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miladyinsanity

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Posts posted by miladyinsanity

  1. What about mangoes?  Aren't they yeet hay, too?  I am breaking out after eating 5 over the course of two days.  Or I'm just stressed...

    From a "western" point of view many people are allergic to mango skins, they are somehow related to Cashews and even farther to poison ivy.

    tracey

    Coincidentally, a blogger I read mentioned this just yesterday.

    God help you if you don't wash your hands after skinning mangoes. Or if you have to skin too many without gloves. *remembers palms as red as a monkey's butt and itched like fire ants*

  2. The yolk cooks in the microwave fairly quickly and has a nice hard-boiled texture without the green color. I make sure that the yolks are pierced with a fork, though the same result might be had with whisking them all together, and I use plastic wrap on top of the microwaveable bowl. It cooks in a short moment.

    Egg whites, though, I have too many of... They might find themselves in a Concorde soon.

    That cherry/tapioca thing is an annoying curiosity!

    Okay. I'll try this. I'm planning to make PH's Parisian Flan pretty soon.

  3. I've given up on my attempt to make the perfect cinnamon rolls because even with the Pioneer Woman recipe... Sigh.

    I'll just be eating a lot of bread pudding, I suppose.

    What's wrong with them? Maybe someone could help you troubleshoot.

    They inevitably turn out 'crunchy,' for lack of a better word. Vanessa/Desiderio had this problem with them too, and started a topic for them. I thought it was the flour, but I'm using pastry flour...is that a problem?

  4. I think it's an Austrian technique, and it's not for pie crust so much as it is for tart crust. I believe it's supposed to result in a very sandy texture--like sable cookies.

    If I could figure out what to do with the hard-boiled egg white, I'd give it a try.

    Eat it! Very Atkins. :smile:

    If there are a lot, you can add a single/few whole eggs and make a less rich egg salad.

    Alternatively, you can separate the eggs, freeze the whites, then zap the broken yolks in the microwave.

    You do not understand.

    Hard-boiled eggs are evil. Plus my brother told me that if I made a less rich egg salad, he wouldn't eat it.

    You're right, it was for tart crusts. And I was looking specifically for linzer torte recipes, so it makes sense that it would be an Austrian technique. Two out of two, you are impressive!! :smile:

    Can you make "hard boiled" egg yolks in the microwave? Interesting idea, I never thought of that. But then, I never thought of just using the yolks!

    Many thanks. (I think I'll give this technique a miss for the time being.)

    I don't know. I've been meaning to try poaching the egg yolk only.

    I've seen a PH recipe with this too, so I guess it must work.

  5. Oh. I always parbake. I didn't know that you weren't supposed to parbake the bottom crust for double crust pies. I just thought what worked for single crust would work for double crust too.

    The main problem would be attaching the top crust to the bottom crust securely enough to prevent major leakage. Usually you would fold the top crust under the bottom crust and flute. Which you cannot do if it is prebaked.

    As far as pizza stones go, I find that even after preheating the stone for an hour that is still blocks the heat. My crusts do not brown as well or as quickly as when they are just on a rack.

    Hmm... Leakage? It's not happened to me either.

    I've never had issues with prebaking and then pouring in the filling and pressing the crust to seal on the edges.

    That said, my pies aren't very pretty.

  6. I think it's an Austrian technique, and it's not for pie crust so much as it is for tart crust. I believe it's supposed to result in a very sandy texture--like sable cookies.

    If I could figure out what to do with the hard-boiled egg white, I'd give it a try.

    Eat it! Very Atkins. :smile:

    If there are a lot, you can add a single/few whole eggs and make a less rich egg salad.

    Alternatively, you can separate the eggs, freeze the whites, then zap the broken yolks in the microwave.

    You do not understand.

    Hard-boiled eggs are evil. Plus my brother told me that if I made a less rich egg salad, he wouldn't eat it.

  7. I think it's an Austrian technique, and it's not for pie crust so much as it is for tart crust. I believe it's supposed to result in a very sandy texture--like sable cookies.

    If I could figure out what to do with the hard-boiled egg white, I'd give it a try.

  8. Not sure whether gelatin helps if your cream isn't whipping up. It's usually used to keep the cream whipped up, isn't it?

    I poured lemon syrup into my little pistachio cakes.

    The problem was, I didn't taste the syrup, and they were So Horrifyingly SOUR!

    I tossed the cakes.

  9. Hi everyone, thanks to those helping me out with my catastro-cream. (My crea-lemma? :raz: )

    The cream here is sold on the regular shelves. Imported "whipping cream," "heavy cream," and "cooking cream" are sold from the chiller, and I suspect these are the proper ones to use, though they cost 2-3 times as much. I haven't bought them.

    Anyway, the regular shelf cream: I have two different types here, both interestingly enough by Nestlé. The one in a tin can is "Nestlé Cream. Premium Quality. It is preserved solely by the perfectly clean and hygienic process of complete sterilization. Do not freeze, except when making ice cream. Manufactured in Brazil." No info on the butterfat percentage or anything.

    The second is a tetra-pak: "Nestlé All-Purpose Cream. Easy Whip! For easy desserts, just chill... for at least an hour. Cut open about 1/2 inch in the corner and squeeze cream directly on cookies, muffins or ice cream. Ingredients: Water, Milkfat, Nonfat milk solids, emulsifier and stabilizer." From the website:

    A sterilized, recombined and homogenized cream with 27% fat; UHT processed for long-life.

    A convenient ready-to-use UHT cream that turns ordinary desserts to great-tasting delicacies which the family can enjoy with its handy packaging and superior whipping ability perfect for dessert toppings.

    Source: http://www.nestle.com.ph/corpsite/content/...=Creams&puid=21

    Though the picture is hopelessly out-of-date, so I don't know if any of it is still true. True enough, it is thick, but I've never successfully whipped it into a billowy mass.

    There are two kinds of UHT cream. The kind that must be refridgerated--you'll find this in the dairy section together with the butter--and the kind that does not need to be refridgerated.

    The latter cannot be whipped, or does not whip up very well.

    So you're right, you do need to get the kind from the chiller section.

  10. A mix of half and half glutinous and long grain for joongzi, and some with only glutinous rice.

    I am very horrified by this. Why would you want to eat less glutinous rice?

    Sticky rice tends to be very rich when boiled for two and a half hours with pork belly, lap cheung, mushrooms, ha mai, peanuts, etc, etc. The richness is not as noticeable when you mix in the long grain. I use jasmin because I love the fragrance, the texture of the rice, and this way, I can eat TWO joongzi instead of one. :raz::laugh:

    Hah.

    I eat TWO joongzi made with all glutinous rice.

    And Sheena? The drawers only keep out moths. They don't keep out the black bugs.

  11. Do you think they make it in Texas, say in Houston where my parents are?

    I'm guessing, but I think the answer is no. They need a period of cool weather to ...I don't know. Fruit or something. But I know the growing season requires a period of cool weather, otherwise the yield is low and the fruit isn't fleshy.

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