The characteristics of bread are divided into internal (related to the crumb) and external (outside surface of baked loaf including caramelization or dehydration during baking).
| Internal | External |
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A “standard bread” product that has an optimum combination of volume, external and internal characteristics should be the base for comparison when performing bread scoring.
Procedure for bread evaluation1
| When to score | Sample selection | Sample preparation | Method and order of evaluation | Who scores |
| Bread evaluation should be done at least once per shift (per variety).
Bread can be scored the same day of production or within 2 days of baking. |
Samples should be selected randomly from each production run of each variety, ideally on a daily basis.
Selected samples should be representative of the batch. Samples can also be taken from the market. |
Loaves must be completely cool before scoring. A warm crumb can tear or collapse during slicing.
Once properly cooled, the loaves should be sealed in plastic bags and kept at room temperature in a storage cabinet until scoring. |
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Properly trained personnel and may include:
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Application
Every bread has its own requirements and quality characteristics. The quality of bread is a function of its ingredients, yeast activity and processing conditions. The soft and resilient texture and fine cell structure (grain) of a slice of white pan or whole wheat bread, are features that consumers expect when purchasing these breads.
An “ideal” or high-quality loaf of white pan bread should have the following characteristics:
| Internal | External |
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The following scoring model can be used to compare bread samples against the standard. Any deviations from optimal characteristics, either insufficient or excessive, should be penalized with a lower score.
| Highest score | Average score | Lowest score | |
| Bread characteristic (internal or external) | 10 | 5 | 1 |
| Relation to standard | Closest | Half-way | Farthest |
A score sheet form is usually filled out during a bread evaluation process. Such form can look like this:
| SCORE SHEET FORM | |||
| Sample or dough No. | |||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | |
| Loaf volume | |||
| Break and shred | |||
| Symmetry | |||
| Crust color | |||
| Crust surface | |||
| Comments external characteristics | |||
| Subtotal external score (E) | |||
| Grain | |||
| Crumb color | |||
| Flavor | |||
| Aroma | |||
| Tactile crumb texture | |||
| Mouthfeel | |||
| Comments internal characteristics | |||
| Subtotal internal score (I) | |||
| Total (E + I) | |||
References
- AACC International. Approved Methods of Analysis, 11th Ed. Method 10–12.01. Guidelines for Scoring Experimental Bread. Final approval September, 2012. Cereals & Grains Association, St. Paul, MN, U.S.A.