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rickster

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Posts posted by rickster

  1. Pulled this book from the bookcase for the first time in quite a while last weekend and made the Great Grains muffins. I was not impressed with the results. I used a mix of dried cranberries and cherries for the fruit plus some walnuts. I think the problem was partially that I used a coarse grind cornmeal for the cornmeal component and it never hydrated and remained gritty in the finished muffin. Plus for me, something just seemed off in the flavor profile, maybe needing some spice with the maple syrup, or maybe no maple syrup at all.

  2. Do restaurant dress codes have roots in the depession era, when not being able to dress might mean you'd not be able to pay ?

    I would suspect that it was more a social class thing and preserving a certain atmosphere. At one time it would be a given that everyone would be in a suit and tie just because that was the social norm. When the norm began to slip, some institutions thought it necessary to remind people via the code of the type of atmosphere they wanted in the restaurant

  3. There's a book called "Baking Artisan Bread" by Ciril Hitz which has a croissant formula I made last weekend. One of the variations he suggests is a hazelnut or almond snail, in which the croissant dough is spread with a ground nut/sugar/corn syrup paste, rolled up, sliced and baked. Would be pretty easy to add raisins to this, although he doesn't suggest the traditional pastry cream filling.

  4. I have a recipe for a large apple nougat tart, that uses puff pastry and cooked apples. But the topping, which looks similar to this is made of 100g sliced almonds, 100g white sugar and 3 egg whites. You beat the egg whites lightly with a fork and then combine all the ingredients and pour on the tart. I will admit this topping looks a bit more caramely than mine. But you could try the tart with raw apples piled up and the nougat poured and shaped on top of them. The nougat might set before the apples shrink, creating the effect.

  5. I guess to me the question is what is the attractive part of the ravioli to the patient?

    If it is the filling, you can make gnudi or malfatti, which is essentially the filling without the pasta, and sauce it.

    If it is the pasta, she is unlikely (I would think) to be attracted by substitutes like vegetables, and you have to look at grain based pasta substitutes like quinoa that try to mimic wheat flour.

  6. On careful inspection, the tart appeared to be made of pate sucree, a layer of frangipane, apple, then a great crunchy /caramelized almond topping.

    Sounds like you've got it worked out!! :biggrin:

    That was my thought too. Seems like a standard apple frangipane tart plus the nut topping. Only question is whether the nuts and caramel are prepared separately and applied after baking, or before baking.

  7. Completely petty of my (and hypocritical of me because I'm constantly butchering foreign languages), but could someone tell Jennifer that "ceviche" is a Spanish word and that final vowel is not silent.

    Overall, this looks like a strong group with a few obvious clunkers. Guess we'll just have to wait a few weeks for the judges to thin the herd. Then the real games can began (unless, of course, someone good does something stupid).

    Don't you think that is a hipster affectation like vege? That was my take on it.

    My take was that it might be the way they pronounce it in her and Ripert's kitchen as sort of a shorthand, "One order of the scallop cevich'"

  8. For an autolysed dough - would I just mix the total volume of flour and water together first, and put in the fridge... then after 30 min. take out and add yeast and mix a bit more? How can the yeast be evenly distributed?

    I've found that with this high hydration and a long retardation, you don't need to mix the dough all that well, just mix the water flour and yeast together and mix briefly. It will look too dry at first, but don't worry.

  9. ok... so I need help... what am I doing wrong?

    My first attempt used King Arthur "Italian style" flour - http://www.kingarthurflour.com/shop/items/...tyle-flour-3-lb

    I mixed about 2 cups of dry flour with about a half teaspoon of SAF instant yeast, then mixed with water for a 70% hydration by weight, but it looked a little dry, so I added a bit more water so it would all come together so probably a 72-73% hydration... This was mixed in a large stainless steel bowl, covered with plastic wrap and fermented at room temp overnight for probably about 15 hours or so...

    Then, I poured the extremely wet and sticky dough into a ziplock bag (poured is not exactly accurate - more like scooped handfuls of dough and slopped into the bag) and let sit in the refrigerator (about 37F) for 7 days....

    On the day of baking, I put a large terracotta saucer upside down in my cold oven - then set the temp of my oven to about 250 to gently preheat the stone... then cranked the heat to 500-550F and let it sit for over an hour....  My oven thermometer which has a max of 500 was reading way off the scale...

    I took the dough out of the refrigerator probably about 2 hours before use... and when I had my mise complete (first trial was filetti style - cherry tomatoes, buffala mozzerella, basil, EVO, salt) put a crapload of AP flour on my work board.... scooped out a large handful of extremely wet/sticky dough (which stuck to the bag, my forearms, seemingly everywhere) and put on the pile of flour - I then dusted the top of the blob with a generous  dusting of AP flour and gave the dough a couple of folds before I nudged/stretched it with my fingertips...  For King Arthur to claim their flour makes an extensible dough is an understatement - if I would have sneezed, the dough would have ripped apart...  Then quickly throwing on the toppings and slid it onto my stone with great difficulty - I'll definitely try the parchment paper trick next time!!!   But, to my surprise, I did not find a soft pillowy crust as a result... instead, the outside of the crust was hard like a crusty breadstick, while the inside was soft-ish...  Baking time was approx. 7 minutes....

    What did I do wrong?  Help!!!!!

    A couple of thoughts. Compared to Sam Kinsey's recipe upthread (which I have tried successfully) you have a lot of yeast relative to flour for a 7 day fermentation. He uses half a teaspoon for 1000 grams of flour. You're using the same amount of yeast for about 260g of flour. It's possible it was overproofed.

    I think the hydration was too high

    Finally (more in the line of speculation) I've used the King Arthur Italian flour and it seems lower gluten than the regular AP flour. I wonder if it breaks down with the long fermentation?

  10. I don't have any recipes at hand, but a scan online indicates that the rule of thumb is by weight, 50% of the flour amount. Which would be roughly consistent with your recipe.

    Regular puff pastry dough has to be pretty elastic to handle all the stretching and folding with the butter encased, so it doesn't surprise me to see a relatively high water amount, compared to say pie dough.

  11. I don't think it's that annoying at all. It's the same as asking someone to pronounce gnocchi.

    As edited, it came across as arrogant. Still not sure how it relates to cooking skills. Not sure I would kick out Emeril Lagasse as a sous chef just because he mispronounces any word that's not English (and some English ones too), for example.

  12. Sorry to see Lo go. Seems to me she bore the brunt of the the last minute changes much more so than the other contestants.

    True, but it's hard to see how centering your buffet around a raw bar was going to get you a win. It doesn't really show off any cooking skills.

    Chiarello's "What's my name?" was very annoying, on the other hand, I didn't have a problem with the rest of the way he handled the sous chefs. It was a contest with a limited amount of time to get a product out and he, not the sous chefs was going home if they screwed up. So he wanted to make sure that they could execute his plan.

    Bayless seemd to go heavy on the avocado with the guacamole and the ice cream. maybe that's why Keller got the win.

  13. There's a lot I liked about the Julia parts, but I thought the structure of the movie was lacking and would much rather have seen a straight biography of Julia Child with more background information in it. 

    Well, in book form, there's also Julia's memoir, My Life In France, that was the basis for the part of the film about her, plus there's a biography of her whole life, Appetite For Life.

  14. I didn't see it, but you've mentioned something that got me to thinking about a previous "star". Wasn't there a winner two years ago named Amy Findley (sp), who did a couple of shows with a "my time in France and cooking French easy," sort of loose theme. Whatever happened to her?

    Yes. She was the contestant the the judges criticized for playing up her time in France thinking it would come across as snooty and would alienate viewers. The story was that she decided to quit after doing her six episode stint. She's no longer with the network.

  15. Sooo...did anyone watch the new show?

    I did. It's a little bit of an odd, "Gourmet Cooking For Under $10" show. Surprising number of references to her life in France, for a network that in the past has looked down on that type of stuff. She made an interesting potato/bacon/gruyere/cream gratin encased in pastry that looked delicious but had a zillion calories, plus salad and an applesauce granita. Also threw out a lot of tips that I think most people would find useful.

    She seemed very nervous.

    I would call it an OK start.

  16. I over-poached the apricots. Kerry's recipe is for pears, I think. Apricots take more like 3-4 minutes to poach

    I don't think you need to poach the apricots at all, probably not the peaches either unless they're on the hard side

  17. I thought it was the most entertaining episode so far, mostly because of the variety of dishes they cooked and lack of constraints. I think Moonen would have won even if he sent out an underdone QF dish.

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