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With this year鈥檚 The Great British Bake Off champion crowned, and the festive season on our doorstep, there鈥檚 one thing that we鈥檒l all be thinking about a lot right now: baking!

Whether it be rustling up a load of mince pies for your friends and family, or finally giving that sourdough loaf a try, there鈥檚 plenty of reasons to get elbow deep in dough at this time of year.

But did you know that your cakes, biscuits and pastries are all the result of lots of complex chemistry and physics?

We spoke to a couple of experts to find out exactly how scientific baking really is.

What makes pastry puff?

Lots of what you bake will involve some combination of flour, butter and water (plus or minus some other ingredients). The key to making them turn into something delicious is usually how they鈥檙e arranged.

Take puff pastry for example. The dough is simple - flour, salt, water. What鈥檚 not simple is how you then put it together with butter.

As chemist and co-founder of chemistry company Carbometrics Dr Andy Chapman explains, butter is 鈥渁n emulsion of water in oil鈥 so tiny droplets of water that are suspended in solid fat鈥. This is crucial in how puff pastry works.

Puff pastry canapes
Image caption,
Puff pastry makes for excellent festive party snacks - and look at all those layers!
Dough with layers
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Because of all the layers necessary, making puff pastry by hand can take a REALLY long time

When you have your dough, you roll it out, place layers of butter onto it, and fold until you have three layers, then repeat. This process is called laminating and it creates 鈥渆xponential growth鈥 in the layers, until you end up with thousands of them.

So what happens in these layers when the pastry is baked? Dr Chapman explains: 鈥淭he fat melts and becomes a lubricating matrix between the layers of dough, so they don't stick together.

鈥淎nd then, very critically, because butter is this emulsion of fat and water, and the temperature in the oven is above the boiling point of the water, the water turns into steam, and the steam is what blows open these layers.鈥

This is why butter has to be cold when you work with puff pastry, otherwise it melts into the dough and can鈥檛 provide the layers necessary to create the distinctive feathered structure.

Bready, steady, go!

Bread is a staple in lots of our lives, and a year ago, baking it became a staple of lockdown.

We鈥檝e been making and eating it for thousands of years and, according to Professor Grant Campbell at the University of Huddersfield, there is one thing about bread that makes it so special: bubbles.

He explained: 鈥淭hat's the distinctive thing about bread, that's what gives it its appealing palatability - it's what gives it its mystery.

鈥淲hen you knead your dough, the dough then rises. And in ancient times, that was mysterious, that was amazing. These days, of course, we understand that it's due to yeast. But back in the day they had no idea why this happened.鈥

But how do the bubbles get there in the first place, and how do they then keep their shape? The answer to that, Prof Campbell says, is gluten.

Sourdough being split in half
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Bubbles and gluten - the star ingredients in your crusty sourdough lo

Gluten, he explains, 鈥渆nables you to form a dough with just the right amount of stretch and flow, to be able to retain the fermentation gases produced by yeast in order to rise, and produce raised bread.鈥

It鈥檚 produced in the bread when you knead it: 鈥淕luten is protein. Protein is long chains of amino acids, and the kneading process aligns those chains, makes them line up.鈥

Air is also incorporated at the kneading stage, but the magic really starts happening when bread is left to prove. This is when the dough is left to rest at a certain temperature for a bit, and during this process, the yeast in the dough will produce carbon dioxide gas. This gas then diffuses into the bubbles that were made when kneading and makes them grow. But, as Prof Campbell explains: 鈥渢hose bubbles need to be there to start with; you cannot create bubbles from nothing.鈥

The strong gluten ensures that not all of these bubbles pop, and depending on the type of bread you鈥檙e making, it could lead to a very tight or very open structure. Sourdough, for example, has lots of very big bubbles, making the structure quite open.

Tempering chocolate
Image caption,
Tempering chocolate is a tricky business, which is why master chocolatiers spend years honing their craft

Good-tempered chocolate

When you鈥檙e baking, there are lots other elements that will make your final product look pretty and taste great. One such thing is chocolate, and to get it into a state that鈥檚 easy to work with, it must be tempered.

But what does this mean? Put simply, it鈥檚 the process of heating and cooling chocolate in order to give it different characteristics.

Dr Chapman says that 鈥渃hocolate is quite like butter, in the sense that, it's mostly fat, and it has a few other things floating around in it like sugar crystals and cocoa鈥.

He has an analogy that helps him describe what happens in the tempering process - he says to imagine the fat in the chocolate as having a structure that looks like a chair.

He explains: 鈥淲hen you when you've got liquid fat above its melting point鈥 you've got a completely random sea of chairs in front of you - there's no order to that structure at all.

鈥淏ut when you cool it down, you start to order that structure and form crystals鈥 you start stacking those chairs, and there are different ways in which you could imagine stacking chairs. You could stack them properly as you form a nice pile, you could put them seat-to-seat, back-to-back鈥 there would be different ways.鈥

Out of all those different ways of stacking the chairs, Dr Chapman says one will be more stable than the rest. And it鈥檚 the same with chocolate - there are apparently six ways the fat crystals can arrange themselves, and there is one in particular that bakers and chocolatiers are striving for when they attempt the tempering process.

What you鈥檙e looking for is 鈥渢hat it looks shiny, it snaps, and it doesn't melt in your hand鈥, Dr Chapman says.

Tempering chocolate
Image caption,
Tempering chocolate is a tricky business, which is why master chocolatiers spend years honing their craft

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