yes
Yes, unbleached flour can be used in just about anything that calls for flour.
Yes. All-purpose flour and unbleached flour are usually the same thing. Just be sure that the package doesn't say something like 'self rising', 'bread flour', or 'cake flour' - those ARE NOT all-purpose flour.
all purpose flour has bleach in it, therefore when you eat anything made with all purpose flour you are eating bleach.
No, cake flour is much finer, giving cakes light texture. You would be better of substituting regular all purpose flour
It depends what your making. If your allergic there is many different types of flour, if you are short in some in a recipie, id have to know the recipie to make an accurate jugment on a substitute :) btw im 13
Numerous other types of wheat flour may be substituted for all purpose flour, particularly cake flour, unbleached flour and bread flour. Self-rising flour may be substituted for all purpose flour if the amounts of baking powder, baking soda and salt are adjusted. Bread flour contains higher amounts of protein than cake flour. This is because high protein content helps to keep bread dough from falling, but is less desirable for cakes because it tends to add a degree of toughness. All-purpose flour has protein levels that fall somewhere between the two, resulting in a compromise that will work for cakes or bread, but not optimally for either. So if you are making a substitution for all-purpose flour, use bread flour for bread and cake flour for cakes, pastries, etc.
There are cake flours, otherwise all-purpose and unbleached flour is great to use.
Self-rising Flour
If a recipe calls for self-rising flour, your recipe will not turn out if you replace it with unbleached flour only because unbleached flour does not rise. You would also need to add baking powder to the recipe (about three teaspoons per cup of flour) if you were making this substitution in order for your recipe to rise.
Flour, all-purpose (plain)substitute: Whole-wheat flour for half of the called-for all-purpose flour in baked goods Note: Whole-wheat pastry flour is less dense and works well in softer products like cakes and muffins. I,ve also heard of almond flour- something to look in to. Go to your local whole foods market, you can always find healthy stuff there
It most likely already is. All purpose can be bleached or unbleached, same flour, one is just whiter than the other.
yes enriched flour can be substituted for all purpose flour in a cake