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Vital wheat gluten: why use the adjective 'vital'?


falco

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I am trying to perfect  a homade/DIY veggie burger recipe. I am trying to understand when, where and how (& the history of) the adjective "vital" came to be so routinely appended to wheat gluten as in "vital wheat gluten" or even less edifying as merely "vital gluten".


 


I understand that one can make one's own wheat gluten by repeatedly rinsing whole wheat flour until all that remains is the protein wheat gluten ("seitan"/'wheat meat'). And by grinding that up one gets wheat gluten 'flour' (aka 'vital wheat gluten)


 


But why use the adjective 'vital'. Apparently 'vital' is not necessarily capitalized & is not a proprietary term. So why is it used but seldom (never, in my experience) explained?


 


I find it a very curious & puzzling situation indeed.


 


Thank you.


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"Vital" simply describes the specific type of gluten that's functional in baking (forms an elastic bond.) 

~Martin :)

I just don't want to look back and think "I could have eaten that."

Unsupervised, rebellious, radical agrarian experimenter, minimalist penny-pincher, and adventurous cook. Crotchety, cantankerous, terse curmudgeon, non-conformist, and contrarian who questions everything!

The best thing about a vegetable garden is all the meat you can hunt and trap out of it!

 

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