Journal of Food Engineering, Vol.237, 194-203, 2018
The size of eye-shaped bubbles in Danish pastry in relation to the size of fat fragments; A reverse engineering approach of the alveolar structure
This study characterized the size distributions of eye-shaped bubbles as a function of different numbers of fat layers (NFL) (4-128) in Danish pastry. This allowed for the first time to objectively define a coarse crumb texture typical of craft products, a too fine crumb texture typical of over-lamination, and the sizes of the bubbles typical of maximum lift. Ten to 20 mm wide bubbles did not differ in number with the NFL, except in over-laminated pastry in which their number decreased. Five-10 mm wide bubbles increased in number between 16 and 48 fat layers and explained the difference in crumb texture (more regular) and lift (+16%). One to 5 mm wide bubbles, rather round in shape, increased with the NFL, contributing to more regular crumb texture and predominated in over-laminated pastry. The number of eye-shaped bubbles was then correlated with the number of fat fragments, giving a ratio of 5 of the widths of bubbles to fat fragments. This result was logical knowing that bubbles also increase in size in the fat layers, as demonstrated earlier by MRI monitoring of Danish pastry during proving. This result also offered the opportunity of optimizing the alveolar structure of finish Danish pastry from the lamination step, using the degree of fat fragmentation at this step. The impact of these results on the usual view of bubble growth in Danish pastry is last discussed. (C) 2018 Published by Elsevier Ltd.