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cakewalk

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Posts posted by cakewalk

  1. 7 minutes ago, Honkman said:

     

    It would help if you could describe how you currently make your bread, e.g. hydration level etc.

    I'm no scientist, but I agree high hydration and also minimal kneading will get you where you want to go. Folding instead of kneading helps.

  2. The guy's quite full of himself, and doesn't seem to understand why others don't share that opinion!

    I lived overseas for many years in a country with so many different nationalities it can make your head spin. There's a lot of complaint, but if you live somewhere that is not your birth country then you're the one who has to adapt, not them. You can sit with your compatriots and moan and groan over a beer or two about how "they" are so wrong about everything, but when you're out in public it's their call, not yours. The guy's a real piece of work. 

    • Like 2
  3. No great ideas here. A wire grid on the wall that holds various baskets. I needed something outside my cabinet space, since that is so limited. It's all quite a mess, and I'd say close to half of it needs to be thrown out. I just never get around to it. :o

    spice rack1.jpg

    • Like 5
  4. I realized I had too much milk and so I had to do something. I also realized I never made a hot milk sponge cake, a situation that had to be rectified. I used the KAF recipe, which actually seems to be a cross between a hot milk sponge and a chiffon cake. (It uses oil in addition to butter.) Whatever, it's very simple and very good. I scarfed down the sides before adding some chocolate ganache. I will bring this downstairs to the guys who work in my building before I eat any more.

    Hot milk sponge cake.jpg

    • Like 9
  5. 1 hour ago, jmacnaughtan said:

     

    It's not a confit in the traditional sense, more like the French confiture - but much more intense.  Essentially, you zest a couple of lemons and juice them, and add half the weight of the juice in sugar.  You then reduce that down slowly until it takes on a jam-like consistency.  (The original recipe from Conticini says to peel off the strips of zest, blanch them three times and blitz the confit, but I skip that and just microplane the lemons and it works perfectly well).

     

    It's an incredibly intense lemon flavour with lots of acidity and almost zero sweetness, so you have to be careful how much you use.

     

    I've tried it successfully with grapefruit as well, and less so with oranges - they tend to go extremely sticky.  If I tried it again with them, I'd cut down the sugar by half.  Let me know if you give it a go :)

     

    Thank you. That does sound intense. It also sounds very do-able. (Which makes me happy.) But how did you use it in this cake? Do you spread a thin layer on the crust and then a layer of lemon curd, topped with meringue? Did you mix some confit into the lemon curd? Sorry if I'm being too nosy. This really caught me. (I love lemon.) 

  6. @jmacnaughtan please tell me about your lemon confit and how you incorporate it into that lovely dessert. I never heard of lemon confit before so I Googled it. The recipes I found seem to vary from preserved lemons (with just a bit of sugar added to the salt) to lemons steeped in olive oil rather than salt. They all look great (I was particularly drawn to the recipe in Saveur), but how did you use yours in that dessert? Which version of confit did you use, salt or oil? (Or something else?) It must add a very interesting flavor element to the sweetness of the lemon curd and the meringue. 

  7. I couldn't get through the whole thing. Who is the expected audience for this article? I find the tone of the questions completely off-putting. The information in the answers is very basic. The impression I'm left with is that Bittman, once again, is a day late and a dollar short. This seems to be his MO. What can I say, I'm not objective here. I smell a book and overpriced speaking engagements. 

    • Like 1
    • Haha 1
  8. On 3/19/2018 at 11:29 AM, Smithy said:

     

    I too would like to know what the baking scientists and experienced bakers have to say.

     

    My working theory, supported by my limited (and inexpert) experience, is that the dormant starter is more sour than freshly-fed starter. The final result is a more sour bread, and that hasn't necessarily been a good thing.

    I agree, I don't see the difference between feeding a dormant starter separately or just adding it to a bread recipe as-is, it's being fed both ways, I do it all the time. The only argument I can think of, and it is a good one, is that you want to make sure that starter is dormant, and not dead. It's not always easy to tell. 

     

    A dormant starter usually will be more sour. Feeding a starter less often (deliberately) also makes it more sour from what I understand, although I couldn't explain the science.

  9. 3 minutes ago, paulraphael said:

     

    It's interesting because it illustrates how easy it is to remain oblivious to racist tropes when we're not on the receiving end of them.

    I was looking through this thread and didn't feel compelled to respond. Not because I didn't have an opinion about it (of course), but I didn't have the energy to collect my thoughts. Then I was looking through the NY Times and came across this gem:

    https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/17/world/asia/india-hitler-childrens-book.html?module=WatchingPortal&region=c-column-middle-span-region&pgType=Homepage&action=click&mediaId=thumb_square&state=standard&contentPlacement=4&version=internal&contentCollection=www.nytimes.com&contentId=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2018%2F03%2F17%2Fworld%2Fasia%2Findia-hitler-childrens-book.html&eventName=Watching-article-click

     

    So yes, when we're on the receiving end, things look very, very different. I can remember all sorts of photos and pictures of blacks (children, adults, men, women) with big smiles and watermelons. Even as I kid I understood that an association was being made between black people and watermelon, and that it was intended to demean. It didn't stop me from loving watermelon, and I can't say I ever understood exactly how watermelon was intended to demean black people, but the intent of humiliation was there nevertheless. But the connecting thread is tenuous for most of us, and so we don't get it. And as with the article I linked to above, we are in trouble if we let ourselves forget these connecting threads. Then all we're left with is watermelon. And who doesn't like watermelon?

    • Like 4
  10. 58 minutes ago, Smithy said:

    It might depend on whether that person is intimidated by cooking. I was. The book that got me over it was Sunset's Easy Basics for Good Cooking. It isn't big or threatening or dense. It's well-illustrated and clear. For each ingredient and cooking method it gives a few different recipes with big differences in the final result (chicken cacciatore vs. chicken in vermouth, say). Its theme-and-variations format demystified cooking for me.

     

    Unfortunately it's out of print, but if that doesn't bother you I'd recommend tracking down a copy.

    One of my first cookbooks was Sunset Cookbook of Breads. I still remember the first loaves of white bread I made, they were great. As you said, there were clear simple recipes, ample pictures (black and white) that were meant to instruct rather than just sit there and look pretty, it was really a great beginning book. I have a copy that I bought at a second hand book store several years ago, it's a little different than the one I had but still basically the same. My friend's son was here a while ago because he wanted to learn how to bake bread (he's 25), and we used that book. The loaves still came out great.

    • Like 4
  11. Interesting choices. I think the book one chooses would depend somewhat on whether you think the best way to learn to cook is by learning science and technique, or by following recipes and seeing what happens. Not that the two can't be combined, but different books will concentrate on different things.

  12. 10 minutes ago, gfweb said:

    At least it is better than Joy of Cooking. By a big factor.

     

    I recall a lot shouting  over on that other food site when I said t hat JoC was a POS a few years ago. It was like I said something nasty about people's mothers.

    I disagree entirely. I think Bittman is pretty much of a sham, and Joy of Cooking in filled with an incredible amount of information. I don't think you're saying anything about people's mothers, but I'd like to know why you think Joy of Cooking is  "POS." That's very different from just saying that you don't like it. 

  13. I'm no Bittman fan, but sounds like the gathering is supposed to be a social thing with food. Will anyone care if they're eating chicken braised in soy sauce with vinegar and garlic instead of chicken braised in vinegar with soy sauce and garlic, as long as it's good? I used to have that book and I gave it away a long time ago, and I am not a good cook; his entire "persona" rubs me the wrong way. But I know I've made things from it that I enjoyed. Maybe look though it until you find something suitable to your standards, I'm sure it's possible. (And no, I'm not being snarky.) 

     

    (And Bittman will never, not in a million years, come close to Joy of Cooking!)

    • Like 3
  14. 1 minute ago, lindag said:

    At the nearby Dairy Queen I have to ASK for my change back!

    This was commonplace in NY a while ago, but it seems to have stopped for the most part, at least in places I've been to lately. There is little that annoyed me more than this practice. I don't think it's because they cared about the money, it was usually just a few cents, but was more because they couldn't be bothered with the pennies. I don't care about the few pennies either, but it seriously bothered me that someone else thought they could make decisions about my money, that is completely out of line and I had no qualms telling the cashier to give me my full change. I ignore tip cups altogether. (They make me think of that Jackie Mason routine on Starbucks, he got that part spot-on.) In restaurants I usually tip 15-20% depending on all sorts of things. I don't do any high-end dining. The structure of our economy basically dictates that tipping is the norm and it will pretty much stay that way for quite a while. I'd like to see everyone (everyone, not just waitstaff) get a living wage, (and I'd also like to see lower rents), but we have a long way to go for that. 

  15. 1 hour ago, Kim Shook said:

    I'd love a little help with the lemon cakes posted above, please!  They are so pretty and the flavor is wonderful.  But, as I noted, they are a little tough.  I've done some research and something that I found suggested substituting some of the eggs with milk to increase tenderness.  Does this make sense to you?  Anyway - here's the recipe.  It would be so great if someone more experienced than me would look at it and see if you could offer some advice!  Thank you!

    I'd replace the sour cream with buttermilk. Nothing beats buttermilk for tenderness in cakes. 

    • Like 1
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