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
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
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
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},
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}
}