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Matthew.Taylor

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Everything posted by Matthew.Taylor

  1. Oh I definitely want to recreate it, buying a dough ball never crossed my mind when I was there last. 20-30 minutes, huh? I wonder if that includes making the dough? My time is rather limited at the moment though, due to heavy seasonal overtime at work, but I’ll put in what time I can. Any help you can give will be appreciated.
  2. That looks a whole lot like the pizza there! Judging by what pizza sauce they serve with their breadsticks, I believe the sauce is tomato paste based, so that’s something I know. I found a recipe for a focaccia type pizza dough, and I’ve heard Adriatico’s referred to that for awhile. It may be awhile before I can test it (I work a lot of overtime, and come home late a lot), but these are all good ideas. Thanks very much!
  3. Ok, I don’t know how many of you are from around Cincinnati or Southern Ohio, but there’s a restaurant called Adriatico’s here that I’m a big fan of. It’s most well known dish is what is called “Sicilian crust” pizza. It’s basically a thicker crust, crunchy on the outside and soft inside. I asked them if I could have the recipe for it, but they said they don’t give out recipes. As such I need to know if anyone has a good recipe for this kind of thing? Any help would be appreciated.
  4. Matthew.Taylor

    Dinner 2021

    Depends. There are more than a few references to Jean Lafitte and how he would stop and eat in Louisiana, usually in the homes of people who were friendly with him. The casserole was excellent, tasted a bit like Beef Stroganoff. It had 15 oz of tomato sauce, ground beef, sour cream, cream cheese, egg noodles, salt, pepper and garlic.
  5. Matthew.Taylor

    Dinner 2021

    Here’s tonight’s dinner for me and the ‘rents. Hamburger Casserole. I got the book where I found it from Disney World of all places! In the gift shop at the end of Pirates of the Caribbean.
  6. Matthew.Taylor

    Dinner 2021

    Brushed with mustard before being wrapped in the dough, and eaten with more.
  7. Matthew.Taylor

    Dinner 2021

    Made this tonight. Recipe was right out of the Great British Bake-off recipe book. Pigs in a blanket.
  8. I did steam them. I had a small basin of water on the rack underneath them the whole time. The basin actually warmed up with the oven.
  9. Well, these aren’t the best looking pieces of bread I’ve ever made, but I’ll post them here anyway, in the hope to get some thoughts and advice. Clearly my skill with baguettes is still somewhat lacking.
  10. Maybe so. I'll try to look into the old product online (if there is any actual info about it out there), But you may have a point. Vegetable oil could possibly imply that the original has something in common with what we now call Devil's food cake. Milk Powder also makes sense as one of the defining characteristics of this cake is a fudgy texture.
  11. Ah, my bad, I misunderstood you. It’s just that by my logic, the original secret ingredient for the TOF cake was a dry buttercream mix, I assumed that logically it would have been based on American buttercream, which is categorized normally as being made of butter, vanilla, confectioners sugar, and some salt. As such by the logic I was going on, to make a dry buttercream powder mix, powdered butter would be the replacement for the butter. so in order to stay true to the original recipe (which, under my logic, would include a good deal of butter), I would need to include powdered butter in the buttercream mix.
  12. I've managed to dig up a copy of the original recipe. (The American Table: Tunnel of Fudge Cake (1966)) And it definitely says that the buttercream mix is mixed into the dry ingredients.
  13. Ah, but I’m not talking about the cake recipe, not yet, but I will. I’m talking about powdered butter on the dry frosting mix that acts as the “secret ingredient.”
  14. I admit that I'm making some assumptions about the ingredients in dried buttercream, but it does seem to make sense to me. I really don't like using chemicals like that in my baked goods, but I will if I have to. I'm going to maybe do some experiments with the ingredients I suggested above, and see what happens.
  15. According to the book, American Cake by Anne Byrn, The original Tunnel of Fudge cake was created by Ella Rita Helfrich for the 1966 Pillsbury Bake-off in San Francisco. he came in second in that competition, but won in the long run, as her cake is still remembered today, while the winner (Mari Petrelli, with her Golden Gate Snack bread) is mostly forgotten. What really made the cake stand out is Helfrich's secret ingredient, A box of Pillsbury Double Dutch Fudge Buttercream dry frosting mix. When baked into the cake (in a Fluted Bundt pan) it supposedly oozed a fudgy chocolate filling, thus "Tunnel of Fudge." That mix above is what I really need to focus on, as it is no longer made by any real company, as such, I am stuck making my own. We can assume that it was based around an American Buttercream, which is composed of four primary ingredients, Butter, Confectioner's sugar, vanilla extract, and a Flavoring (also some salt usually). Since this is supposed to be a dry mix, the one semi-liquid ingredients will need to be changed, that being butter. I have managed to find several different dry butter powders on the internet, so current ingredients would be: Butter powder Confectioner's sugar Double Dutch Cocoa Powder. (found in specialty baking stores, some groceries, and online) Any advice you guys can give would be extremely welcome. it may be a bit before I can really launch into this, as I get paid every 2 weeks, nevertheless, any advice or opinions would be welcome.
  16. Here’s the recipe I used, this is a great site. http://www.hungrybrowser.com/phaedrus/m1123SU03.htm#2
  17. Well it’s technically a pound cake, so it would be a little dense. The glaze is brown sugar, black walnut extract, confectioners sugar, butter and milk. I actually had to save it when the original recipe made the “frosting” dry and clumpy. I added more milk and made it a glaze.
  18. Well, I finally did it! Here’s my Black Walnut cake! In truth I think I overcooked it a bit, and I need to consider adding more black walnuts to it next time, plus perhaps baking it in two loaf pans instead of the tube pan.
  19. Well, 1 cup of vodka, 1/2 a cup of bourbon, 1 and 1/2 cups of toasted black walnuts, left in the back of the pantry for two months and three days. I ended up with around 4 oz of extract. Not as much as I wanted m, but enough for the black walnut cake I intend to bake in the next week or so.
  20. Don’t know how many of you have seen this book. I got it years ago on a trip to San Fran in Ghirardeli’s park and store there. I made this recipe from it today. First time I’ve done anything out of it in years. These are called Black and White Macaroons.
  21. First things first, here’s the link to the recipe I used for this. https://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/pistachio-butterfiyou-know-9440781 if you guys watched the recent Good Eats Halloween special, you’ll have seen this recipe. I’m not sure if this is the right thread to put this in, but it is kind of a chocolate. I’ve wanted to find a recipe for this particular candy bar for awhile, but could never find one that didn’t involve candy corn. Mine aren’t quite as “neat” as those shown on the show, but I like them. If my math is right, there’s a total of 540 layers of sugar and nut mixture in these things.
  22. This was one of my favorite shows back when it was on. I'm glad that there are new episodes coming up, and I enjoyed the recent "House that dripped chocolate" Halloween special (especially because it showed recipes for treats which I've wanted to try for years.) So I wanted to make this thread for the show, favorite recipes from the show, or episodes. Enjoy.
  23. The engine on my old kitchen-aid stand mixer is starting to make some “struggling” noises. If I have to upgrade, what is a good realiable choice nowadays?
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