Quote:
Originally Posted by Coosie [snip] Well, I will admit that I was not really paying attention 36 years ago when I barely made it through Algebra class. [snip] Fractions~~ they are going to kill me! And where are they getting the numbers they get in the examples in the book? The book is Professional Baking by Wayne Gisslen. If I don't figure out bakers percentages and yields soon I think I am going to have a stroke. [snip]I'm probably making this harder than it really is, aren't I?[snip]
Coosie |
Take a deep breath, open your book and look in appendix 3 for the
Decimal Equivalents to Common Fractions. That should solve most of your problems, and without a calculator.
The way to convert a decimal equivalent to a percentage is as follows: 0.XY = XY% for instance, 0.375 = 37.5%. The reverse is also true: 37.5% = 0.375. This makes more sense still if you remember (or find in the appendix) that 0.375 = 3/8.
Here's an (over-simplified) example. "Basic French bread requires 25% to 33% water, by weight, depending on humidity. How much water for 1doz standard loaves?" Start with making percentages fractions. Between 1/4 (25%) and (1/3) of the total weight of the unbaked dough will be water.
Cool. Let's wrestle it to the floor. Start with your conversion constants:
A pint's a pound, the world around and
a standard loaf is 1.5 (1-1/2)
lbs. 12 standard loaves x 1-1/2 = 12 lbs + 6 lbs = 18 lbs.
Okay?
Now, 1/4 of 18 = 4-1/2. And, 1/3 of 18 = 6.
So you need between 4-1/2 pints (2 qts plus 1 cup water) and 6 pints (3 qts) water. You can subtract the water weights from 18 lb total to determine the flour weight at between 13-1/2 and 12 pounds, since the weight of the other ingredients (yeast and salt) is negligible.
Metric conversions are easier. Forget everything you know about cups, pints, pounds, etc., and trust your measuring cups. 0.5 L will always be 500 mL. And in water will weigh 500 gm which will always be 1/2 Kg. 25% of a liter is 0.35 L is 350 mL
Cool?
If you have some specific example with which you'd like help, be more than happy to oblige.
BDL