Yes it can!
Certainly, white all purpose flour will work in muffins. Although they might turn out to be cupcakes, rather than muffins.
There are 90g in a cup of white all purpose flour. There are 90g in a cup of white all purpose flour. It depends on what type of flour it is. In all purpose gold medal flour there are only 88g of carbs in 1 cup of flour ( 22g per 1/4 cup ).
To make all-purpose flour at home, you can mix together equal parts of whole wheat flour and white flour. This combination will give you a flour that can be used for a variety of recipes.
Purity Flour is a brand name, the same as Quaker Oats is a brand name. Generally speaking, Purity flour is a good quality all-purpose white flour. You can use any all-purpose flour as a substitute.
Because there are molecules in all-purpose flour that stabilize the consistency of the flour. Hence the name, "all-purpose". It will do the trick for most-everything you cook, and will not interfere with the molecules in whole-wheat flour. Whole wheat flour typically will not have the durability because ingredients from regular flour have been removed and/or replaced to fit in more whole-wheat additives.
You will end up with a different look and texture if you do, but it is possible.
Replacements or substitutes for all purpose flour are: 1 cup + 2 tbsp sifted cake flour = 1 cup sifted all-purpose flour; 1 cup minus 2 tbsp unsifted flour = 1 cup sifted all-purpose flour; 1 1/2 cups breadcrumbs = 1 cup sifted all-purpose flour; 3/4 cup whole wheat flour or bran flour + 1/2 cup all purpose flour; 1 cup rye or rice flour; 1/4 cup soybean flour + 3/4 cup all-purpose flour
There are 450 grams of carbs in 5 cups of all purpose white flour
Yes, assuming that by "plain flour" you mean all-purpose flour. Because all three sound like the exact same thing.
no it's not all purpose flour..
Sapin Sapin is a glutinous rice and coconut dessert, traditionally calling for rice flour. If your recipe calls for all-purpose flour, you can safely substitute equal parts brown or white rice flour.
White flour is wheat flour. The asker may intend to ask whether whole wheat flour can be substituted for white flour. The answer is yes, but the final product will be more dense and heavy than when made with white flour. Home bakers often compromise by replacing 1/3 to 1/2 of the flour in a recipe with whole wheat flour, then use white flour for the remaining amount.