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Baking Glossary

Baking Glossary

Baking Glossary

Simply use the alphabetical list below to find the term you need to understand



Aerate

A synonym for sift.  To pass ingredients through a fine mesh to break up large pieces and to incorporate air into the ingredients to make them lighter.

Baking beans:

Dried beans or peas that are used to hold down pastry in a flan tin when baking it blind (without a filling). Just line the pastry with greaseproof paper and place the beans on top. You can get special ceramic or metal shapes for this, but dried beans do the job just as well.

Batch

Several breads, cakes or biscuits cooked together.

Batter

Dough that is too moist to knead. Also used to describe texture of mixture before all the flour has been added.

Beat

To mix ingredients together with a circular up and down motion using a spoon, whisk or rotary / electric beater.

Bind

To hold together the other ingredients.

Blanch

To plunge fruits or vegetables into boiling water.

Blend

To stir ingredients until they are thoroughly combined.

Caramelise

To heat sugar until light brown with a characteristic flavour. The temperature range in which sugar caramelises is approximately 160ºC to 182ºC.

Chill

To cool food by placing it in a refrigerator or in a bowl over crushed ice.

Clarify

To make a substance clear or remove impurities.

Coat

To thoroughly cover a food with a liquid or dry mixture.

Combine

To mix or blend two or more ingredients together.

Cool

To let food stand until it no longer feels warm to the touch.

Cream

To soften solid fats, often by adding a second ingredient, such as sugar, and working with a wooden spoon or electric mixer until creamy consistency.

Crush

To pulverisefood to its smallest particles, usually using a pestle and mortar, or a rolling pin.

Crystallise

To form sugar or honey based syrups into crystals. The term also describes the coating.

Curdle

To cause semi-solid pieces of coagulated protein to develop in food, usually as a result of the addition of an acid substance, or the overheating of milk or egg-based sauces.

Cut in

To combine solid fat with flours using a pastry blender, two forks or the fingers.

Dash

A measure approximately equal to 1/16 teaspoon.

Dot

To place small pieces of butter or other food on the surface of a food.

Double–boiler

One pan containing hot water with another pan resting in it, allowing gentle, even heat to be applied – great for melting chocolate.

Dredge

To sprinkle lightly and evenly with sugar or flour. A dredger has holes pierced on the lid to sprinkle evenly.

Drop

Using a spoon to drop cake or biscuit mixture onto a baking tray.

Dust

To lightly sprinkle the surface of a food with sugar, flour or crumbs.

Egg wash

A mixture of beaten eggs, sometimes with a little added milk or water. Used to coat cookies or pastry to give a shine when baked.

Emulsion

A mixture of liquids (one fat or oil and the other water-based) in which tiny globules of one are suspended in the other. This may involve the use of stabilisers, such as egg or mustard. Emulsions may either be temporary or permanent.

Flake

To break into small delicate pieces with a fork.

Flute

To create a decorative scalloped or undulating edge on a pie crust or other pastry.

Fold

To incorporate a delicate mixture into a thicker, heavier mixture with a whisk or rubber spatula without stirring, so that the finished product remains light.

Fritter

Sweet or savoury food coated or mixed into batter, then deep-fried.

Garnish

To decorate a dish with attractive and complementary foodstuffs.

Ganache

A rich chocolate filling or coating made with chocolate, white vegetable fat and possibly double cream. It can coat cakes or cookies, and be used as a filling for truffles.

Glaze

A liquid that gives an item a shiny surface – i.e. fruit jams that have been heated, or beaten egg (egg was) brushed onto pastry before baking.

Gluten

The protein in wheat flour that gives dough its characteristic elasticity.

Grease

To rub fat on the surface of a cooking utensil or on a food itself.

Infusion

Extracting flavours by hot soaking in liquid in a covered pan. The term also refers to the liquid resulting from this process.

Knead

To work dough by pressing it with the heels of the hand, folding it, turning it, and repeating each motion until the dough is smooth and elastic.

Level

Dry ingredients are scooped onto a spoon and then levelled off with a straight edge, such as a knife or spatula.

Liaison

A mixture of cream and egg yolks, used to thicken and enrich sauces.

Macerate

To soften by soaking in a liquid or syrup.

Mash

To break food by pressing it with the back of a spoon, a masher or forcing it through a ricer.

Marble

To gently swirl one food into another.

Marzipan

A paste of ground almonds, sugar, and egg whites used to cover cakes or make petit fours. Most often used to cover classic fruit cake, before the icing.

Meringue

Egg whites beaten until they are stiff, then sweetened. It can be used as the topping for pies, or baked into firm biscuits.

Parchment

A heavy, heat-resistant paper used in cooking.

Preheat

To heat the oven, grill or toaster  to a desired temperature before inserting the food.

Pâte a choux

Cream puff paste. It is a mixture of boiled water, fat and flour with whole eggs beaten in.

Pâte Brisée

A quick, basic pastry dough that can be used with both savoury and sweet recipes.

Pâte Sablée

A sweet, crisp pastry with the consistency of biscuit and a delicate texture. Added egg yolks make it rich and light.

Peaks

The mounds made in a mixture - for example egg whites that have been whipped to stiffness. Peaks are ‘stiff’ if they stay upright or ‘soft’ if they curl over.

Pipe

To force icing or similar through a piping bag to decorate a food – different nozzles give different effects.

Punch down

To push a fist firmly into the top of yeast dough that has completed the first rising.

Purée

To put food through a fine sieve or a liquidiser to form a thick, smooth liquid.

Ricer:

A kitchen utensil that forces food through small holes to form ‘rice’ – usually used for cooked potato to create smooth mash.

Rest time

Yeast dough benefits from brief intermission of handling. Always cover resting dough so a ‘skin’ doesn’t form. Turn a bowl over it or cover with plastic wrap.

Scald

To heat liquid to just before the boiling point to dip food into boiling water or pour boiling water over the food.

Score

To make small, shallow cuts on the surface.

Sear

To brown the surface of a food very quickly with high heat.

Season

To add pepper and salt, herbs, or spices to adjust the flavour.

Separate

To remove the yolk from the white of the egg.

Shred

To cut or break into thin pieces.

Sift

To sift flour and dry ingredients through a sieve. Flour will pack from its own weight, sifting incorporates air into the flour and insures accurate measuring.

Simmer

To cook in liquid that is barely at boiling point.

Skim

To remove a substance from the surface of a liquid.

Steam

To cook with vapour produced by a boiling liquid.

Steep

To soak in hot liquid.

Strain

To separate solid from liquid.

Thicken

To make a liquid dense by adding flour, cornstarch, egg yolks, rice or potatoes.

Vent

To leave an opening through which steam can escape.

Whip

To beat quickly and steadily by hand with a whisk or electric mixer.

Zest

The thin, brightly coloured outer part of the rind of citrus fruits. It contains volatile oils, used as flavouring.


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Baking glossary