All-purpose (AP) flour earns its name by sitting in the middle of the protein range — about 10–12% — which makes it the do-everything flour for home kitchens. Protein matters because it forms gluten when flour meets water: more protein means more chew and structure, less means more tenderness. AP’s middle ground handles cookies, muffins, pancakes, quick breads, and even a respectable loaf of yeast bread.
Where it shines — and where it doesn’t
AP flour is the right default for most everyday baking. For very tender, fine-crumbed cakes you’d prefer lower-protein cake flour; for chewy artisan bread and pizza, higher-protein bread flour gives a better rise. But in a pinch AP does a decent job at both ends, which is why it’s the one bag almost every kitchen keeps stocked.
Substitutions
| To replace | Use AP flour as |
|---|---|
| Cake flour | 1 cup AP − 2 Tbsp, + 2 Tbsp cornstarch |
| Bread flour | AP works; expect slightly less chew |
| Self-rising | AP + 1½ tsp baking powder + ¼ tsp salt per cup |
One cup of all-purpose flour weighs about 125 grams, spooned and leveled — or better yet, weighed for consistency.
Frequently asked questions
What protein is all-purpose flour? About 10–12%, varying by brand and region.
Can I use AP instead of bread flour? Yes — the loaf will be a bit less chewy but still good.
How much does a cup weigh? About 125 g.
