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JayBassin

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Posts posted by JayBassin

  1. As with most choux puffs, let them cool in the oven with the door adjar. If they're large, you may even consider taking them out hot, slicing the top open, and putting them back in to cool a bit more (this will help dry out the insides).

  2. What I really miss about the area is the town of Gardena. Technically, it is about five miles away, but is home to the FINEST Japanese food outside of Tokyo.

    There are a ton of places...what kind of stuff do you want...I live in the area and write the local newspaper reviews....got a million places I can tell you about...

    Whew! You guys are great! I will be staying at the Crown Plaza Redondo Beach. I will have a car. I probably will need to stick relatively close to the hotel for lunches (probably 1.5 hours for lunch including travel), but can drive around for dinners. I'm partial to Japanese food, but I'm good with any quality restaurant regardless of cuisine. I'm really looking for anything unusual or unique to the area.

    Thanks again.

  3. Try rolling the cake with the baked top inside. I think cake rolls crack because the top dries out when it bakes, and then is stretched by the rolling. Putting the filling onto the dry top may moisten it enough, but even then, any compression cracks won't show. The bottom of the cake becomes the outside, and I think it's soft enough not to crack. It also looks nicer.

  4. I just looked up the Libby's recipe. They instruct you to roll up "starting with the narrow end." If I interpret this right, they intend you to have a roll that's 10" long and pretty thick around. I always roll up my roulades from the long end--getting a 15" roll. What do the rest of you do?

  5. JayBassin -- how much do you consider a splash, are we saying a tablespoon or literally a splash? I have some berries in the fridge that I'm worried will get moldy and would like to try this on.

    Thanks for the tip

    I don't measure, but I would guess it's a tablespoon or two. Just enough to "wet" the berries. I use either a baggie or a tupperware-style sealable bin just large enough to hold the berries, then I turn the container upside down or gently slosh it about to get the vodka to coat all the berries.

    It's IMPORTANT that the berries (or other food product) is DRY before adding the vodka. Any water or juice will just dilute the alcohol and render it less effective.

  6. Do the blueberries not absorb some of the alcohol? could you do the same for strawberries or raspberries?

    I've tried strawberries and didn't like the resulting texture; they get soft and mushy (but they don't get moldy). Blueberries do absorb some alcohol, but they remain round and firm. Cooking the berries drives off the alcohol. Using them raw either doesn't matter (as in a fruit tart) or even on cold cereal, the amount of alcohol is negligible. I've also used vodka to film little plastic containers of homemade glace de viande and demi glace, which keep indefinitely in the fridge.

  7. Do any of you fill your pumpkin rolls with anything besides cream cheese frosting?  It's too sweet and too sour for me.  Whipped cream sounds like a natural, but perhaps this cake is not sweet enough to contrast with the cream.  How about filled with whipped cream and served with a caramel sauce?

    I fill pumpkin or pecan rolls with a pumpkin pastry cream with a bit of bourbon or rum mixed in. I used to cook the pumpkin puree into the custard, but someone on the P/B forum (probably Wendy!) suggested simply stirring in canned pumpkin to pre-cooked custard. Lot easier. You should strain the pumpkin custard before using, though.

  8. I haven't seen this subject on eGullet, so I thought I'd share a trick I've been using for years: using a splash of (cheap) vodka to preserve opened food from mold. I put tomato paste in a plastic container and top it with a film of vodka; I splash vodka into a baggie with cheese; I put vodka into a sealable plastic tub with blueberries in the fridge. This retards growth of mold and is pretty tasteless. I think it keeps the products for a very long time. I know I wasn't the inventor of this trick. Any other eGulleteers using similar tricks or on different products?

  9. If you have potted plants in the window sill, you've probably read that it's best to water them by putting them in a dish of water and allowing capillary action to draw the water up from the bottom. If you pour water from above into a pot with dry potting mix, the water will trickle through fissures and flow out the bottom without wetting all the soil It's the same principle in a coffe filter. Ideally, you'd saturate the filter and grounds from below and allow capillary action to pull hot water up, but I don't know of any coffee machines that operate that way. Second best is to allow the water to sit in the filter, saturating the grounds, before beginning the brew.

  10. Katie, whacking off that knob or severing those tendons down by the knob help eliminate that stringiness, greatly.

    Absolutely! Cut off the ankle knob before braising or roasting. When cooked thoroughly, the tendons revealed at the end slip out easily, leaving just the meat.

  11. Jay - do you think a slightly prolonged delay after initially saturating the grounds might help to reduce the "channeling" effect?

    Saturating the grounds before brewing starts would ensure that the entire volume of grounds contributed to the brew for the entire brewing time. Wetting the filter helps speed up the flow of water through the grounds. Wetting both the filter and the grounds before brewing would be ideal.

  12. Turkey-leg "au vin"---coq au vin with turkey legs. I make it regularly. Cheap turkey legs often come from older birds (leftovers from humongous turkey breasts), and so are perfect for slow braising.

  13. If you percolate water through dry coffe grounds in a dry filter, the water "wets" grains and follows inter-grain channels to the filter. Water will flow through these wetted channels preferentially. The first patches of filter that feel the water will wet, and due to surface tension, subsequent water will flow through the initially wet patches. The rest of the filter may take a few minutes to saturate. Therefore, the initial flow of percolated water will follow the same narrow inter-grain channels rather than spreading out evenly to saturate the dry coffe quickly.

  14. I'm converted! My old recipe is now crumpled up in a little ball in the trash. This one definitely goes in the "best of" recipe box!

    Glowing testimonials, but I'm curious: what exactly makes these so different? I notice the sweetened condensed milk, but isn't that pretty much the same as adding sugar to the recipe? The only other thing different appears to be a very slightly higher ratio of liquid than the traditional 1:1. Any ideas about what makes it so much better?

  15. I agree with CulinaryBear: instead of a stiff biga, try a wet poolish (100% hydration for the poolish) and use a softer flour (or a mix of flours to get the protein down). Otherwise, sounds good.

    ps--I usually do the final rise on a strip of parchment paper that goes into the oven on preheated quarry tiles, just to avoid the risk of sticking to the peel. I also don't like cleaning out all the accumulated burnt bits of semolina from the oven floor.

  16. i'm having problems.  I've made pies for years and been very happy with my crusts.  In the last week the 2 crusts I've made have been very tough.  The first I made in the Food processor, the second using a pastry cutter.  Both doughs had chunks of fat in them when they were done, and both had streaks of fat once they were rolled.  I worked the dough as little as possible.

    Are there any other reasons why the dough may be tough?  There was some vinegar in it as well.  Any thoughts?

    It appears you are an experienced pie-dough maker, so technique doesn't sound like the problem. Was the flour different? Did you switch from low-gluten (cake flour, pastry flour, ap flour) to bread flour?

  17. Look in the frozen aisle--where they have frozen tart shells, bread and pizza doughs--that's where you'll find sheets of frozen puff.  Then check the ingredients--last time I looked Pepperidge Farm puff was not all butter but one that is all butter that has fairly wide distribution is DuFours. I've used it, it's quite good.

    Whole Foods carries frozen DuFours. It's quite good---much more tasty than Pepperidge Farm, which is crisco-based.

  18. Just got some great bone-in rib eye from Safeway yesterday (on sale for $4.99/lb)

    Not to be too cynical, but I would question whether the meat is that good to begin with. Safeway and Giant sometimes sell USDA "Good" grade (less fat, less marbling) at a discount; the steaks are tough. Doesn't matter how you cook them unless you braise them. If they're actually choice grade, I would go with the recommendations to cook them all the way through on medium or medium high heat for 3 minutes per side, flipping every 3 minutes. Flip whenever you see beeds of juice on the top surface. After about 10-12 minutes, it should be done. Salt after the first flip. Add pepper after the second-to-last flip.

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