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Evolution of cake batter bubble structure and rheology during planetary mixing
Authors:A.K.S. Chesterton  D.A. Pereira de Abreu  G.D. Moggridge  P.A. Sadd  D.I. Wilson
Affiliation:1. Department of Chemical Engineering & Biotechnology, New Museums Site, Cambridge CB2 3RA, UK;2. Department of Analytical Chemistry, Nutrition and Bromatology, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Santiago de Compostela, E-15782 Santiago de Compostela, Spain;3. Premier Foods, Lincoln Road, Cressex Business Park, High Wycombe HP12 3QS, UK
Abstract:The incorporation of air into a high ratio cake batter by planetary mixing was studied using two bench mixers, a Kenwood KM250 and a Hobart-N50. Power draw (expressed as specific mechanical power input) and air volume fraction, ?, were monitored over time for batters prepared in each mixer for heat-treated and un-treated cake flours. The two flour types gave very similar results, indicating that the benefit of heat treatment for cake manufacture is manifested during the baking step. Both mixers gave a rapid initial increase in ? up to ~0.50 followed by a gradual decay. Bubble size distributions of batters prepared in the Hobart showed the initial aeration stage to be accompanied by the formation of a large number of small bubbles, with diameters around 5 μm: the average bubble size increased and number of bubbles decreased with extended mixing. Batters prepared without emulsifier exhibited a steady increase in ? to a plateau at ~0.2 and contained larger bubbles which did not change in average size significantly over time. All batters exhibited power-law shear-thinning behaviour with power law indices and consistency strongly dependent on ?. At low shear rates, the apparent viscosity showed the non-linear dependency on ? expected for dense suspensions. At higher shear rates, elastic forces generated by the bubble phase became significant. The non-Newtonian nature of the liquid phase and the elasticity generated by the bubbles meant that shear-thinning and bubble break-up could not be predicted by analyses based on the capillary number. The results support a qualitative model of bubble formation and break-up caused by extensional deformation generated by shearing these bubbly liquids: the bubbles cream out slowly owing to the high viscosity of the continuous phase at rest.
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