Some homemade bread rolls.

Bread: A Photo Essay

I love making bread. It is a way for me to relax and just let things happen. Yesterday, I saw some interesting effects when mixing my ingredients, so I thought I would share. The bread I make is a no knead bread and so has several proofing stages. To start with I mixed molasses with oil, which turned out to be immiscible and the molasses formed little droplets. When I stirred the oil and molasses, more droplets would form.

A brown drop is surrounded by a clear drop that is longer than it is wide. The background is yellow
A droplet of molasses in a droplet of oil on a yellow chopping board. Image by Cathy Davies 2019
On the left there are lots of little brown droplets surrounding a large brown blob that makes up more than half the photo.
A big brown blob of molasses, There are lots of little droplets of molasses on the left side. Image by Cathy Davies 2019

I don’t know if these droplets are micelles as molasses is mostly carbohydrates and water. Perhaps there are amphiphilic compounds in molasses forming an outer surface to make a micelle. Searching for molasses and oil, btw, brings up some great molasses cookie recipes! Not much help for my science questions though.

Adding warm water to the oil-molasses mixture dissolved the molasses and caused the oil to form droplets, which very actively coalesced as this video shows. [Yes, I am a proud science nerd taking videos of my oil-water mixtures!]

Adding yeast stabilized the droplets. The photo below was from after stirring the yeast into the oil-water/molasses mixture. That was when I realized that the oil was still in droplet form, but no longer coalescing. The yeast had stabilize the oil droplets, probably due to proteins in the cell membranes or released by the yeast.

Yeast stabilizes the oil droplets. Image by Cathy Davies 2019

After adding wholewheat flour and flaxseed meal, I left the dough-sponge to proof. The yeast did its work and the dough doubled in size within an hour. Bubbles of carbon dioxide form as a by-product of yeast digestion. The starch-protein matrix from the flour coat the surfaces of these bubbles causing pockmarks in the surface of the dough when the bubbles burst.

The remnants of a bubble on the surface of the bread dough. Image by Cathy Davies 2019
The sponge after the flour-oil-water-yeast mixture is left to proof. Image by Cathy Davies 2019

After adding the rest of the ingredients (general purpose flour, flaxseeds, poppy seeds, caraway seeds), I let the dough rise a second time after covering it with flour. You can see how much the dough grew because the surface opens as the internal dough pushes to the surface. There is no flour on this new surface..

Final bread dough after second proof. You can see how much the dough grew due to the lack of flour. Image by Cathy Davies 2019.

I made two loaves of bread and 14 rolls and baked these until their internal temperature was greater than 95 oC (203 F). 

Bread after baking. There were 12 more rolls on another rack. Image by Cathy Davies 2019

After baking, I had a very soft bread, even though is was 50% wholewheat flour, with a good crumb structure.

Cross-section of roll with butter. Image by Cathy Davies

It was very tasty!

What’s your favorite bread recipe? Share the details in the comments.

No Knead Wholewheat Bread Recipe

Ingredients

  • ½ cup molasses
  • ½ cup vegetable oil
  • 3 cups warm water
  • 2 tbsp dried yeast (or 2 packets)
  • 1 cup flaxseed meal
  • 4-5 cups whole wheat flour
  • 1 tbps caraway seeds
  • ½ cup flaxseeds
  • ½ cup poppy seeds
  • 3-4 cups white flour
  • Butter or oil for greasing baking tins

Instructions

  1. Place molasses and oil in big bowl
  2. Add warmed water
  3. Add yeast and mix
  4. Add flaxseed meal and wholewheat flour and mix well
  5. Leave in a warm place covered with a clean tea towel until doubled in size
  6. Add the rest of the ingredients
  7. Leave in a warm place covered with a clean tea towel until doubled in size
  8. Divided into buttered loaf tins or makes rolls and place on parchment paper on a baking sheet.
  9. Leave to rise
  10. Heat oven to 192 oC (375 F)
  11. Bake bread for 30-40 min (until external temp is greater than 95 oC/203 F)
  12. Bake rolls for 15 – 20 min (until external temp is greater than 95 oC/203 F)
  13. Remove from bread tin/baking tray and cool on a wire rack.
  14. Enjoy!
Rolls are the best. I think I will make more next time. Image by Cathy Davies 2019

4 thoughts on “Bread: A Photo Essay

    1. cdavies Post author

      Thank you. I love sharing when food science comes alive like it did this time.

Comments are closed.