Pea-n-Me
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2004
- Messages
- 41,378
There are thousands of supermarkets so I won’t profess to know what each one does. But I can say that many supermarket bakeries have “slugs” of products (could be bread, muffins, donuts, bagels, almost anything) that come in already made and partially baked, and all they have to do is stick them in the oven for a little while, then call them “fresh baked”. But again, for consistency, the real work is done by others. And yes, KK is mostly automated, I know.Depends. The supermarkets around here have all sorts of setups, including deli counters where everything can be seen. They do claim that bread is baked on site and donuts are made on site, but that may be in the back using conveyer belt style equipment that doesn't need the kind of skills other than unloading a box of shortening and using the mixer. Some of the strange ones I've seen are more or less hexagonal ones where I'm sure the cutting dies do that to maximize waste and not having to place excess dough back where it has to be mixed again.
At a typical Krispy Kreme, everything is done in view of customers. But it's mostly a machine making it and not an employee doing it by hand. The process is all computer controlled now with fryer temps and mechanical application of the glaze. But I've been to independent donut shops where I saw the employee dropping the dough in and then dipping in whatever glaze or sprinkles.
Also - donuts at mom and pop shops are remarkably consistent because they all buy from maybe less than a half dozen makers of donut mixes like Pillsbury, Dawn, BakeMark, Krusteaz, Rich's, etc. And there really isn't that much of a secret to it as they're almost all identical. Once at a donut shop I noticed they had a calendar from one of the major donut companies, and it showed donuts as well as bags of mixes, shortening, sprinkles, glazes, etc. The only key is to know from feel how long it needs to stay in the fryer before it's scooped out. A few local places around here supposedly make their donuts from scratch, but even then it's just big bags of commercial flour and following fairly simple recipes.
I will disagree somewhat with your last paragraph, because just using mixes (which most do) doesn’t guarantee a consistent product. There is still a lot that goes into baking things. Even chefs hate baking, and there’s a reason for that. It looks easier than it actually is. And, as we’ve seen here, have some sort of screw up, and you’re kind of screwed. People want and expect to go into a bakery and get a top notch product every time. That is so not the case everywhere today.