I’m tired of guessing which country the author is from when they use cup measurement and how densely they put flour in it.

  • @redshoepastor
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    91 hour ago

    Just because no one in your life cares enough about your niche opinion to actually have an opinion does not make that an “unpopular opinion.” When your opinion is the opinion of hobbyists, professionals, and elites alike, it’s certain not unpopular, even if it is niche.

    You’re certainly right in your opinion, and that’s the point of bitching at you.

    • Liz
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      250 minutes ago

      OP is probably from Western Europe, where a kitchen scale is common. Ain’t nobody in the US got a fancy kitchen scale.

      The solution to their problem is use mL for volume.

      • @dondelelcaro
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        223 minutes ago

        Ain’t nobody in the US got a fancy kitchen scale.

        Lots of us have them. (Well, basic scales which weigh a tenth of a gram.) They’re useful when weighing compressible dry ingredients like flour and brown sugar, and viscous wet ingredients like molasses and corn syrup. They’re also helpful when you’re multiplying a recipe by a factor that doesn’t result in useful units; it’s annoying to figure out how to measure out fractional cups that involve teaspoons.

        They also help with portion control if you’re watching calories.

  • @RBWells
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    117 minutes ago

    I like weight measurement best, except for a few things I don’t really want to bother measuring closely, like cornbread or ricotta cake. Those I just know by volume and can scale up based on the number of eggs, and aren’t fussy.

    So for cornbread I know the dry mix is half cornmeal half flour, with a spoonful of baking powder, half spoonful of salt, big pinch of baking soda for each cup of that mix. One cup of that for each egg you have; melt a whole stick of butter in the iron skillet at 425F while you mix the dry stuff, when it’s hot add the eggs and enough buttermilk to make a thick batter (have literally never measured the buttermilk), pour the melted butter in, stir briefly, then pour batter into pan and bake 20-25 minutes. Has never failed, and I’m sure it’s never exactly the same twice. It doesn’t matter.

    “Recipes” like that I enjoy. And most of my cooking is loosey goosey like that.

    But bread, and fancy cakes, and even cocktais, 100% agree, I would prefer to pull out the scale and SO much easier to do weight, in grams.

    • @[email protected]
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      255 minutes ago

      Anyone who learns to bake knows that’s silly. You don’t need to try and weigh out a teaspoon of vanilla or that 1/4 cup of sugar weighs exactly X amount.

  • @finestnothing
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    31 hour ago

    The book “flour water salt yeast” is awesome for a lot of reasons, one of them is that all of the recipes are in grams, us volumes, and bakers percentages. I primarily use the grams measurements, but the bakers percentages makes it much easier to scale recipes up or down

  • @johannesvanderwhales
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    57 minutes ago

    Not really unpopular. That said, while flour (kind of the backbone of most baking recipes) is prone to being inaccurate when measured by volume, there are a lot of ingredients which do not have this problem and are not as sensitive to being measured wrong. If a cookie recipe calls for a quarter cup of chocolate chips that’s probably fine. I think a lot of people don’t have a scale sensitive enough to measure a half gram of yeast, either.

  • southsamurai
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    32 hours ago

    Definitely not an unpopular opinion. Anybody that bakes more than once a year ends up wishing it was by weight. And I agree fully with your opinion.

    Mind you, it doesn’t actually matter with all baking, and even then it matters less what the actual measures are as long as the person using the recipe is consistent in how they measure.

    What measuring by weight achieves is consistency more than ideal results, though consistency leads directly to ideal results. So, if you measure by volume, and you measure out each cup the same every time, you’ll get the same results every time, within the degree of variability in things that can’t be standardized like humidity, water content of flour, precise gluten amounts, etc.

    Where volume measurements in baking fail is when you hand the recipe to the next person, which is what your post is really about. But, even that has limited impact on results since there are factors in end results that can’t be standardized. The difference between a densely packed cup and a loosely packed one matters for sure, but it also won’t make a cake recipe fail entirely in most cases.

    For things like quick breads, you don’t worry as much about measurements at all, since you’re going to be adjusting liquid amounts no matter what the measures are. The only part that matters there is the ratio of leaveners to flour, and there’s more leeway in that than there is in cakes.

    But, even with cakes, you’ll have as much or more difference in results from the type of flour as the measures. If your recipe is built on using AP flour, me using cake flour is going to end up different, even measured by weight. Noticeably different even to a non baker. But it’ll still be yummy no matter what the measures are.

    Bread baking is where you see weight measures used the majority of the time, and there’s still a ton of variability between loaves because the environment plays such a big role. A five degree difference in room temp during proofing has more effect on the end results than those caused by measures.

    The key is that you can actually control the measures, which is why I agree fully with your opinion. If you’re enough of a baker to be publishing recipes (as opposed to just sharing them with people that ask), and you aren’t giving the recipes in weights, you’re a prat lol.

  • fmstrat
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    344 hours ago

    Use non-American recipes.

    The rest of the world does this. And guess what, 1 milliliter of water is exactly 1 gram, unlike stupid ounces.

    • @EtherWhack
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      152 minutes ago

      Density differs for other ingredients though.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 hour ago

      That’s more an issue of its too hard for you to learn, then. Also, for cooking, that’s great that 1ml of water weighs 1mg. Why does that help with cooking? All the weights of everything else will be different from that. It’s much quicker and easier to use a measuring cups to get half a cup of flour than it is to get a scale and weigh out 60 grams.

    • @[email protected]
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      84 hours ago

      If I want a recipe in English I always end the search query with “UK” to make sure it’s in weight, not cups. I’m not a fucking toddler

      • @[email protected]
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        173 hours ago

        Except that’s not true.

        An imperial fluid ounce is 1⁄20 of an imperial pint, 1⁄160 of an imperial gallon or exactly 28.4130625 mL.

        US customary fluid ounce is 1⁄16 of a US liquid pint and 1⁄128 of a US liquid gallon or exactly 29.5735295625 mL, making it about 4.08% larger than the imperial fluid ounce.

        US food labeling fluid ounce is exactly 30 mL.

        So we have 28.4g, 29.6g or 30g of water. An ounce is 28.3g (closest to the imperial measures and neither of the US ones, despite the ounce being common to imperial and US systems)

        • @evasive_chimpanzee
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          23 hours ago

          I’d consider that within the margin of error for a volumetric measurement. Especially if you are being lazy like me and measuring something like milk by weight.

          Funny enough, you made me go check my kitchen scales. They report in grams, ounces, and weirdly milliliters and fluid ounces. I used my scale that reports in hundredths of a gram to measure out exactly 1 oz mass. I then placed it on my other three scales to see what it would read. 2 of them correctly reported that they weren’t quite at 1 fluid ounce, while the other said it was. I never actually put my scales in ounce mode, though.

    • @yetiftw
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      -64 hours ago

      one fluid ounce of water is one (weight) ounce of water

  • Lvxferre
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    64 hours ago

    This is not unpopular. At least acc. to my experience.

  • @pHr34kY
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    145 hours ago

    IMO anything sold by weight should be measured by weight in a recipe.

    I could have an exception for things under 20g, which scales seem to get wrong a lot. I can do spoons, but not cups.

    Also: Metric only. A tablespoon is anywhere from 13g to 20g depending on who you’re talking to. A gram is always a gram.

    • @[email protected]
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      157 minutes ago

      Volume and weight are different, a tablespoon of salt, oil, and vanilla extract are all going to weigh differently.

  • originalucifer
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    757 hours ago

    i cant imagine this would be unpopular for anyone who actually bakes.

    its so frustrating not having exact amounts for what is essentially chemistry.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 hour ago

      It’s not chemistry as much as chemistry is chemistry.

      Like 1/4 cup of sugar being like 2% off isn’t going to matter.

      Then you want to weigh out your teaspoon of baking powder? I guess you’ll need a small scale made for such tiny amounts to go along with your larger one. Hope you like cooking taking longer with more little things to clean.

      Doing it all by weight is a waste of time and something no one with a real amount of experience cooking would bother with. Where your butter comes from is more important than how much of a weight difference can be from measuring out 3 tablespoons of it compared to weighing it out.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 hours ago

      Black magic chemistry at that, since local, varying conditions can affect baking so much.

    • @[email protected]
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      02 hours ago

      It really doesn’t matter that much. When was the last time you had your kitchen scale calibrated? Are you actually putting in exactly 200g of flour? Or are you calling it good at anything between 190-210? I was a chemistry minor in college and no one was meticulously measuring out the eaxct amount or reagents they needed, they got it to the ball park and made sure to record exactly how much they used. You’re a home cook making a treat for your friends and family, not the royal pastry chef. And guess what? Those royal pastry chefs in the 18th century were also doing recipes by volume since precision scales weren’t readily available. Meanwhile i get frustrated when i run into a recipe that only uses weights because I’m not used to it. I already have incredibly limited counterspace, and find somewhere to set up my kitchen scale immediately throws me off my game.

      As someone said elsewhere in this thread, you aren’t upset at volumetric measurements, you’re upset at American cultural hegemony.

      • originalucifer
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        21 hour ago

        bad practices become bad policies. minor issues scale terribly. its not crazy to want to do things appropriately.

        as others have pointed out, scaling is far easier than washing handfuls of measuring devices. i can easily counter with your process sucks and takes more work just because you lack counterspace as opposed to dishwashing space.

        just because you dont want to be exact doesnt mean others cant or shouldnt.

        • @[email protected]
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          146 minutes ago

          I’m getting high as fuck and baking treats for my friends and coworkers, not making something for a competition or dignitary. The process is irrelevant, what i was saying is that whatever you are comfortable with you should use. I can quickly scoop out 3 cups of flour and a cup and a half of sugar in the same time you can weigh them out. And at the end of the day no one will be able to tell the difference between our cookies. The temperature and humidity of your kitchen is going to have way more of an impact on your final product than a 2-5% variation in the quantity of ingredients.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      197 hours ago

      I wanted to believe my opinion is popular yet recipes I’ve seen are almost in volume and I don’t know why.

      Baking is chemistry for sure.

      • @[email protected]
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        34 hours ago

        I feel like this is just a remnant of a time where a container with a bunch of lines on it was cheaper than a sufficiently accurate scale. It might just go away over 1-2 more generations.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 hours ago

          Anyone who gets into baking today will quickly learn volumetric measuring doesn’t work.

          Basic baking you can get away with volumetric (simple breads, for example). Anything beyond that… Well, good luck.

          Scales have been cheap for a couple generations now. Digital scales didn’t exist until I was an adult, but the cheap spring type did. And those were maybe $5 decades ago. It’s more about awareness and knowledge. Cookbooks 50 years ago wouldn’t have had weight measurements because people didn’t have scales.

      • Baggins [he/him]
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        65 hours ago

        In my opinion every recipe should be in weight unless there’s a good reason to put it in volume. The idea of washing half a dozen individual little measuring cups to prepare one recipe is absurd. Slap a bowl on your scale and go to town.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 hour ago

          You mean a separate bowl from the main container, right? So you can remove over-scoops without disturbing the previous ingredients? I’m still trying to get comfortable with my scale. I get frustrated because there’s not parts of grams, and it doesn’t seem to constantly update, it just jumps from too little to too much.

          • Baggins [he/him]
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            2 hours ago

            That’s a small pinch of pepper. I don’t even own a measure that size.

            • flicker
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              120 minutes ago

              I have a 1/8 teaspoon but the idea is… why? Anything being pinched, I’m not digging out a measuring spoon for.

              Measuring by volume is definitely ridiculous. I’m an USAmerican baker.

      • @[email protected]
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        96 hours ago

        My total guess is weighing scales used to be expensive / inaccessible for the common home baker and one of the first popular recipe books thus used volume, became wildly popular, and indirectly taught a generation of home bakers that baking recipes are by volume, not weight.

    • @SpaceNoodle
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      57 hours ago

      I can’t get my octogenarian mother to bake by weight, but she’s certainly not on Lemmy.

  • @Treczoks
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    4 hours ago

    In the civilized world, they are. Except for liquids, but that’s a given.

    This stupid “How many grams is a f-ing cup of <whatever> again?” is a pain in the a…

    • @[email protected]
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      13 hours ago

      Years ago I printed out a copy of a weights and measures chart with common ingredient substitutions and taped it inside a kitchen cabinet. I’ve found it incredibly convenient.

      And this is how we become our grandparents. 🥴

    • @LifeInMultipleChoice
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      3 hours ago

      Normally liquids are pretty standard, but I picked up a gallon of milk the other day and thought I must be sick or something. I handed it to my partner and she was along the same lines that it was extremely heavy. Not sure what happened there, but usually they weight around 4kg, this one had to be a lot more, 6kg maybe. I needed extra money to pay for some debts, so I was working instacart at nights. So I probably picked up 50 of them a week, always felt the same, this one… Not a single clue how it weighed so much, I figure if it goes bad the sun of the ingredients should be the same, its a closed environment.

      • @Treczoks
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        22 hours ago

        Now that is strange. Did you open it?

        • @LifeInMultipleChoice
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          12 hours ago

          Nah, I gave it to one of the Kroger employees telling them something must be off. The date was the same as the rest on the shelf, but I wasn’t going to open it in the store

    • Skua
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      13 hours ago

      I do like when recipes give me liquids by weight as well. One tool for measuring everything is nice.

      • @Treczoks
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        03 hours ago

        Here the metric system comes to help: almost any liquid in the kitchen is about as dense as water, so 1ml = 1g.

        Oils are a bit less dense, but there you just subtract 10%, i.e. 100ml rapeseed oil is about 90g.

        Honey is a far outlier with 1.4g/ml, but it usually given in grams.

    • @evasive_chimpanzee
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      13 hours ago

      If you live in a place that uses cups, the container the food comes in typically has both measurements as part of the nutrition facts on the back label. US nutrition facts are per-serving not per-100g like the EU, so for flour for example, it will have “serving size 1/4 cup (30 g)”. The main exceptions are items meant to be eaten in their entirety like a candy bar or, unfortunately, liquids, which give you milliliters.

      • @Treczoks
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        23 hours ago

        Luckily, I live in a metric country, and nobody uses cups for measuring except from my wife who waters the plant with two cups of water.

        The problem always arises when I find an American recipe with such fantastic measurements like “two cups of spinach”. Yes, that is a real one.

        • Lvxferre
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          149 minutes ago

          Brazil got a weird twist on that: metric everywhere, except for most kitchen ingredients. Including stuff like “a can of milk” (milk is not sold in cans here), “a requeijão glass of [ingredient]”, so goes on.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 hour ago

          Okay I grew up using cups and find scoopscrapedump more convenient than trying to get the exact amount on a scale, BUT You are so right about 2 cups of spinach! Or really any leafy green, even worse than lumpy nutts or variously sized berries! Considering how much a cup of spinach can vary depending how you pack it, (not to even get into fresh/wilting/deflated/cooked and grown/baby leaves!) I grab 2 handfuls, although your hands may be a different size. Or I use as much spinach as I have, unless I want to save some for whatever reason.

        • @evasive_chimpanzee
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          22 hours ago

          Volumetric leafy greens are the worst, lol. I guess salad greens don’t matter too much cause it doesn’t really change anything, but something like basil, you probably want relatively accurate. Same thing with shredded cheese, it can be a huge difference to the recipe if you grate the cheese through the large holes on a box grater vs something like a microplane.

          I think, especially in American recipes, cups are basically the missing link between “grandma recipes” and modern “accurate” recipes. Everyone has gotten recipes handed down that call for “some onion” or “1 handful of nuts”. It’s fine for lots of recipes: no one is going to actually measure out 200 grams of onion for a stirfry, they’ll just grab an onion and chop up the whole thing.

  • @CM400
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    75 hours ago

    My kitchen scale won’t measure below one gram, and a lot of things (spices and flavorings, mostly) are used in amounts below one gram.

    So I can either dirty up some spoons, or go buy a second scale that only gets used for the small stuff…

    In general I agree, of course, but there definitely is a use case for volumetric measuring spoons.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 hours ago

      I’ve never even considered weighing spices. They’re usually given in teaspoons or just as “a pinch” even if the rest of the recipe uses grams and milliliters.

  • @evasive_chimpanzee
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    23 hours ago

    Stop getting recipes from whatever random source pops up in Google, and start getting recipes directly from sources you trust. Reputable test kitchens usually use mass for recipes, and at least the ones I look at will also include volumetric measurements for people who prefer them.

    The thing with baking, though, is that there are many ingredients that require below gram level accuracy, and for those, volumetric measurements are more accurate for most people who have scales with a gram resolution.

  • @[email protected]
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    207 hours ago

    Flour’s ability to absorb water changes depending on what variety of wheat and where it was grown and what the weather was like during the season. Weight is also just a guideline. Baking is not an exact science.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 minutes ago

      And weather/storage. If flour is stored in a humid environment in a paper bag (like on a store shelf), it will get heavier as it takes on water. This messes up the weight of flour but also throws off the amount of water in the dough.

      That said I prefer baking by weight, not because it’s more precise, but because I don’t dirty dishes for measurements.

    • @[email protected]
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      85 hours ago

      Pretty sure any pastry chef will strongly disagree with that. If anything, baking is the cooking activity most akin to an exact science. The amounts need to be carefully measured, the temperatures need to be exactly right (e.g. Italian merengue), the baking time needs to be correct to the second for some dishes (lava cake).

      Yes, the measures can change based on the flour or its substitutes (ground pistachio for example), but the processes involved require an equal amount of precision.

      A lot of chefs call cooking an art, but baking a science.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 hour ago

        Lol. Dude, you’re laughably wrong about this. Omg, I could just imagine trying to get lava cake out to the second or it being no good. Not even talking about how much temp, elevation, and humidity effect things to make “perfect recipes” non existent.

        Also, “oh no. Your nutmeg is now 6 weeks old. You’ll have to add an extra 0.9% of it to your recipe”

        Cupcakes aren’t like making Walter Whites blue meth, Hun.

      • @[email protected]
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        53 hours ago

        I am a former pastry chef and baker. You’d think it’s very precise work but it’s actually mostly intuition based on experience. You know the recipes and tweak them as you go. Also the batch sizes are many times bigger than a home cook ever makes so a cup of flour more or less usually makes no difference to the end product. With leavening agents the margin of error is smaller obviously.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 hours ago

      I am currently pursuing engineering PhD working on bakery products.

      Sometimes baking is indeed an exact science :D

      It’s just that the typical home baker has to guess and assume a lot of things. But then, a chance of failure is naturally expected.

      • @[email protected]
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        22 hours ago

        In the industrial realm, baking is quite scientific, I’m sure. It’s a much more controlled, and measureable environment than a home baker’s.

        Take our ovens (please!) - you want 450? OK, how about I give you 420 to 475 as I cycle on and off? Lol

        Even in the industrial realm you’ll deal with the variability in your ingredients (e.g. moisture content of flour), but you’ll have the capability to measure that, and have systems to compensate for it automatically. (Yes, I’m jealous!)

        • @[email protected]
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          1 hour ago

          Hehe, yes, we have those and even more, because while industry can still afford some slack (but can measure moisture, humidity while proofing, precise temperature, air contamination etc.), we scientists cannot :D

          We have industrial-scale ovens and proofing chambers that cycle in the range of ±5 degrees and can control humidity through steam injection, professional-grade planetary mixers and big stationary 100+kg dough mixers, automatic devices to measure moisture content (although compensating for it goes manually), devices to measure gluten deformation, sugar content on all phases, structural properties of dough and finished product, microbial contamination of flour, dough and products, leavening activity of yeast and gas retention of dough, also рН meters and automatic titrators, chromatographs, colorimeters, ultra-precise scales…and that’s only what directly relates to the baking process :D

          …although yep, very regular baking takes a while under those circumstances

    • @Luvs2Spuj
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      5 hours ago

      Baking is not an exact science

      • @[email protected]
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        22 hours ago

        It’s not, you will be blown away at how much you can wing it and still make a delicious cake or cookies.

    • @dustyData
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      04 hours ago

      If you know the factors that affect the flour, you can control said factors, thus predict your results based on such factors, more or less a measurable margin of error. Ergo, baking is precisely an exact science.

      • @andrewta
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        14 hours ago

        How would you find out those factors about wheat?

        • @dustyData
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          03 hours ago

          Random sampling flour batches. And you’d think I’m joking. But no, this is exactly how we invented cookies. Cookies were baker’s experimental tool to test their flour and, by ovserving the cookie, predict what they needed to change in their bread recipes to produce the exact result they wanted.

          • @[email protected]
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            158 minutes ago

            Did you make that up yourself, or did someone else actually get you to fall for that? Testing bread flour has nothing to do with the creation of the cookie.