This is what every book promised me over the years, and I have never seen anything amazing happen ever. It goes from not very uniform to uniform, but that’s all.

After years, I found out about giving the dough a bit of folding, or balling it up, or whatever is fitting, and now it doesn’t take forever, doesn’t stick to my hands, and seems at least as good.

Have you seen anything wondrous happen from lengthy hand kneading?

  • Aux@lemmy.worldM
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    11 months ago

    Chemically, gluten does not exist in flour. It is a composite material which is made of flour proteins and water. It also requires energy to form. Usually warm dough temperature gives enough energy for gluten to form, but the process is very slow. When you’re kneading, you’re adding a lot of mechanical energy and that speeds up the process.

    • dogma@lemmy.worldOP
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      11 months ago

      I realize it’s chiefly supposed to be gliadin and glutenin.

      It seems to me that any temperature change from hand kneading must be quite modest because I’ve never perceived it.

      • Aux@lemmy.worldM
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        11 months ago

        It’s not temperature from hands, it’s mechanical energy you’re adding through kneading.