Wheat: varieties and characteristics
- Related Topics:
- cereal
- grain mill
- food processing
- atta
- grist
The three principal types of wheat used in modern food production are Triticum vulgare (or aestivum), T. durum, and T. compactum. T. vulgare provides the bulk of the wheat used to produce flour for bread making and for cakes and biscuits (cookies). It can be grown under a wide range of climatic conditions and soils. Although the yield varies with climate and other factors, it is cultivated from the southernmost regions of America almost to the Arctic and at elevations from sea level to over 10,000 feet. T. durum, longer and narrower in shape than T. vulgare, is mainly ground into semolina (purified middlings) instead of flour. Durum semolina is generally the best type for the production of pasta foods. T. compactum is more suitable for confectionery and biscuits than for other purposes.
The wheat grain, the raw material of flour production and the seed planted to produce new plants, consists of three major portions: (1) the embryo or germ (including its sheaf, the scutellum) that produces the new plant, (2) the starchy endosperm, which serves as food for the germinating seed and forms the raw material of flour manufacture, and (3) various covering layers protecting the grain. Although proportions vary, other cereal grains follow the same general pattern. Average wheat grain composition is approximately 85 percent endosperm, 13 percent husk, and 2 percent embryo.
Characteristic variations of the different types of wheat are important agricultural considerations. Hard wheats include the strong wheats of Canada (Manitoba) and the similar hard red spring (HRS) wheats of the United States. They yield excellent bread-making flour because of their high quantity of protein (approximately 12–15 percent), mainly in the form of gluten. Soft wheats, the major wheats grown in the United Kingdom, most of Europe, and Australia, result in flour producing less attractive bread than that achieved from strong wheats. The loaves are generally smaller, and the crumb has a less pleasing structure. Soft wheats, however, possess excellent characteristics for the production of flour used in cake and biscuit manufacture.
Wheats intermediate in character include the hard red winter (HRW) wheats of the central United States and wheat from Argentina. There are important differences between spring and winter varieties. Spring wheats, planted in the early spring, grow quickly and are normally harvested in late summer or early autumn. Winter wheats are planted in the autumn and harvested in late spring or early summer. Both spring and winter wheats are grown in different regions of the United States and Russia. Winter varieties can be grown only where the winters are sufficiently mild. Where winters are severe, as in Canada, spring types are usually cultivated, and the preferred varieties mature early, allowing harvesting before frost.
In baking and confectionery, the terms strong and weak indicate flour from hard and soft wheats, respectively. The term strength is used to describe the type of flour, strong flours being preferred for bread manufacture and weak flours for cakes and biscuits. Strong flours are high in protein content, and their gluten has a pleasing elasticity; weak flours are low in protein, and their weak, flowy gluten produces a soft, flowy dough.
Wheat breeders regularly produce new varieties, not only to combat disease but also to satisfy changing market demands. Many varieties of wheat do not retain their popularity, and often those popular in one decade are replaced in the next. New varieties of barley have also been developed, but there have been few varieties of rice.
Wheat flour
The milling of wheat into flour for the production of bread, cakes, biscuits, and other edible products is a huge industry. Cereal grains are complex, consisting of many distinctive parts. The objective of milling is separation of the floury edible endosperm from the various branny outer coverings and elimination of the germ, or embryo. Because wheats vary in chemical composition, flour composition also varies.
Although some important changes have occurred in flour milling, basic milling procedure during the past 100 years has employed the gradual reduction process as described below.
Milling
In modern milling considerable attention is given to preliminary screening and cleaning of the wheat or blend of wheats to exclude foreign seed and other impurities. The wheat is dampened and washed if it is too dry for subsequent efficient grinding, or if it is too damp it is gently dried to avoid damaging the physical state of the protein present, mainly in the form of the elastic substance gluten.
The first step in grinding for the gradual reduction process is performed between steel cylinders, with grooved surfaces, working at differential speeds. The wheat is directed between the first “break,” or set of rolls, and is partially torn open. There is little actual grinding at this stage. The “chop,” the resulting product leaving the rolls, is sieved, and three main separations are made: some of the endosperm, reduced to flour called “first break flour”; a fair amount of the coarse nodules of floury substances from the endosperm, called semolina; and relatively large pieces of the grain with much of the endosperm still adhering to the branny outsides. These largish portions of the wheat are fed to the second break roll. The broad objective of this gradual reduction process is the release, by means of the various sets of break rolls, of inner endosperm of the grain, in the form of semolina, in amounts sufficient that the various semolinas from four or five break rolls can be separated by suitable sieving and the branny impurities can be removed by air purifiers and other devices. The cleaned semolinas are reduced to fine flour by grinding between smooth steel rolls, called reduction rolls. The flour produced in the reduction rolls is then sieved out. There are usually four or five more reduction rolls and some “scratch” rolls to scrape the last particles of flour from branny stocks. Since the various sieving and purification processes free more and more endosperm in the form of flour, flour is obtained from a whole series of processing operations. The flour is sieved out after each reduction roll, but no attempt is made to reduce to flour all the semolina going to a particular reduction roll. Some of the endosperm remains in the form of finer semolina and is again fed to another reduction roll. Each reduction roll tends to reduce more of the semolina to flour and to flatten bran particles and thus facilitate the sieving out of the branny fractions. The sieving plant generally employs machines called plan-sifters, and the air purifiers also produce a whole series of floury stocks.
Modern flour processing consists of a complicated series of rolls, sieves, and purifiers. Approximately 72 percent of the grain finally enters the flour sack.
The sacked flour may consist of 20 or more streams of flour of various states of purity and freedom from branny specks. By selection of the various flour streams it is possible to make flour of various grades. Improvements in milling techniques, use of newer types of grinding machinery in the milling system, speeding up of rolls, and improved skills have all resulted in flour produced by employing the fundamentals of the gradual reduction process but with simplified and shorter milling systems. Much less roll surface is now required than was needed as recently as the 1940s.
The purest flour, selected from the purest flour streams released in the mill, is often called patent flour. It has very low mineral (or ash) content and is remarkably free from traces of branny specks and other impurities. The bulk of the approximately 72 percent released is suited to most bread-making purposes, but special varieties are needed for some confectionery purposes. These varieties may have to be especially fine for production of specialized cakes, called high-ratio cakes, that are especially light and have good keeping qualities.
In many countries the flour for bread production is submitted to chemical treatments to improve the baking quality.
In modern processing, regrinding of the flour and subsequent separation into divisions by air treatment has enabled the processors to manufacture flour of varying protein content from any one wheat or grist of wheats.
Composition and grade
Flour consists of moisture, proteins (mainly in gluten form), a small proportion of fat or lipids, carbohydrates (mainly starch, with a small amount of sugar), a trace of fibre, mineral matter (higher amounts in whole meal), and various vitamins. Composition varies among the types of flour, semolinas, middlings, and bran.
Protein content
For bread making it is usually advantageous to have the highest protein content possible (depending on the nature of the wheat used), but for most other baked products, such as cookies (sweet biscuits) and cakes, high protein content is rarely required. Gluten can easily be washed out of flour by allowing a dough made of the flour and water to stand in water a short time, followed by careful washing of the dough in a gentle stream of water, removing the starch and leaving the gluten. For good bread-making characteristics, the gluten should be semi-elastic, not too stiff and unyielding but not soft and flowy, although a flowy quality is required for biscuit manufacture.
The gluten, always containing a small amount of adhering starch, is essentially hydrated protein. With careful drying it will retain its elasticity when again mixed with water and can be used to increase the protein content of specialized high-protein breads.
Sometimes locally grown wheat, often low in protein, may be the only type available for flour for bread making. This situation exists in parts of France, Australia, and South Africa. The use of modern procedures and adjustment of baking techniques, however, allow production of satisfactory bread. In the United Kingdom, millers prefer a blend of wheat, much of it imported, but modern baking procedures have allowed incorporation of a larger proportion of the weak English wheat than was previously feasible.
Treatment of flour
Use of “improvers,” or oxidizing substances, enhances the baking quality of flour, allowing production of better and larger loaves. Relatively small amounts are required, generally a few parts per million. Although such improvers and the bleaching agents used to rectify excessive yellowness in flour are permitted in most countries, the processes are not universal. Improvers include bromates, chlorine dioxide (in gaseous form), and azodicarbonamide. The most popular bleacher used is benzoyl peroxide.
Grade
The grade of flour is based on freedom from branny particles. Chemical testing methods are employed to check general quality and particularly grade and purity. Since the ash (mineral content) of the pure branny coverings of the wheat grain is much greater than that of the pure endosperm, considerable emphasis is placed on use of the ash test to determine grade. Bakers will generally pay higher prices for pure flour of low ash content, as the flour is brighter and lighter in colour. Darker flours may have ash content of 0.7 to 0.8 percent or higher.
A widely employed modern method for testing flour colour is based on the reflectance of light from the flour in paste form. This method requires less than a minute; the indirect ash test requires approximately one to two hours.