Why baste bread with cornstarch?
In this sourdough recipe, it suggests basting the bread with a cornstarch slurry. I would assume this is meant to promote crust development, but how does that work? I usually see such a slurry used to thicken liquids.
Other recipes that use this method:
- Yankee Harvest sourdough
- "Secrets of a Jewish Baker" glaze
- Jewish Sour Rye on The Fresh Loaf
- What's Cooking America bread machine tips
It appears to be a presentation thing (makes it look "professional") and possibly a Jewish tradition.
Edit: Do note that the question is "Why cornstarch? How does that work?". I understand the desire for a good crust, and I understand that the slurry is meant to promote crust development, but I fail to understand what it is about cornstarch that mimics good crust development.
Best Answer
I've seen bread recipes like the one that you described.
When bread is baked in an oven with steam- the starch in the crust is able to gelatinize before it all dries out and becomes crispy. This is what makes the crust crisp, shiny, and delicious- characteristic of "artisan" breads.
Most people don't have steam enhanced ovens (or the ability to hack their oven to add steam: How can I create steam in a normal oven to promote bread oven spring?)
The recipe you linked has water added for steam but then takes out extra insurance (they cheat) by adding the cornstarch glaze to mimic the effect. By adding extra, pure, starch on the surface of the loaf more gelatinization occurs. Additionally, cornstarch gelatinizes at a lower temperature that wheat starch. Conceivably, you should be able to use any starch and see similar results but, in the US at least, cornstarch is by far the most common.
It shouldn't be necessary if you are able to produce enough steam in your oven.
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Why do you put cornstarch on bread?
Cornstarch in the dough helps tenderize the gluten for fluffy bread that rises well. This bread has two rising periods, which allow the yeast to fully activate and allows the gluten in the flour to relax before baking. Baking the dough in a loaf pan ensures that your bread comes out in a sliceable, neat shape.What is the best thing to brush on bread before baking?
MILK: Brushing with milk will help to color the crust, the sugars in the milk helping to brown it. WATER: Water is often sprayed or brushed onto bread before it is placed in a very hot oven, and during baking, to give the bread an extra-crisp crust.What do you brush bread with after baking?
The crust can also be treated after the bread is done baking. Remove bread from the bread pan and place it on a rack. Lightly brush the top of the loaf with melted butter, margarine, olive oil, or vegetable oil and sprinkle desired topping on to the bread's top.What does cornstarch do to dough?
Cornstarch is primarily used as a thickening agent. It's made up of a long chain of starch molecules that will unravel and swell when heated in the presence of moisture. This swelling, or gelatinization, is what causes thickening.1 Dough vs 15 Glazes | Which One do You Like Most?
More answers regarding why baste bread with cornstarch?
Answer 2
Cornstarch slurries are used because they make the crust of the bread shine. This happens because Cornstarch mixes are translucent; whereas flour mixes are opaque.
Answer 3
The wash also can be used to allow seeds or oatmeal, for example, to adhere to the crust of the bread for aesthetic purposes.
Answer 4
This is something I'm still learning to execute beyond "theory". So, take it for what it is. My understanding from a chemical point of view is that the cornstarch heats, and on a molecular level breaks into a gel like substance on the surface of the bread due to the contact with the hot steam, and that gel like substance solidifies in/on the surface of the bread, making the crust, well, crusty. As noted before, wheat starches and other starches do this in the steam of the oven. For lack of much steam in a regular oven (though you can do some tricks to create it without a steam injection oven-- google it) the water part of the slurry will become the steam that's in contact with the cornstarch part of the slurry. So, steam via slurry rather than steam injection oven, and cornstarch gelatinization and solidification instead of wheat starch gelatinization and solidification to yield... dun dun dah dah... CHEWY CRUSTY CRUST without a steam injection oven! Cheers.
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