and strongly    bleached    with    chlorine    dioxide or
chlorine    gas.    The chlorine    treatment   turns   out
to  cause   the starch  granules    to  absorb  water
and swell   more    readily in  high-sugar  batters,
and produce a   stronger    starch  gel.    It  also
causes  fats    to  bind    more    readily to  the starch
granule surface,    which   may help    disperse    the
fat phase   more    evenly. In  combination with
the new shortening  and with    double-acting
baking  powders,    cake    flour   allowed U.S.    food
manufacturers   to  develop “high-ratio”
packaged    cake    mixes,  in  which   the sugar   can
outweigh    the flour   by  as  much    as  40%.The
texture of  the cakes   they    make    is  distinctively
light   and moist,  fine    and velvety.
Thanks  to  these   qualities   and to  the
convenience of  premeasured ingredients,
packaged    cake    mixes   were    a   great   success:
just    10  years   after   their   major   introduction
following   World   War II, they    accounted   for
half    of  all cakes   baked   in  U.S.    homes.  The
very    sweet,  tender, moist,  light   cake    became
                    
                      barry
                      (Barry)
                      
                    
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