A guide for using the most common types of flour for baking and cooking. Learn about the role of gluten in the texture development of your favorite foods. Gain helpful tips on how to select flours for recipes.
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Using flour can seem like a simple task. That is until you get to the supermarket and are suddenly faced with multiple varieties. A less thorough recipe may merely ask for flour, so it’s up to you to figure out which type is best for your needs.
The selection process comes down to what’s being made and whether you want to add nutritional benefits or have a dietary restriction. Don’t worry! I’ve done my homework and am here to help. I’ve put together some basic guidelines for the different types of flour and cooking tips based on my experience.
It’s not an exhaustive list, but here are some common household flours you can typically find at American grocery stores.
All-Purpose Flour
What you’ll find in most kitchens and on all store shelves. All-purpose flour contains the seed’s endosperm, meaning it’s more shelf-stable and will last longer than whole wheat flour. I mainly use Gold-Medal all-purpose baking flour In my kitchen because it’s lower in protein and gives a more tender baked good.
- Best used for: Cookies, White Bread, Waffles, Pancakes, Biscuits, Pizza dough, Pasta, and Irish Soda Bread.
- Contains: 10 to 13% protein
Whole Wheat Flour
Whole wheat flour is denser. It is made from the endosperm, germ, and fiber-rich bran. The germ makes products more dense with less rise. You’ll also have to let this flour rest before baking–ten minutes should be the minimum; 20-30 is ideal. Resting allows the liquid in the batter or dough to permeate the bran and the germ, softening it before baking, resulting in a less coarse final product.
- Best used for: Cookies, Wheat Bread, Waffles, Pumpkin Scones, Pizza dough, Pasta, and Irish Brown Bread.
- Contains: 13 to 14% protein
White Whole Wheat Flour
This flour shouldn’t be confused with bleached flour. Instead, it’s made from a whole wheat seed head containing bran, germ, and endosperm. Only it’s made from a lighter variety of white hard winter wheat. The result is a lighter-colored baked good and a slightly sweeter taste than whole wheat.
- Best used for: Cookies, Zucchini Bread, Muffins
- Not suitable for: Lighter cakes
- Contains: 13 to 14% protein
Pastry Flour
It comes in a regular variety, as well as whole wheat. Often bleached, it utilizes softer wheat varieties, resulting in a finer texture and diminished protein content. It shouldn’t be used for bread because of its lower gluten profile.
- Best used for: Cookies, Muffins, Pound Cakes, Scones, Waffles, Biscuits, Pie Crusts
- Not suitable for: Bread
- Contains: 7.5 to 9.5% protein
Cake Flour
It is ideal for–you guessed it!–cake baking, creating a spongy, airy texture in the final product. It’s milled extremely fine, usually bleached, and has a low protein content. The bleach allows the starches in the flour to absorb more fat and liquid.
- Best used for: Chiffon, Spritz Cookies, Pound Cakes, Angel Food Cakes, Layer Cakes
- Contains: 6 to 8% protein
Bread Flour
This high-protein flour is perfect for developing a strong gluten network when creating chewy texture products.
- Best used for: Sticky Buns, Artisan No-Knead Bread, Yeast Breads, Some Cookies, Bagels
- Contains: 12 to 15% protein
Self-Rising Flour
When you’re looking for a shortcut, self-rising flour already has a leavening agent (baking powder) and salt built right in. The flour base is closer to a cake flour with lower protein. It cannot be substituted for other flours. To make your self-rising flour, combine 1 cup of flour with 1 ½ teaspoons of baking powder and ½ teaspoon of salt.
- Best used for: Parmesan Drop Biscuits
- Contains: 8 to 9% protein
Vital Wheat Gluten Flour
It is somewhat of a “super flour”–which is not a scientific term, just my way of saying that it’s a flour engineered with little starch and a lot of gluten. Technically, it isn’t flour but is made from hydrated wheat flour. This combination activates the gluten, and then the flour is processed to remove everything but the gluten. After that, it’s dried and ground back into a powder.
- Best used for: As a booster for low-protein flours, like rye, whole wheat, or sprouted flours
- Contains: 40 to 85% protein
Gluten-Free Flour
Gluten-free flour alternatives have become popular as consumers have dietary restrictions, allergies, celiac disease, or want to reduce gluten consumption. These flours attempt to mimic the functionality and texture of wheat flour. They may contain rice, corn, potato, tapioca, arrowroot, buckwheat, amaranth, beans, quinoa, sorghum, flax meal, or ground nuts, typically as a blend.
- Best used for: Gluten-free diets, Cakes, Gluten-free Chocolate Chip Cookies, Pancakes, Waffles, Bread, and Gluten-free Cornbread Muffins.
- Contains: % Protein varies by brand
Sprouted Flour
This is made from sprouted grains, including much more than just white or red wheat. These are good choices for anyone seeking to increase taste and nutrition, though they may require more skill to work with. On the list are rye, corn, sorghum, amaranth spelt, and einkorn, to name only a few grains.
- Best used for: Bread, Cakes, Cookies, Crackers, and Spelt Irish Soda Bread.
- Contains: Protein levels vary with the type of flour.
Bleached Flours
White flour, in particular, is occasionally treated with benzoyl peroxide or chlorine to remove the yellow tinge of color from carotenoids after milling for a consistent bright white color.
Bleaching changes the structure of the starches and protein, causing the starches to become more absorbent and the protein to bind less tightly together. The process makes the dough less sticky and easier to work with.
The Role of Protein in Baking and Cooking
Mixing flour and water hydrates and activates the insoluble wheat proteins, glutenin and gliadin, creating gluten bonds that give structure and elasticity to bread, cakes, cookies, pizza dough, and pasta.
Each type of flour has different levels of wheat protein, which determines the gluten-forming potential. Also, the intensity and length of mixing affect the strength of gluten formation. That’s why some directions say “gently fold” or “do not overmix.” A tender muffin can become a rubbery hockey puck with the wrong technique due to a few extra stirs.
Does Protein Content Vary By Brand?
Yes! Check the nutritional label and use this simple calculation: grams protein ÷ grams serving size x 100 = % Protein
Examples:
- Gold Medal All-Purpose Flour: 3 grams ÷ 30 grams x 100 = 10% protein
- King Arthur All-Purpose Flour: 4 grams ÷ 30 grams x 100 = 13.3% protein
As you can see, there’s a pretty big spread for these two brands. This can cause more of an impact when kneading and baking bread dough because more protein creates more gluten development, potentially creating a more rubbery texture. This is less of a concern with tender crumb products with higher sugar and fat, like muffins, biscuits, or cookies.
For a quick fix, replace one tablespoon of flour per cup with one tablespoon of cornstarch. If within the 10-11% protein range, bread recipes should have less noticeable differences. (Reference: Cook’s Illustrated)
Other Alternative Flours
- Almond Flour
- Arrowroot Powder
- Oat Flour
Dave says
Awesome article on flour types. This is why I love this site (besides the guaranteed to work recipes of course), is the food science.
Jessica Gavin says
Thank you so much! I’m thrilled to hear that you are enjoying the recipes and food science content.
bill marsano says
I see all-purpose and self-rising flour everywhere, and cake flour (which I take to be equivalent to Italian “00”) fiarly often. But I can’t recall ever seeing anything labeled ‘bread flour,’ and wonder where to look. (Ordering it shipped will entail hideous shipping costs.)
Also, the English use something called ‘strong flour.’ Any idea what that is?
Jessica Gavin says
You can find bread flour at major grocery stores. King Arthur and gold medal sells bread flour. Strong flour is make from hard wheat kernels, that’s more coarse and denser than all-purpose flour.
Virginia Hyde says
I want to use Semolina flour also called Durum to make a less refined bread.
Do you have a recipe for it.?
Ginny W says
Can you tell me which one of these flours is considered third class flour? Thanx for your help
Jessica Gavin says
Third-class flour is the most similar to cake flour in the United States.
Ginny W says
Thank you so much sweetie
Irish clover says
What is third class flour? Which brand i can buy for making a wrapper like shanghai wrapper
Jessica Gavin says
Thrid class flour is also called pastry flour. It’s a soft type made with soft white wheat and used in applications like cookies, biscuits, crackers, noodles, and lumpia wrappers. It is lower in protein content and finer in texture. Check out bob’s red mill fine pastry flour or other brands selling soft wheat flour.
Liyakath H says
Flours are important in baking ,an essential.. knowledge to understand better in details of culinary .