Jump to content

jimb0

participating member
  • Posts

    629
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by jimb0

  1. 16 hours ago, Robin G said:

    Artichokes are best made in the microwave, in my opinion. In a covered container, it takes 6-7 minutes for a huge one, and it steams itself. Heretical, I know.


    psh, i’m down. honestly i cook (and pre-cook) most of our vegetables in the microwave. fast, easy, like steaming but much quicker. as long as you don’t really over heat, it’s great. we have space for it so i’d never personally give up the microwave.

    • Like 2
    • Thanks 1
  2. On 9/20/2020 at 4:29 PM, pastrygirl said:

     

    Interesting, does it melt well?  Definitely a unique way to market it and stand out from the zillions of powder cocoa mixes.  

    I’ve seen these all over North America, too, and you’re right - which is why, I think, they’re still the domain of boutique or upscale products.

     

    i sort of assumed op was making a chocolate and chili bar based on their name :v

    • Like 1
  3. On 9/21/2020 at 11:59 AM, pastameshugana said:

     

    This is a thing of beauty.

    I thought the same thing. 
     

    I have an awesome 6-qt bowl lift KA that I bought refurbished for about $150 usd shipped, like 12 years ago. It’s finally stopped working, and I’m pretty sure something, somewhere has shorn. Taking it apart should be fun. 

     

    On the subject of dough making, I never really have a problem regardless of quantity. I do take the hook in hand and do a rough mix first before engaging the mixer. Alex and aki at ideas in food are firmly convinced that the paddle does a better job of kneading dough than the hook, though I'm not entirely convinced either way.  I have to imagine the paddle is a bit harder on the motor for doughs of mass, though. 

  4. Yeah i watched the ingredients section again and don't see leavening anywhere - I'm sure your pancake mix has it and so I'll be curious to see if just using standard AP flour will help with your issues. It has nothing to do with the creation of water (your vinegar is already 95%+ water) diluting a batter as much, I'd wager, as excess gas effing up structural networks that help maintain air bubbles and stabilize the foam. 

     

    As an aside, I wonder if you could just mix everything plus egg whites and put it in an iSi whipper to dispense directly into the skillet.

  5. It depends on whether the issue is just sweetness or if carbs matter. If just the former, Ritz and pretzels as mentioned are good, as are corn chips, tortilla chips, and potato chips in chocolate. For cookies specifically, I'm a big fan of doing shortbread, which is often not very sweet, and I always add salt to mine. Or a piece of salty naked pie crust could be very good once enrobed.

  6. I've always found yeast to be more resilient than less. I used to be a lot more careful but these days I keep it in a ziploc in the door of the fridge. As long as I use it within a year, I basically find no really noticeable degradation in ferm. 

     

     

     

     

  7. Honestly, I don't think ice cream requires nearly as many stabilizers or technical ingredients as has become popular in modernist cooking circles unless you're planning on keeping it around for days and days. 

     

    I will say that I usually make something that's a bit less fat than most ice cream recipes, and a good bit more fat than gelato (my standard recipe is 4:2:1 milk:cream:sugar). Gelato typically has quite a bit less milkfat than ice cream. So if you'd like to standardize around, say, 8% or something (which is on the higher end of the gelato range, but still fine, and more forgiving), you could back calculate the rest. Mangoes average around 80% water content, and you can replace any milk proteins / lactose with up to 30g of skim milk powder per 3 or so odd cups of liquid.

     

    How it precisely shakes out will probably depend on just how much mango you feel like you want to incorporate into your base. Personally I wouldn't worry too much about the stringiness of mango, I'd just puree it first, but that's a personal decision.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  8. 🙄

     

    The problem I have with most uses of nutritional yeast are twofold: first, people flat-out lie about what it tastes like, and second, they use way too much. It's fine in smaller quantities as a seasoning. It's nutty, though it comes off as flat if you use it in something that doesn't have any fat in it. Vegan blogs always used to use it as a cheese replacement, but there are some better alternatives these days, and in general we have a better understanding of how to add umami without animal proteins, I think.

     

     

    • Like 4
  9. Soda bread. Freshly milled red fife, 100% extraction. Sides are a bit iffy because I always stuff too much parchment in the loaf pan.  Quite a bit redder / richer in person; the forum always likes to strip vibrancy out of most of my iOS pictures.
     


     

     

    A2B593E1-F6A3-4343-B7D6-AD68FDE596FF.jpeg

    • Like 4
  10. 6 hours ago, Toliver said:

    Everyone knows what's coming...I rush in and say, chunk it all up with the crust, mix it with whipped cream and you've got a lovely strawberry trifle.xD

    It looks delicious, Kim.

     

    I was thinking of how it would make for a great mix-in to frozen custard.

     

    I'm sure it's tasty, which is, ultimately, the most important thing. But having looked up the recipe, I'd wager you could probably make it work next time by cooking the strawberry mix a little longer. Or honestly I'd even think about maybe adding a little pectin for assurance (but that's making it a different recipe, ofc).

     

    Anyway I'd certainly eat it. I tend to call stuff like this, when I make it (and absolutely no insult intended), 'mess pie.'

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  11. 33 minutes ago, weinoo said:

    I actually never steam dairy, but boy would my wife like it if I made lattes for her!

     

    My other thought was just to can the espresso idea altogether, and get a high quality automatic brewer; something like a Technivorm. But then I read reviews about the Technivorm, and they are not all that. People complain about plastic, etc. etc.

    Oxo looked like it was gonna offer an 8-cup version of its highly rated 10-cup auto brewer, but I don't know when and if that's really gonna happen.

     

    I can't say enough good things about the Bonavita BV1900ts we've got. Thermal carafe, though preheating it with hot water isn't really necessary if you don't need it to stay hot for hours. With a large enough filter I can put in about 70 grams, though 60g is a good limit. Very stable / repeatable brews to let you dial in your grind. Grounds are flat post-brew, no cratering or anything. 

  12. Aha! Hilarious. I feel you, though, it's why I don't use a giant multi-boiler machine anymore either. 

     

    The 870XL that @gfron1 mentioned is what I picked up and like I said it's good. But since you already have a grinder, I'd avoid it. Aside from complexity and size and the chances of something else breaking down, it makes a mess and spews ground coffee all over the place. The bambino is probably a good option if you want something smaller than the gaggia, or just their entry level normal espresso maker that doesn't have the grinder if you don't mind something larger.

     

    There's also models from places like delonghi - the dedica is absolutely small and neat, though it also comes with a pressurized portafilter by default. 

     

    In all fairness, I couldn't tell you much about their steaming capabilities, though. I never steam dairy; all my espresso is either straight, with a little dairy, or as americanos.

    • Like 1
  13. The biggest downfall of the bambino is that they only ship it with pressurized portafilters, so you'd have to buy something separately to replace it. What kind of budget are you looking at?

     

    I have one of the Brevilles with the built-in grinder that I bought as a backup from an auction. It makes honestly superb coffee for its price range but the solenoid is prone to failure so I'm taking it apart to replace it already. 

     

    If you have a separate grinder, I'd be looking hard at a gaggia classic / classic pro when it comes to entry-level home espresso machines:

     

    https://www.wholelattelove.com/products/gaggia-classic-pro

     

    The Rancilio Silvia would be a next step up. You can mod one with a PID if you're interested. Or there's the Silvia Pro for a few hundred more which has a built-in PID and dual-boiler setup.

    • Like 1
  14. Yeah I agree, just way too much liquid. Generally speaking I do a rough ratio of 3:1:1:1 flour:butter:buttermilk:egg. Sugar is variable depending on whether they’re sweet or savoury, but two ounces is a reasonable number; for this much flour I might do three, especially on a sweet scone. 
     

    edit: also agree on the temp; mine go at 425°F. 

    • Like 1
  15. 2 hours ago, Bernie said:

    If you sneak in a baguette and you got caught, would the restaurant charge you "crustage" (or crumbage?)

     

    You know like corkage, where they put a charge on for glasses you use when you bring your own wine 😁

     

    mandatory slicing fees

    • Haha 3
×
×
  • Create New...