
JoNorvelleWalker
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Batch 42: 90g blanched Spanish almonds 90g apricot kernels 350g water 280g sugar 60ml Wray & Nephew Overproof And I got a chance to use my new homogenizer!
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My kitchen floor is sticky because I spilled lime juice on it.
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I shall never again spill lime juice on the kitchen floor. But if I do it shan't matter much. The floor is already sticky.
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I feel a little foolish. When I went to wash the shaker there was a big glob of coconut puree at the bottom. Shaking was not enough to get the coconut cream into suspension. The improvement I noted was almost certainly due to using less cream of coconut than in my prior pina colada. I could try homogenization but I doubt that it will happen. It's not like I were making a mai tai or something.
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Cream of coconut is sweetened coconut puree: (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) Coconut cream is simply coconut puree. I find if I use all cream of coconut the drink is far too sweet. I might try omitting the coconut cream and using just a small amount of cream of coconut, so that pineapple flavor would be more prominent. I'd cut down on the rum too I'd think.
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Shaken pina colada over shaved ice... 3 oz Cana Brava 3 oz fresh pineapple juice 2 Tablespoons cream of coconut 2 Tablespoons coconut cream juice of one lime
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This may be too late to be useful but I have been evaluating an 11 inch frying pan from WANGYUANJI, the same company whose wok I suggested earlier. (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) Earlier today I used the WANGYUANJI to make an omelet. Results were as good as with the non-stick pan I usually use for omelets. I recently evaluated a more expensive Made In carbon steel frying pan but did not care for it as much. Both pans were used on induction. Alas, my Darto pans all rusted. Lastly, the WANGYUANJI pans and woks come in gift boxes. A nice touch (that may indicate the pans are overpriced).
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The temperature of the drum is not adjustable, only its rotation speed. I could have gotten one of the units with a more powerful compressor, but I could not have lifted it. Also according to the manual, the bigger units are not air cooled. They require a dedicated water line to cool the compressor. @Ddanno Is the base for granita any different from the base for popsicles?
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I juiced a pineapple and have half a liter of 13.5 Brix pineapple juice left. However I'd like to start with some liquid ingredients more expendable than my lovely pineapple juice. Again, I'm not wanting the texture of sorbet. Why would popsicle recipes not be a good place to start?
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Sorry, I don't understand.
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I have a "slushie" machine sitting on my kitchen counter where the Ninja Creami used to be. (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) So far I have used the appliance only for shaving unflavored ice. The method consists of a compressor cooled drum that rotates at variable speed against a sharp blade. I am impressed how well it works. It takes only about a minute before ice starts coming out. Despite the name, the result is nothing like a slushie, as I understand a slushie. I'm not looking for sorbet texture. I can do sorbet in the Ninja, which now lives in the bedroom. What I am looking for is a lighter, icier texture. There is a dial to adjust the texture from little frozen curls to the finest powdered snow.
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Not popsicles exactly, but I would welcome some popsicle related advice. I am wanting to make a flavored shaved ice confection. Desserts such as snow cones, raspadilla, and shikashika are made by pouring flavored syrup over shaved ice. But what I want to do is freeze the mixture and then shave it. My assumption is such a recipe would be closer to a popsicle recipe than to a snow cone recipe?
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That's what they would like you to believe. Here we have "Cornish game hens" that are just baby chickens. I've been to Cornwall. Didn't see any little fish. Just bad ice cream.
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Success. Three hours at 93C. Final temperature 87C. Meat could be cut with a table knife. Juicy. Still difficult to chew, but that is a reflection on the condition of my teeth, not the fault of the spareribs. For next time I think I'd skip the rub and just use a little salt and garlic powder.
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The battery takes years and years to run down though. However it did eventually run down on my older Zojirushi.