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Yeah that book has things written out and metric weight.Im assuming everything is scaled? It minimizes differences the differences in amounts but not texture and flavor. There’s a reason that Dominic Ansel imports flour and butter from France.
I have not been able to find mascarpone Imported from Italy either, nor sheeps milk ricotta. It’s extremely frustrating. All I can find is mascarpone from Vermont Creamery and BelGioso. Neither has the texture or flavor of the imported Italian. We use the BelGioso at the shop where I work since it’s better four our purposes.
But scale is not the issue. The issue is the difference in the ingredients.
for example, wheat in the UK Is naturally very low in protein. plain flour in the UK has a protein content of about 9%. It’s also unbleached.
All purpose flour in the United States has a protein content of 10% – 11.5%. The glour may be bleached or unbleached. Unbleached pastry flour in the United States are the equivalent to plain flour in the UK.
French flour is miled completely different from other flours. French flour is labeled with a number. The number indicates the level of ash (mineral) content.
in other countries the wheat kernel is separated; the bran, germ, and endosperm are then milled separately. Flours are made my blending different percentages of these three streams back together. Whole wheat flour contains all three streams, it’s 100% extraction. cake flour contains almost all endosperm flour; it’s about 45% extraction. all purpose flour is about 73% extraction.
The French mill the entire wheat colonel then sift out the bran and germ. So some of the bran and germ is in bedded into the endosperm flower. This creates a flour that is higher in protein and ash content. So it actually performs differently.
Type 45: equivalent to pastry flour
Type 55: equivalent to all-purpose
Type 65: the first in a line of what Americans would call bread flour, but it is still pretty low in protein
Types 80: high gluten bread flour
Type 110: Another type of bread flour that has a unique blend of bran and germ so it performs bit handles more like all-purpose flour, but has some of the nutritional value, colors, and aromas of whole wheat flour.
Butter in France is cultured. The cream is fermented before the butter is made. American butter is sweet cream butter, that’s why it has no flavor.
The dairy in Europe is different. Anyway you get the idea
Whenever you make something using a formula from another country, you have to make those conversions.