurements. The USDA label can be a good source I feel it depends on the ingredient. If the ingredient can smoosh or fluff like flour or brown sugar, by weight makes more of a difference. If it's 1 tbsp / 1 tsp, maybe 1/4 cup or lower, maybe not as much difference
Because I do not want to make 100 loaves of bread to test types of flour’s effect per loaf and merely wish to make and bake, I find the TEST KITCHEN provides helpful hints. I have been watching them for years and use many of their methods which have been perfected for us. ❤I do however wish they would have a few episodes with information for adjustments for high altitude baking and cooking. 😊I live at 5000 ft and believe me when I say there are adjustments to cooking and baking that can help. Thanks
Telling people to use a scale is the best advice you can give, especially with an insane number of recipes calling for cups. And what's worse, people use liquid measuring cups to measure flour, which is even worse than the dry measuring cup he was demonstrating with.
Yet all the recipes on the site and in their videos use cups instead of grams, and they have no way of converting on the site, or have it provided, so you have to do it yourself. I think it's preposterous that he's telling us to use metric, yet they don't practice what they preach.
@@vittoriabakes The video had nothing to do with metric -- you might've noticed he weighed the flour in ounces. It's about measuring by weight instead of measuring by volume.
@@vittoriabakes I think ounces are considered an imperial measurement, be it weight or volume. The metric system doesn't have anything called ounces in either category.
Can you give more details about whole wheat flour ? When to use and when not to use. How does it change the texture of the end product [say bread] to use 1/4 or 1/2 whole wheat ? Thanks
Great information! I used Fleishman's Bake - it - easy Yeast Book for info on grains etc. It may be found some places but it is pretty old now. Definitely old fashioned cooking. Thanks!
Frankly, I find the viewer criticism of how the flour is measured (by volume rather than weight) rather peculiar. I have been cooking since I was 12 years old and learned on a wood stove, everything from cakes to bread and have always used measuring cups and have had incredibly good results. Personally, I think if you bother to follow the recipe - and don't "force" quantities - you are going to have success either way. If you want that extra in your baked goods, buy the grain (store in a freezer) and mill it as you need it - THAT is where the different is. VitaMix has a grain bowl specifically for that which works extremely well. Honestly, your quality is going to depend more on measuredly accurately!
I noticed Jack just dips the cup to fill it, and then leveled off the top. I always, for each cup. first tamp the cup on the counter before leveling to avoid any density variation in the just-filled cup. Will do Jack's weight test using my cups of flour tomorrow.
I really wish in the videos you guys would mention the metric measurements, or put them up on the screen (The measurements aren't even in the written recipes on the site). If you are going to tell us not to use Imperial, and that ATK doesn't use them, please mention the gram amounts. It would be super helpful
Most digital scales I've seen have an option for imperial as well as metric. Or you can Google the measurement in imperial and get the metric. This isn't hard.
I weigh everything except Tbsp. and tsp. But I have a problem with opposing weight charts. King Arthur's weight chart says 1 cup of AP flour weighs 4 1/4 oz. or 120 grams. ATK's Bread Illustrated says 1 cup of AP flour weighs 5 oz. or 142 grams. That is a huge difference and I have to change things up when ever I make an ATK recipe. Bread flour is worse, 4 1/4 oz. to 5 1/2 oz. When I use a measuring cup it is closer to the King Arthur weight.
Just be aware, different recipe creators have different conversions for the weight of a cup of flour, so follow the guidance of whichever source you're using. ATK will be 5oz, but other sites like King Arthur use a different weight for their own recipes.
@@trickvro Because today in news it was reported that that emoji is offensive to some. Personally, I like the thumbs up, so I used it anyway. That is why.
Great video! I would love to see a quick guide to gluten free flours as a celiac since there are SO many options and they are not all great that I have found.
Ok...what is the conversion from cup to ounce? My bread recipes are in grams and ounces...so I use my scale. What about cookie recipes that only call for cups? Love your info...it's a great help.
I gave-up with weighing flour and just use a slightly heaping cup of measured flour. I then separately prepare liquid and dry ingredients, mixing the wet ingredients until I obtain the desired mixture thickness, subsequently either tossing or freezing the remaining liquid ingredients. Weighing flour is wasted time, while time better spent focused on sifting all the dry ingredients and/or whisking the egg whites into stiff peaks, providing good texture. When I have plenty of time and rather than just using my preferred King Author flour, tend to get far more excellent results milling my own flour!
I received some farina in a food relief box; where does this fall in the lineup? I know it is meant for a hot cereal, but CAN it be used in baking as a portion of the flour called for (I suppose like wheat flour)?
@@ThisOldChris Do NOT ignore them, REPORT THEM. The only way to get rid of these scammers is if more people report them instead of just looking the other way.
00 flour is for making pizza dough, and certain types of pasta, it is not a substitute for all-purpose flour, not to mention that it costs considerably more. And to be quite honest, if you make pizza in a home oven that tops out at 500-550° F, you will not notice much of a difference.
I believe whole wheat flour is not just ground wheat. Stoneground wheat is the entire wheat kernel ground into flour. Commercial flour is ALL ground the same way, the germ, bran and endosperm (the white part) are all separated from each other. “Whole wheat” flour has some of the germ and bran mixed back into the endosperm. Buy stoneground wheat if you can find it. Another way is to buy a grinder & grind yourself. I have a KoMo grinder and I love the breads I make with it.
Interesting for bread, any particular flour type for pie crust. My wife has always been famous for her pies but recently the crust has been shrinking during a blind bake. She is very frustrated. I’m ignorant but suspect she needs to use a lower protein flour such as White Lily All Purpose. Any thoughts?
The MOST important message from this video is to go metric. Flour types are definitely important, but, more important than that is actual volume/weight.
Are there differences in the quality or accuracy of scales used for food stuffs? Anyone using a scale have a favorite brand? **Mom found an Ozeri digital at Macy's. I don't know if it is any good, but she was happy I expressed an interest. 🙃
They have a review on scales. ATK recommends a digital scale, and most digital scales were pretty accurate. Oxo was one of their favorite brands. I use the Oxo and have been happy with it. It's been durable and easy-to-clean
I have an AvaWeigh scale that can be calibrated with calibration weights, but I don't think most of the less expensive scales ($20-$50??) can be manually calibrated, you just need to trust. (Happy to be corrected if wrong). Mine works on electricity or batteries and the weight plate is removable for cleaning, though this is more a perk than a need.
Lol scale ⚖️ I have 2! I scoop and put in a bowl and weigh it and you might have more than you think it never fails! So I agree take you scale out or purchase one!
I started weighing flour about 4 years ago. Definitely changed the outcome of my baking items. Love you Jack!
We should all hate Jack, for writing recipes in cups and then calling paying subscribers stupid for not weighing their flour. Hate Jack. He deserves it.
@@dylanbystedt I guess my hearing is bad since I didn't hear him call anyone stupid!
Recipes are generally written in cups because, get this, not everyone has scales.
heck,..I weigh coffee,..every pot. I can taste the difference, in 2grams difference.
I don't shave off the cup when I measure,just finished making the Jamaican Easter bun and it came out fine except I didn't use the amount of sugar they recommended, don't like stuff too sweet
Jack always has high enthusiasm for all food topics. Love it!
He does! 😊 I love Jack.
Thank you so much for all these years of honest, reliable consumer common sense.
The Test Kitchen folks has changed my kitchen forever! Thank you from the bottom of my heart ❤
This is my favorite cooking resource. They are good a such a wide variety of things, from various food types to tools to use in the kitchen, unlike many of my other favorites who focus on one thing like mexican food or BBQ. They are also entertaining - the shows are put together very well and the various personalities are fun to watch.
That is the most serious and direct we have EVER seen Jack Bishop weigh in on a topic.
I love the sass at the end! This guy’s great!
I would love if you had alternative measurements for weight, using grams, in all your baked recipes.
It's not that hard to convert it. My calculator on my phone has a converter. Or you can Google it.
5 oz is 141.747 g
Does your scale not have the option to switch between units? All of mine have, but then again I'm in the US, and that might not be as necessary in the rest of the world.
@@lji_btrfly Did you watch the video? A volumetric measure of flour is going to be slightly weight with each scoop. Not a big deal for a small amount but gets magnified when using several cups.
@@lji_btrfly If it's so easy to convert, then ATK should have no problem providing gram weights for all of their paying subscribers. Commenters on their site, including me, are always asking for it, but it seems like some executive in their organization doesn't want to provide it.
I convert all the weights to grams myself, but it becomes cumbersome in recipes with multiple dry ingredient weights. And really, there is no reason for the conversion to not be built into the website.
I have been baking for so long that I don't use a scale or measuring cups. Been baking since I was 8 years old. Most of the measuring tools are not going to work when it really matters because the elements around you change and so should your ratios. That is why it is good to know what your dough is supposed to feel like. Happy baking.
It really depends on what you're baking. I make biscuits a lot and just use eye measures for most of it. Similar with bread dough--enough flour to bring the dough together. However, if I'm making a chiffon cake or angel food cake, then everything gets measured very carefully--including the egg whites which are measured by cups rather than by count.
I always measure flour in grams.
@@nancy9478 That's probably the most accurate way to take a measurement. For cakes and other "fussy" baked products, I'd encourage others to follow your example. For thickening gravy or throwing together a biscuit dough, I'd just use an eye measure. It really comes down to how much precision is required for the final product.
@@nancy9478 If you are not familiar with how it should feel when you're kneading it. You should use a measuring tool until you have the feel for it. Once you know the feel, you will start getting consistent results.
I eyeballs the spices sometimes but I couldn't bake a cake or bread without a cup, I have four different measuring cups in different sizes
Love Jack. Always entertaining and informative. Great delivery!
In the American South, we also have low-protein flour for biscuits and soft rolls. Cake flour is close but not quite right. "My brand" is White Lily, and I even have a little round aluminum biscuit pan with their lily logo on it. It was my Grandmother's and though I don't use it near as much as she or my mother did it still gets used!
You might be able to mix all-purpose with cake flour. Another factor is that if you measure via weight from White Lily, it might come closer. You can get the conversion often from the side of the flour bag (ex: 1/4 c. is 30g, so 120g is 1 c. or around 4.25 oz)
@@JoeStuffzAlt That's a lot of faffery just to get around buying a brand you know will work.
@@cisium1184 Except that White Lily might not be available everywhere
Never heard of White Lily.
Beautiful. I love ATK as they actually EXPLAIN the differences among stuff.
I love watching Jack Bishop's talks about all-things-food! I don't even care about flour types - I know the difference between "self rising" and "not self rising" and that's all I realistically need - but I watched AND ENJOYED this video because Jack is great and we always learn other things in his vids, too. Thanks!
Love the way he explained the differences. Wow! He is Awesome.........
His videos are always really good, thanks for teaching us so much about food and cooking.
Jack is always great to watch! Informative and well presented.
Another tip: always store your flour in the freezer or in an airtight container. Trust me, you don't want to open the flour bag in your cabinet up only to find little weird mites in there having a field day. (Has happened to me even in a spotless, 35th floor apt in NYC.)
Righf
They are all there (weevils) regardless, but with freezing, they don’t hatch.
@@pamelaspooner7183 Exactly--that's why the advice to never eat raw flour. And if they do happen to hatch (even if it seems gross), you can just sift them out.
Oh man, I thought for sure I'd finally get to learn about the protein content of pastry flour
Beyond the accuracy, using a scale to bake is so much less messy!
Love, love, love learning from you. I will use the scale from now on when measuring flour.
I bought a good scale years ago and use it when baking. I researched the weights of all ingredients (flour, sugar, etc.) it makes a difference.
Great video as always but would have loved to here the difference between those flours and 00 pizza flour and what makes it special.
Thanks so much for these educational videos! Personally, I too would love for recipes to include measurement quantities available in grams whenever possible. However, I AM grateful for any weight specifications provided.
Ludo for your comment on cups !! Always cooked in weight and always frustrated with the approximation of cup especially with some more rough ingredient. So many thanks to voice your professional opinion on cup, cups are gone , weight it is
What about bleached vs unbleached ap flour? Is it worth it to have both?
Thank you so much - I am a new to the game baker and I have been baking like a twirling dervish!!! I have a very small kitchen and the information in this video is invaluable. I will keep my scale front and center when baking now, especially when making breads....
Find it funny how they covered the branding on 2 of the 3 king Arthur flours. Then the specifically mentioned the brand. The cake flour in the video is swans down. I personally use king Arthur. Their unbleached and unenriched cake flour is absolutely amazing. I keep all 3 types of flour in my kitchen. I always use a scale too.
I generally avoid bleached flour (or bleached anything) when possible, so, like you, I turn to King Arthur's unbleached cake flour. My cakes are probably not quite as tall or light as someone's with bleached cake flour, but I'll sacrifice those couple of millimeters to avoid eating bleach.
Why are the King Arthur labels digitally blanked out (but partially visible on a few shots) on the whole wheat and bread flours, but shown on the all-purpose flour? Is it an ATK recommendation thing? Seems very odd...oh well, I use KA for all my flours and have no complaints.
Perfect explanation.thanks😊
Very good Jack, TY.
Wow that was good advice at the end of the video! 👍🏼
This was nicely informative…thank you…
…cups till death…
Well, looks like I will now be using my scale. Great information!
You teach us so much!
That was good. And quick.
You ARE the best! Thank you for sharing.👍
I have always used a scale. It is precise, and when baking, you don't make errors that may affect the end product.
Thanks for telling people to use a scale, Jack I always use a scale when baking!!
Hello Rebecca
Hello, new subscriber here. This video was very informative. I was taught to tap the top of my cup with a flat edged knife to make sure there are no air pockets but I'm going to try measuring next time. Thank you for the education!
Yes, using grams is more accurate than oz. Also, its ok to use that measuring cup...to dip the flour into the bowl that's on the scale.
More 'precise', not more 'accurate'.
Hello Sharon
@@CorwynGC He meant "accurate" and not "precise". Accuracy means how close the taken measurement is to the real measurement. Precision refers to how close diferent measurements of the same real measurement are between them. This person clearly meant the first thing.
Have been baking for over 60 years and have never owned a scale. My family has never complained once.
I guess your family loves you too much to complain, or they simply don't know what properly prepared food tastes like! 😁
@@barcham 🙄
@@barcham I guess the billions of families, for centuries, who never used a scale, also "love their cook too much to complain and simply don't know what properly prepared food tastes like" either? Hmmm 🤔
@@frankhughes001 Oh, by the way... I think it is safe to say that, after a lifetime of eating fast food, most Americans haven't the slightest idea what properly prepared food tastes like. 😎
@@barcham Oh, Is that really the excuse you're going use to berate and belittle someone. Or are you just being trolly? 🙏 Happy(ier) trails 👋
I am a King Arthur loyalist flour user. Yes, I have used other flours. I enjoy them. However, King Arthur’s brand is my FAVORITE!!!
I just started using KA Bread flour and it's delicious-- makes chewier bread as he mentioned.
Always the best ❤❤❤❤
Thank YOU
Love Jack. He's sweet, authentic and fierce.
Weighing is a waste of time for bread if you are going to throw more flour on the board and knead. It's more about how the dough feels.
Thank you! The most accurate comment here.
I used King Arthur Brwed flour for Thanksgiving dinner rolls this year and they were FANTASTIC! My first two attempts were epic fails. MAIN LESSON - SCALD THE MILK!!!!! It makes a HUGE difference. I love ATK. its the NPR of cooking.
And for Canadian viewers, our general purpose flour has around 13% protein. So please be careful when following American recipes as they will not come out the same if you make them here in Canada with our GP flour.
Wow! Good to know. I had no idea that Canadian flour is so much stronger than its American cousin. Thanks for the tip!
Yes, ATK, I would love to see your recipes include gram weights. I generally jot down ingredients and convert everything to grams before I start, but how nice it would be to skip that step!
I actually used to use 1 cup of flour = 120 g (pretty standard, actually what King Arthur's uses), but apparently ATK uses a 5 oz standard, which is closer to 141g... eek. 125g and 128g also have been said. Gold Medal also says 120g (source: serving size on their USDA label says 1/4 c = 30). Apparently many people use the 4 1/4 (four and a quarter) standard...
I did use oz whenever I use an ATK recipe though. Still, I agree, I would prefer grams because it's a more accurate measurement. I'm thinking if you use an ATK recipe, you should measure by weight
@@JoeStuffzAlt Wow, TY. Just starting my research into baking. Haven't baked ANY bread as of yet, but have all the gear. Baking is ENORMOUSLY complexed and exact!
@@optionout A lot of the better bread recipes have weighted measurements. When in doubt, I would say use the flour manufacturer's measurements. The USDA label can be a good source
I feel it depends on the ingredient. If the ingredient can smoosh or fluff like flour or brown sugar, by weight makes more of a difference. If it's 1 tbsp / 1 tsp, maybe 1/4 cup or lower, maybe not as much difference
Because I do not want to make 100 loaves of bread to test types of flour’s effect per loaf and merely wish to make and bake, I find the TEST KITCHEN provides helpful hints. I have been watching them for years and use many of their methods which have been perfected for us. ❤I do however wish they would have a few episodes with information for adjustments for high altitude baking and cooking. 😊I live at 5000 ft and believe me when I say there are adjustments to cooking and baking that can help. Thanks
I would love for y’all to test einkorn flour
You just taught me something about the cup measurement method I will get out the scale next time
Telling people to use a scale is the best advice you can give, especially with an insane number of recipes calling for cups. And what's worse, people use liquid measuring cups to measure flour, which is even worse than the dry measuring cup he was demonstrating with.
Yet all the recipes on the site and in their videos use cups instead of grams, and they have no way of converting on the site, or have it provided, so you have to do it yourself. I think it's preposterous that he's telling us to use metric, yet they don't practice what they preach.
@@vittoriabakes The video had nothing to do with metric -- you might've noticed he weighed the flour in ounces. It's about measuring by weight instead of measuring by volume.
@@Ice_Karma Measuring by weight, whether it be in ounces or grams, is metric. Measuring by volume is Imperial.
@@vittoriabakes I think ounces are considered an imperial measurement, be it weight or volume. The metric system doesn't have anything called ounces in either category.
Love A America test kitchen
And all the chefs . Arthur is livable.
Miss watching on t.v.
Niloofer
I hope to make bread some day so thanks!
Great advice Jack, you’re singing to the choir as I live in Northern Europe where everything is measured in grams and millilitres.
Can you give more details about whole wheat flour ? When to use and when not to use. How does it change the texture of the end product [say bread] to use 1/4 or 1/2 whole wheat ? Thanks
Great information! I used Fleishman's Bake - it - easy Yeast Book for info on grains etc. It may be found some places but it is pretty old now. Definitely old fashioned cooking.
Thanks!
I agree, when I do pancakes, I weigh out my flour part and I get consistent fluffy pancakes all the time.
Frankly, I find the viewer criticism of how the flour is measured (by volume rather than weight) rather peculiar. I have been cooking since I was 12 years old and learned on a wood stove, everything from cakes to bread and have always used measuring cups and have had incredibly good results.
Personally, I think if you bother to follow the recipe - and don't "force" quantities - you are going to have success either way.
If you want that extra in your baked goods, buy the grain (store in a freezer) and mill it as you need it - THAT is where the different is. VitaMix has a grain bowl specifically for that which works extremely well.
Honestly, your quality is going to depend more on measuredly accurately!
Useful
Love Jack. He says it how it should be done. He’s thinking…that’s it, enough said!
Kitchen balance/ scale is as important as a good knife in the kitchen
I noticed Jack just dips the cup to fill it, and then leveled off the top.
I always, for each cup. first tamp the cup on the counter before leveling
to avoid any density variation in the just-filled cup. Will do Jack's
weight test using my cups of flour tomorrow.
I love ATK, Cooks Country, & cooking with Kimble
I really wish in the videos you guys would mention the metric measurements, or put them up on the screen (The measurements aren't even in the written recipes on the site). If you are going to tell us not to use Imperial, and that ATK doesn't use them, please mention the gram amounts. It would be super helpful
Most digital scales I've seen have an option for imperial as well as metric. Or you can Google the measurement in imperial and get the metric. This isn't hard.
I weigh everything except Tbsp. and tsp. But I have a problem with opposing weight charts. King Arthur's weight chart says 1 cup of AP flour weighs 4 1/4 oz. or 120 grams. ATK's Bread Illustrated says 1 cup of AP flour weighs 5 oz. or 142 grams. That is a huge difference and I have to change things up when ever I make an ATK recipe. Bread flour is worse, 4 1/4 oz. to 5 1/2 oz. When I use a measuring cup it is closer to the King Arthur weight.
Good video. 5 oz. = 1 cup Great info! Thanks “👍🏻” 😉
Just be aware, different recipe creators have different conversions for the weight of a cup of flour, so follow the guidance of whichever source you're using. ATK will be 5oz, but other sites like King Arthur use a different weight for their own recipes.
Why did you put your thumbs-up emoji in quotes? Are you quoting someone who said that?
@@trickvro Because today in news it was reported that that emoji is offensive to some. Personally, I like the thumbs up, so I used it anyway. That is why.
Great video! I would love to see a quick guide to gluten free flours as a celiac since there are SO many options and they are not all great that I have found.
Hello Ann
I like using cups instead of my scale when I am lectured on why I shouldn't.
The Canadian brand Robin Hood has only 4 gm of protein. We don’t have more than that in Canada, unfortunately!
I used measuring cups for the longest time until when I started using a scale. It simply makes baking easier and consistent, plus less dishes.
Why are two brands named and the rest not?
Maybe because they were best picks in another article?
\Maybe to avoid flour shaming?
Ok...what is the conversion from cup to ounce? My bread recipes are in grams and ounces...so I use my scale. What about cookie recipes that only call for cups? Love your info...it's a great help.
Why is the King Arthur logo blocked out on two of the three KA bags? Kind of strange.
Bobs, always Bobs! Best ap out there.
I have to leave out flour when measuring by volume in all your recipes. Might be a thing with Canadian flour but it’s been consistent.
Please make a recommendation for a scale. Or maybe even test different scales and let us know the best one
How about pointers on How to use a scal
I don't think I could get used to that I will stay with my cups. thank you I appreciate the information.
Where can I buy this scale?
I gave-up with weighing flour and just use a slightly heaping cup of measured flour. I then separately prepare liquid and dry ingredients, mixing the wet ingredients until I obtain the desired mixture thickness, subsequently either tossing or freezing the remaining liquid ingredients.
Weighing flour is wasted time, while time better spent focused on sifting all the dry ingredients and/or whisking the egg whites into stiff peaks, providing good texture.
When I have plenty of time and rather than just using my preferred King Author flour, tend to get far more excellent results milling my own flour!
🖤🖤🖤🖤🖤🖤🖤🖤🖤
I received some farina in a food relief box; where does this fall in the lineup? I know it is meant for a hot cereal, but CAN it be used in baking as a portion of the flour called for (I suppose like wheat flour)?
thank
Well, I've got a scale but have never used it for weighing my flour. Guess I'll have to give it a try.
What is “00” flour used for and can it be substituted for reg all purpose flour?
Sorry, I don’t go on any other social media sites.
I use it for pizza dough
*_What's are scam bots?_*@@ThisOldChris
@@ThisOldChris Do NOT ignore them, REPORT THEM. The only way to get rid of these scammers is if more people report them instead of just looking the other way.
00 flour is for making pizza dough, and certain types of pasta, it is not a substitute for all-purpose flour, not to mention that it costs considerably more. And to be quite honest, if you make pizza in a home oven that tops out at 500-550° F, you will not notice much of a difference.
I believe whole wheat flour is not just ground wheat. Stoneground wheat is the entire wheat kernel ground into flour. Commercial flour is ALL ground the same way, the germ, bran and endosperm (the white part) are all separated from each other. “Whole wheat” flour has some of the germ and bran mixed back into the endosperm. Buy stoneground wheat if you can find it. Another way is to buy a grinder & grind yourself. I have a KoMo grinder and I love the breads I make with it.
Can you tell me please which flowers is good for baklava it should be high protein or low protein
I just measure by cups. Never had a problem.
Can you speculate where T55 fits into this spectrum?
could you please do a video of this but with gluten-free f l o u r are so confusing as all heck
Interesting for bread, any particular flour type for pie crust. My wife has always been famous for her pies but recently the crust has been shrinking during a blind bake. She is very frustrated. I’m ignorant but suspect she needs to use a lower protein flour such as White Lily All Purpose. Any thoughts?
What is the best flour for takoyaki.. all purpose flour or wheat flour
Why block out the King Arthur logo on 2 bags of flour but not the other?
According to King Arthur Flour Company - one cup of All Purpose or Bread Flour weighs 4.25 oz.
The MOST important message from this video is to go metric. Flour types are definitely important, but, more important than that is actual volume/weight.
Are there differences in the quality or accuracy of scales used for food stuffs? Anyone using a scale have a favorite brand?
**Mom found an Ozeri digital at Macy's. I don't know if it is any good, but she was happy I expressed an interest. 🙃
They have a review on scales. ATK recommends a digital scale, and most digital scales were pretty accurate. Oxo was one of their favorite brands. I use the Oxo and have been happy with it. It's been durable and easy-to-clean
I have an AvaWeigh scale that can be calibrated with calibration weights, but I don't think most of the less expensive scales ($20-$50??) can be manually calibrated, you just need to trust. (Happy to be corrected if wrong). Mine works on electricity or batteries and the weight plate is removable for cleaning, though this is more a perk than a need.
@@JoeStuffzAlt thank you I love Oxon products.
@@getoffmydarnlawn thanks!
@@kinjunranger140 yes. Just wanted to see what the everyday person/vid watcher vs creator was using
Lol scale ⚖️ I have 2! I scoop and put in a bowl and weigh it and you might have more than you think it never fails! So I agree take you scale out or purchase one!
Love jack bishop sorry at 83 I called hiim Arthur