Visit the Camlab web site
Click on the advert above to visit the company web site

Product category: Education, Training, Courses
News Release from: IChemE (Institution of Chemical Engineers) | Subject: Bubbles in bread
Edited by the Processingtalk Editorial Team on 23 May 2008

The answer to the perfect sandwich -
bubbles!

Request your FREE weekly copy of the Processingtalk email newsletter. News about Education, Training, Courses and more every issue. Click here for details.

A leading UK chemical engineer has revealed the unlikely ingredient needed to make the perfect sandwich - and this is - bubbles (with no filling)

Speaking at a recent IChemE lecture, Professor Grant Campbell said that bubbles in bread are as important for making a good sandwich as its filling, due to the unique composition of wheat "Bread is special because of its bubbles

It's got these bubbles because wheat, when mixed with water, salt and yeast is the only cereal that can trap the carbon dioxide and give us raised bread".

That raised bread makes for soft bread and it's soft because of the bubbles.

Different breads are distinguished by different aerated structures.

It's one of the reasons why brown or wholemeal bread is less suitable for making tasty sandwiches - the bran pops the bubbles.

"Chemical engineers are working to find a way of getting bran into bread recipes without popping the bubbles.

By doing this we will create a healthier bread without sacrificing the tastiness.

Nutritionists have been telling us to eat more wholemeal bread for decades but we still prefer white bread because it tastes better" explained Campbell.

Speaking at Birmingham University to an audience of chemical engineers, scientists and students, Campbell was awarded the IChemE Frank Morton medal - recognising his outstanding service to chemical engineering education.

"Bubbles have made wheat the world's most important food crop.

If you took all the engineers that have ever lived and asked them to recreate such an appealing food structure, at such a price that most people in the world could afford to eat it every day, they wouldn't come up with anything as remarkable as bread," said Campbell: "Bread is the world's most important food and wheat is the king of grains because of its unique ability to give us bubbly bread," he concluded.

Campbell, based at the University of Manchester, also explained the key role bubbles play in other foods and drinks, including chocolate, champagne and meringue, for those people in the audience with a different taste.

IChemE (Institution of Chemical Engineers): contact details and other news
Email this article to a colleague
Register for the free Processingtalk email newsletter
Processingtalk Home Page

Search the Pro-Talk network of sites

Visit the Camlab web site