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CKatCook

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Posts posted by CKatCook

  1. If I know a guest has a preference before they come to dinner I will do my best to accomodate it.

    but one time I had someone at my house for dinner I was putting the finishing touches on the meal and she was standing over me telling me everything she didn't like about it....she was quickly told to go to the mc donalds up the street if she didn't like it.....

    I understand preferences, but don't be rude about it. I have eaten some awful meals in my day in the name of not hurting my hosts feelings. I expect the same treatment, or tell me before hand your prefrences (I usually ask) or just don't eat it....

  2. I think the proofing may be the issue. I placed the yeast in 110 (I measured) water and let it set until there was a "head" on it like beer. Then added in the milk, honey, butter all heated to 110 degrees. Then added to the dry ingridents. And it would not rise for nothing. The recipe called for it to be punched down and risen, about 2 more times, but I could barely get it to rise once. I even turned on my oven and placed it on top the oven to see if that would help.

    I used the dry packet, the recipe called for 2 oz compressed, I used two packet "compartments". It comes in a packet that is sectioned off into three sections.

  3. I made this honey whole wheat, with (I don't have the recipe in front of me, I am sad to say) milk, honey, butter, a combo of bread flour and whole wheat. I used rapid rise yeast instead of compressed yeast. I could not find compressed yeast ANYWHERE I looked so I went with the rapid rise. it came out really dense and then I realized anytime I try to make bread with the rapid rise it does not rise as much and the bread comes out real dense and heavy. It does not have the light "airy" texture. It almost has a cake like texture.

    I realize with out a recipe this may be hard to analyize, but could it be the yeast? Since I cannot find compressed like the recipe calls for, can I use plain, non rapid rise yeast? Does anyone know of good yeast?

    thanks!

  4. gallery_34971_5274_31662.jpg

    I hope this post makes it!!! I have been trying to post a picture here for a solid hour! :blink:

    Sorry the picture is so dark, I am still fighting with my camera and lighting...

    I used butter in the crust, and only a little sugar and cinnamon in the filling...

    I smells soooooo good....

    edit to add: Yeah!!! I did it!!! I got a picture to post!!!!

  5. I saw that picture of Chufi's apple pie and and it is beautiful!

    I think I will try that mix of braeburns and granny smith, mostly braeburns.

    I have been wondering, has anyone tried a making their pie crust with lard?? I never heard of vodka...I just may have to try that...

  6. I saw the whole series and while I am not by any stretch a chef, Dale's food just looked better to me. I thought the chocolate cake at the end of Hung's meal should have lost it for him. A fantastic meal, then you end it with something so everyday....

  7. Watching the first episode right now, how much are they trying to rip off Top Chef!? Im losing patience! lol You'd think as cutting edge food network can be, they'd not mirror another networks show. (grr)

    Eh, cool to see Rhulman, one of my favorite writers and all the chefs competing are bad asses.

    It didn't feel like a Top Chef rip off to me. In fact, I kept wishing Top Chef had done great challenges like this rather than some of the ridiculously inane ones they did with insufficient resources.

    I think the one thing that IC was clear about was that they were looking for someone who could project a personal identity, style and "voice" with their food. TC didn't appear to be as much about skill as it did about playing a game with an often bazaar set of parameters. IC is pretty straightforward.

    I loved watching the chefs break down the raw components, and I loved that they docked them for errors. A big part of IC, especially the original Japanese version, were the wild and often wacky desserts and ice creams made from the theme ingredient. So tonights challenge was very much in keeping with the history and spirit of IC.

    On TC 4 I'd much rather watch chefs doing a challenge like this than feeding Padma in bed.

    That is one reason I really don't follow Top Chef much. The challenges are really not what I would expect to find to determine who is a "top chef". This show looks good. I found myself getting ticked at the equipment in there. I seemed nothing worked. Right now I am rooting for Besh.....

  8. Oh man, I knew I should have checked here before all the baking I did today....while eating apples.....

    Oh well....

    I can't find Northern Spy apples anywhere around here and I hear they make the best pies. I usually do braeburns (or however you spell them) I tried an all granny smith last week that didn't turn out too good in the filling. I cannot seem to get the spice right.

  9. Chef - you pretty much follow the method I follow except I had my butter COLD, not cool. I think that was the difference.

    I was surprised using margarine in this didn't effect the taste more. Normally I detest the thought of using the stuff, but it turned out pretty good. So good in fact what I normally give away to co-workers, my hubby demanded I leave at home this time....:)!

    Thank you everyone for your wise and wonderful help!

  10. Thank you, Thank you! The book gives the reason for the margarine being that it makes a flakier pastry in the end. What I wound up doing is just want you suggested, going forward with it, folding it in thirds rolling a little, chill again, repeat. And by that time all the margarine was worked into the dough. I now have them formed and they are rising.

    So I will see when I bake them how they come out....If I can get my camera to work I will post a pictures (I doubt it though, I have been fighting with that camera for ages now....LOL)

  11. My loving hubby bought me this book called "the professional pastry chef" and I have been baking and baking away. I decided today to try my hand at danish pastry. So I formed the margarine square, the recipe called for margarine not butter, formed my dough around the square, sealed it in, and rolled carefully as the book said, the problem? there is big blobs of margarine in my dough now....is that normal? they are still there after several turns of the dough and it is in the refrige now for chilling....the blobs are still there....

    thanks!!

  12. thank you everyone for your great replies. While learning all about duck, and cooking duck...before I actually purchase one, I went to a local chinese place and had some duck. It was wonderful..although the taste was a bit like a real gamey chicken. The meat was rich, and moist! I was expecting the texture of chicken, so I was surprised.

    As soon as I cook one, I will take pictures and find this thread.

    Thank you!!!

    edit to add: I have been reading recipes on epicurious and they say to salt the duck the day before you use it....why would you do that??

  13. Here in the southern part of the US it has been about unbearable lately. My solution...my crock pot! It does not heat the house, I can make enough for two nights. Rotessorie (sp?) chicken from the grocery store, deboned and made into tacos, quesadillas, my rice cooker will not heat up the house, so I can make rice. Between that, cold cereal and eating out, grill out (too hot for even that lately!) sandwhiches, saleds. That is about it in this heat. (the crock pot is only when we get sick of eating out, sandwhiches, saleds, cold cereal. :rolleyes:

    edit to add: Also, it is not uncommon to see me up at 5 in the morning cooking dinner to put in the fridge to nuke it later.

  14. (Yes, I also thought about rolling the skin around some type of dowel, deep frying it like a pasta tube and piping the potato inside.  I quickly dismissed that idea as lunacy.  I'm not even trying to get this woman into bed.)

    ok...where do you live again?? (just kidding of course)

    I eat them after cooking. And here I thought I was the only one crazy enough to do that!

  15. After a lengthy hunt for duck, I finally found a butcher here in town that keeps fresh duck and I am think of dropping what is a small fortune for one. 5-6 lbs, whole, about 20 bucks. My question is, for my first duck -> ever -> I would like to do something fantastic. What recipe would you give a duck newbie???

    :raz:

    Thanks!

  16. I really want to try lobster, (I mean cooking it on my own) but I am so worried the poor thing is suffering terribly during the process. Can someone tell me if the poor little guys are in pain or not?

    (Yes, as an old animal rights activist I worry about this, but I do love a good lobster. Go figure.)

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