Making Malt-Free Bread

The bread I make has been inconsistent in how it turns out each time. I follow the "Artisan Bread in 5 Minutes a Day" method for making bread. Sometimes it rises really nice, other times it barely rises at all. I know their methodology uses regular all purpose flour, however due to a food allergy, I can't have any malt. So I usually use Gold Medal Organic All Purpose flour that does not have malt listed as an ingredient. Somehow I think these are related, though I don't know for sure.
I realize malt is a sugar that the yeast feeds on. Could this be why I have inconsistent bread from time to time? What can I add to make up for the lack of malt in the bread?
Best Answer
Added malt is not necessary for yeast action.
The starches in flour are huge sugar molecules. They are too big for our tongue which is why we can't taste them. They are also too big for yeast to break down.
Given some time amylase enzymes in the flour will break some of those starches down into natural malt. This gives dough more complex flavors as well as a considerable amount of sugar for us and for our belching yeasty slaves. For this reason it is added to some flours by millers. Peter Reinhardt has made a career talking about this.
However, this malt, while delicious, is not always necessary. The flour milling process produces plenty of damaged starches that the yeast will happily munch on. For many breads this is entirely sufficient for proofing.
If your flour does not have much amylase and no added malt (which can also add enzymes) then your dough won't be breaking down any of your starches into new sugar. If you age your dough for a long time your yeast could simply be starving to death. You monster.
If you consider your constant quest for convenience to be corrupting the quality of your carbohydrate-consuming companions and curtailing the quantity of carbon-dioxide- an easy way to test this theory would be to mix in a little sucrose (table sugar). Your indentured yeast will love you and will honor your reign with gassy uprisings.
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What can I use instead of malt extract?
15 Substitutes for Malt Powder You Can Get Easily- Ovaltine. Ovaltine is a chocolate malted milk powder and is one of the best non-diastatic substitutes for malt powder. ...
- Bread Flour. ...
- Malted Milk Powder. ...
- Coconut Milk Powder. ...
- Molasses. ...
- Corn Syrup. ...
- Corn Starch. ...
- Vanilla Powder.
What does adding malt to bread do?
Malt is the name given to a sweetening agent made primarily from barley. The enzymes from the germ of the seeds become active, changing much of the starch into maltose, a complex sugar. Maltose has a distinct flavour and is used for making yeast products such as bread and rolls.What is the trick to making good gluten free bread?
Start out at a lower temperature\u2014350\xb0 F\u2014to help prevent the gluten-free bread, which takes longer to bake, from overbrowning. Then increase the temperature by about 25\xb0 to brown at the end. You can also maintain a steady temperature and cover the bread with foil if it's getting too brown.What does malted flour do to bread?
It's extremly rich in the reducing-sugar, maltose. The extra sugar sweetens the bread and provides a browner crust. The flavour of non-diastatic malt flour is a slightly sweet, roasted-nut smell that's perfect for wholesome baking styles.UNBELIEVABLY Soft Whole Wheat Malted Milk Bread Recipe
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Answer 2
I use the same recipe. I find as the dough gets older, it rises less. Maybe some of the gasses have already been created and gone away. But it tastes nicer when it's had some time in the fridge, probably because wild yeasts are growing. My solution is fourfold:
- use a little more yeast (2 tsp instead of 1.5)
- slash the dough more than in the pictures, to make sure I don't prevent any rise
- skip the steam generating step (the tossing a cup of water onto a preheated pan)
- use a heavier piece of dough, so you can get the same size even if it's denser
The result is a slight less crunchy crust, but a slightly large loaf. It's delicious so I also don't get too worked up about some loaves rising more than others.
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