Rajala
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Everything posted by Rajala
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This should be food grade, it's for tobacco products you have in your mouth. I guess I ought to ask, but since I'm just playing around for myself - I'll go with this for now, already placed the order. 😮 Thanks Paul, I'll try with lecithin as well - I have that at home. Only liquid form though, but that might work as well I guess. Since this polysorbate product is liquid.
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Hah, that's a good suggestion. I immediately found some where I live, much cheaper. Thanks to these people doing weird tobacco products at home.
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I've been looking at this recipe https://www.chefsteps.com/activities/dairy-free-pistachio-gelato but this polysorbate thing for food seems kind of hard to source. I can only find one source of it and that's in US with shipping and customs etc. Any other substance you can substitute it for?
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Yeah yeah, I can easy do this myself in Cinema 4D, it's a simple shape with a texture. Faking itself isn't hard at all. We've had a discussion earlier about fake stuff, so that's why I thought it would be a funny discussion.
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Your Daily Sweets: What Are You Making and Baking? (2017 – )
Rajala replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
I don't think you can get Swedish apricots. But these are from France, if I trust the guy I bought them from. Not sure I do - they're probably Turkish haha. But they do taste good. -
Your Daily Sweets: What Are You Making and Baking? (2017 – )
Rajala replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
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Your Daily Sweets: What Are You Making and Baking? (2017 – )
Rajala replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
Thank you! -
Your Daily Sweets: What Are You Making and Baking? (2017 – )
Rajala replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
Yes and almost, I guess. Lengthwise on a mandoline, and hot syrup poured over the rhubarb strips. I let them rest for a few minutes in the hot syrup, to get them more flexible as you wrote. -
Your Daily Sweets: What Are You Making and Baking? (2017 – )
Rajala replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
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I make a regular caramel by pouring 100 grams of water in a saucepan, followed by 300 grams of caster sugar and 50 grams of glucose. Deglaze with 200 grams of cream when you get that dark amber color and it's basically ready. I don't boil it anymore after that, it gets a nice consistency as is. This is a great base I believe, I used it for my hazelnut caramel where I add 50 grams of hazelnut paste. For the salty liquorice caramel, I just add q.s. of this https://lakridsbybulow.com/products/salty-liquorice-syrup/170g
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Yeah, the bacon is there - but I would probably try to enhance it more if I were to make this again, like you say; with fat in the ganache as well. The lingonberry chocolate is 100 grams of freeze dried lingonberry, 380 grams och cocoa butter, 520 grams of sugar and 5 grams of lecithin. The potato crisp is "grinded" potato chips that I mixed with some almond butter, salt and cocoa butter to get a better and more solid texture. There's a dish called "raggmunk", from where I live, that's potato pancake served with a few slices of fried pork belly and lingonberry jam, so I tried to make that into a bonbon.
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Thank you! It's a bit weird that I loathe coffee as a drink, but in sweets and pastry? All good!
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So I made a batch of lingonberry "chocolate" today. The one change I did was to add 5 grams of sunflower lecithin to the recipe (380 gram cocoa butter, 100 gram lingonberry powder, 520 gram caster sugar.) And that made all the difference in the viscosity. I'm eager to try my blackcurrant chocolate again, with some lecithing to see how it turns out.
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It's called titanium dioxide. Haha nice of Susanna Yoon to like her own pictures.
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It's just colored cocoa butter shaped like a little flower. Probably more color than what you usually have in cocoa butter since you dissolve it in pure cocoa butter.
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Ask them where to send the invoices for the pictures you take.
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You can get them in Europe through Home Chocolate Factory. But it's very expensive. Chef Rubber is one of the most rude companies I've ever been in contact with. They must have lots of business in US in order to basically ignore potential sale leads. It took me 6 emails over the span of a month to get a single reply from them. Edit: Oh, don't know if they carry their "natural" colors though.
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These are good ideas! I found one in GN1 size, which isn't too far off from a full size silpat. Decisions... I haven't bought any gadgets in a while. I've been thinking about getting an AW meter, but it feels like too much of an investment for something I'll use just for "fun." This makes more sense, since it could be use for multiple things.
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Nice work! I played around trying different temperatures in my oven to see what would be best working with this. But I have really no idea. I think I'm going to do it some more, I would really love to make some perfect leaf croquant - looking at the picture in Grewelings book, make it seems like the hardest thing ever. I'm thinking it would be crazy tasty with hazelnuts, or maybe even my favorite - pistachios. I looked for these sugar lamps, but they're way too expensive.
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This is what I can get when it comes content 73% sugar in it. So I guess we're talking about 27% water in this product? I just noticed that they offer trimoline, which might be the correct name for the product I'm used to work with? That have 81% sugar. But can't see how 8% more would make it that much thicker. However, the main question, if anyone know; can I use this product in the same way if I take the different water amount into account? Below image is the product that they call invert sugar trimoline.
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Regarding inverted sugar... I bought a big bucket of inverted sugar a year back. Some French brand. I used that up. Recently I bought inverted sugar from Sosa in a 1,4 kg bottle. However, this inverted sugar doesn't seem to be close to the same product. The French one's viscosity is very high where the inverted sugar from Sosa is more like a maple syrup and transparent. Can't come up with a better example, but you can pour it out of the bottle. Have anyone worked with the Sosa product? I guess there's a lot more water in this one, so just thinking of how to use it compared to the other one. Whenever I see someone working with inverted sugar, it's more the thick nontransparent one.
