Add note on temperature and milling flour (#132)

This just adds a small note on temperature when milling flour. The
provided source is an interesting read.
This commit is contained in:
Hendrik Kleinwaechter
2023-06-29 13:48:17 +02:00
committed by GitHub
parent cd1130903d
commit 0664fe5b0e
2 changed files with 15 additions and 2 deletions

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@@ -38,7 +38,10 @@ activity so that it can thrive in its new environment.
Of course, a ground flour can no longer sprout. But the enzymes that Of course, a ground flour can no longer sprout. But the enzymes that
trigger this process are still present. That's why it's important not to trigger this process are still present. That's why it's important not to
mill grains at too high a temperature, as doing so could damage some of mill grains at too high a temperature, as doing so could damage some of
these enzymes. these enzymes.\footnote{In a recent study tests have shown that milling
flour at home with a small mill had no significant negative impact on the resulting bread
quality compared to milled flour from temperature-regulating large-scale mills.
\ref{milling+commercial+home+mill+comparison}}
Normally, the grain seed shields the germ against pathogens. However, as the Normally, the grain seed shields the germ against pathogens. However, as the
grain is ground into flour, the contents of the seed are exposed. This is ideal grain is ground into flour, the contents of the seed are exposed. This is ideal

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@@ -358,3 +358,13 @@
number = {96}, number = {96},
pages = {122-130} pages = {122-130}
} }
@article{milling+commercial+home+mill+comparison,
author = {Ross, Andrew S. and Kongraksawech, Teepakorn},
journal = {Cereal Chemistry},
number = {2},
pages = {239-252},
title = {Characterizing whole-wheat flours produced using a commercial stone mill, laboratory mills, and household single-stream flour mills},
volume = {95},
year = {2018}
}