Sentences with phrase «water than wheat»

Do I understand from this that spelt requires less water than wheat?
Since rye often absorbs considerably more water than wheat, did you have any trouble with the dough being stickier and hard to work with?

Not exact matches

Apple Appe is a soft and chewy, delicious mouth watering snack prepared using apples and wheat flour or atta, and can be prepared in less than 30 minutes.
Water, cultured organic soybeans, soy sauce (water, organic soybeans, salt, organic wheat), organic cider vinegar, organic evaporated cane syrup, less than 2 % of: organic brown rice, sea salt, natural smoke flavor, beet powder (color), yeast extract, organic dried onions, spWater, cultured organic soybeans, soy sauce (water, organic soybeans, salt, organic wheat), organic cider vinegar, organic evaporated cane syrup, less than 2 % of: organic brown rice, sea salt, natural smoke flavor, beet powder (color), yeast extract, organic dried onions, spwater, organic soybeans, salt, organic wheat), organic cider vinegar, organic evaporated cane syrup, less than 2 % of: organic brown rice, sea salt, natural smoke flavor, beet powder (color), yeast extract, organic dried onions, spices.
I used yellow wheat flour, which does absorb less water than regular all purpose flour.
Spelt is more water - soluble than wheat, so you may need less liquid than with whole wheat flour.
A dough made with yellow wheat flour will need much less water than a dough made with regular all - purpose flour.
You may need to add 1 - 2 tablespoons of additional liquid if the dough feels dry, as whole wheat flour absorbs more water than all - purpose flour.
I've read that whole - wheat flour absorbs more water than white, and this agrees with my observations.
Other than that, just make sure all the ingredients are the exact same: WHITE whole wheat flour (I measure mine out so it's consistent from loaf to loaf), vital wheat gluten, water, etc..
TriSource Protein Blend (soy protein isolate, calcium caseinate, whey protein isolate), maltitol syrup, chocolate flavored coating (sugar, fractionated palm kernel oil, cocoa powder, whey, nonfat milk, soy lecithin, natural flavor), cane invert syrup, fructose syrup, oligofructose (from chicory root), soy crisps (soy protein isolate, tapioca starch, salt), alkalized cocoa powder, whole oats (contains wheat), roasted almonds, high oleic canola oil, and less than 2 % of: chocolate, water, soy lecithin, natural flavor, sugar, dextrose, caramel color, peanuts
It's more than just choosing whole wheat over white or water over soda.
In South Asia, water availability and rainfall seem to be more limiting factors than heat for corn, wheat and rice.
Of the agricultural land converted to almonds, a lot of it was formerly corn, cotton, winter wheat and tomatoes, which use less water than almonds.
Because rice is grown underwater — often in water contaminated with arsenic in such hot spots as Bangladesh, India and China — it takes in 10 times more arsenic than do other cereal grains, such as wheat and oats.
Cooked kale and ricotta ravioli (ricotta cheese [whey, skim milk, vinegar, xanthin gum], water, whole wheat flour, durum semolina, kale [kale, sunflower oil], eggs, dehydrated potatoes, salt, black pepper, garlic, nutmeg), tomatoes (tomatoes, sea salt, citric acid), mozzarella cheese (part skimmed milk, bacterial culture, salt, calcium chloride, microbial enzyme), water, sunflower oil, butternut squash, kale, contains less than 2 % of basil, garlic puree (garlic, water), organic black pepper, parsley, red wine vinegar, rice starch, xanthan gum.
Pig out intelligently with Smart Bacon ® — a product advertised as bringing «that hearty bacon taste into the veggie world» — and you'll get the following ingredients: Water, soy protein isolate, wheat gluten, soybean oil, textured soy protein concentrate, textured wheat gluten, less than 2 percent of natural smoke flavor, natural flavor (from vegetable sources), grill flavor (from sunflower oil), carrageenan, evaporated cane juice, paprika oleoresin (for flavor and color), potassium chloride, sesame oil, fermented rice flour, tapioca dextrin, citric acid, salt.
Ingredients: Organic Wheat Flour, Water, Organic Whole Wheat Flour, Organic Cane Sugar, Contains Less Than 2 % Of Each Of The Following: Organic Soybean Oil, Salt, Yeast, Organic Oat Flour, Organic Molasses, Organic Potato Flour, Organic Cultured Wheat Starch, Enzymes, Citric Acid, Organic Reduced Fat Soy Flour, Ascorbic Acid, Organic Soy Lecithin.
Water, Vegetable Oil (Soybean And / Or Canola Oil), Sugar, Distilled Vinegar, Tomato Puree, Egg Yolk, Buttermilk, Skim Milk, Red Jalapeno Puree, LESS THAN 2 % OF: Salt, Molasses, Natural Smoke Flavor, Dried Garlic, Worcestershire Sauce Apple Cider Vinegar, Molasses, Wheat - Free Tamari, Water, Evaporated Cane Juice, Salt, Lemon Juice Concentrate, Ginger Puree, Tamarind, Chili Pepper, Dried Garlic, Xanthan Gum, Shitake Mushrooms, Allspice, Cloves, Orange Extract, Lemon Extract, Lactic Acid, Corn Starch, Dried Roasted Garlic, Garlic, Dried Onion, Xanthan Gum, Onion, Spices, Caramel Color, Lemon Juice Concentrate, Citric Acid, Dried Red Habanero Chilies.
drink water, light lemonade, or the fuse unsweeted tea, the green tea is loaded with sugar and fake «antioxidents», do nt get cheese, and go light on the sauce, the baked bags of chips have 1/3 less chips in them than the normal bag of classic lays, go figure less calories, get apples instead of chips and cookies all together, get wheat bread as the cheese breads add on close to 100 calories per footlong..
Hemp thrives on less water than most crops (soy, corn, wheat).
Ingredients: Organic Wheat Flour, Water, Organic Whole Wheat Flour, Organic Cane Sugar, Contains Less Than 2 % Of Each Of The Following: Organic Soybean Oil, Organic Molasses, Salt, Yeast, Organic Wheat Bran, Organic Oat Flour, Organic Potato Flour, Organic Cultured Wheat Starch, Enzymes, Citric Acid, Organic Reduced Fat Soy Flour, Ascorbic Acid, Organic Soy Lecithin.
Water, Mushrooms, Vegetable Oil (Corn, Cottonseed, Canola And / Or Soybean), Modified Food Starch, Wheat Flour, Contains Less Than 2 % Of: Cream (Milk), Salt, Dried Whey (Milk), Monosodium Glutamate, Soy Protein Concentrate, Yeast Extract, Spice Extract, Dehydrated Garlic.
[1] CO2 absorbs IR, is the main GHG, human emissions are increasing its concentration in the atmosphere, raising temperatures globally; the second GHG, water vapor, exists in equilibrium with water / ice, would precipitate out if not for the CO2, so acts as a feedback; since the oceans cover so much of the planet, water is a large positive feedback; melting snow and ice as the atmosphere warms decreases albedo, another positive feedback, biased toward the poles, which gives larger polar warming than the global average; decreasing the temperature gradient from the equator to the poles is reducing the driving forces for the jetstream; the jetstream's meanders are increasing in amplitude and slowing, just like the lower Missippi River where its driving gradient decreases; the larger slower meanders increase the amplitude and duration of blocking highs, increasing drought and extreme temperatures — and 30,000 + Europeans and 5,000 plus Russians die, and the US corn crop, Russian wheat crop, and Aussie wildland fire protection fails — or extreme rainfall floods the US, France, Pakistan, Thailand (driving up prices for disk drives — hows that for unexpected adverse impacts from AGW?)
say it has been predicted that «the average temperature in the semiarid northwest portion of China in 2050 will be 2.2 °C higher than it was in 2002,» and they report that based on the observed results of their study, this increase in temperature «will lead to a significant change in the growth stages and water use of winter wheat,» such that «crop yields at both high and low altitudes will likely increase,» by 2.6 % at low altitudes and 6.0 % at high altitudes... Even without the benefits of the aerial fertilization effect and the anti-transpiration effect of the ongoing rise in the air's CO2 content, the increase in temperature that is predicted by climate models for the year 2050, if it ever comes to pass, will likely lead to increases in winter wheat production in the northwestern part of China, not the decreases that climate alarmists routinely predict.»
A groundwater survey released in Beijing in August 2001 revealed that the water table under the North China Plain, an area that produces more than half of the country's wheat and a third of its corn, is falling fast.
More than 20,600 barrels of crude oil have spilled into a North Dakota wheat field, but thankfully because of a 40 foot thick layer of clay beneath the field, the oil has been relatively contained and is not believed to have reached a water source.
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