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April 1, 2021 at 12:45 pm #29330
In reply to: The cake that ‘Nailed It’ was emulating
I have seen "Nailed It" although not this episode. But neither my brothers nor I (fourth generation south siders until we moved away) have heard of this. My dad probably would have. He had a job driving to gas stations all over the city and his knowledge of Chicago geography and institutions was encyclopedic.
My little brother was a big fan of the Rainbow Cone which he was introduced to while working at Rainbow Beach.
April 1, 2021 at 10:44 am #29328In reply to: Coming Through the Rye
Shipping costs have been going up because of increased demand. UPS has been advertising they're looking for more drivers. And cardboard boxes are in short supply, too, so they've also been going up in price. And I read in the Wall Street Journal the other day that more companies, including General Mills, Kimberly-Clark and Hormel, are planning to raise wholesale prices to reflect their increased costs, including COVID-19 mitigation. But the government still says inflation is under control. (Another Wall Street Journal article was talking about how the middle class is going to bear the brunt of the tax increases that are coming.)
I did actually find my wife's preferred toilet paper in the grocery store the other day, the first time I've seen it since last spring.
I've ordered from walmart.com, but they don't always have what I'm after, especially specialty flours. But Amazon doesn't have a lot of those, either.
April 1, 2021 at 8:56 am #29326In reply to: Covid 19: The Next Six Months
Had my second shot (Pfizer) Saturday and no ill effects. My arm was not to sore until Violet started jumping on me.
April 1, 2021 at 8:54 am #29325In reply to: Coming Through the Rye
"Sour" is interesting. I used to have a really sour starter and what was good about that was I could make sour sourdough (too many sours) quickly. But I couldn't make something lighter. Now I have a starter that is sweeter that I can make more sour with time.
If I could have multiple starters hanging out I would have a sour one and a sweet one (and maybe rye and wheat variants too). But, until I have my own kitchen that won't happen.
Thanks for the tip on first clear Mike. The first time I ordered a 50 lb bag of flour the shipping was $11 (including the box of parchment. The next time I went to order flour shipping was $35. It was cheaper to by 48 lbs of flour in 8 lb bags from Walmart because the shipping was free.
March 31, 2021 at 3:27 pm #29316In reply to: What are You Baking the Week of March 28, 2021?
I wanted a light dessert in these days before Easter, so I baked the Apricot-Oatmeal Bars recipe (posted here at Nebraska Kitchen). My changes are to replace the AP flour with white whole wheat, cut the salt in half, and reduce the brown sugar to ½ cup, and use my own jam. I used homemade strawberry-seeded blackberry jam that I canned in August of 2019, using the meager blackberry crop we had that year and some ringer strawberries from the market.
March 31, 2021 at 1:23 pm #29311Topic: The cake that ‘Nailed It’ was emulating
in forum Baking — DessertsIf you've seen 'Nailed It' (I haven't), there's apparently an episode where they try to emulate a famous Chicago area bakery's multi-layer cake.
Here's the original:
Atomic CakeMarch 30, 2021 at 5:22 pm #29298In reply to: What are You Baking the Week of March 28, 2021?
Over the years I've given away hundreds of those rolls. I make them smaller than the recipe calls for, 1.5 ounces each. A 6 inch round pan holds 8 of them comfortably, 7 around the outside and one in the middle. I've done them in an 8 inch pan, which holds more like 15 of them, and I did them in a 12 inch pan once, I think it held around 36 of them.
I used to send in a big batch of them to my wife's office (bringing in home baked items was dying off even before the pandemic shut the campus down, the university had banned pot lucks completely), and she seldom had any left at the end of the day. I know several of our neighbors look forward to them every Good Friday. (For some strange reason, I never seem to make these any other time than then.)
Their biggest drawback is that they dry out fairly quickly, like in 2 days. They do freeze well, though.
March 30, 2021 at 1:19 pm #29296In reply to: What are You Baking the Week of March 28, 2021?
Nice crumb.
I've been using the Hot Cross Buns recipe in the King Arthur Whole Grains book for quite a few years, I'll probably make at least two batches of it on Thursday, I may try one using tangzhong to see if I can tell the difference. (The rule of thumb is that you use up to 10% of the total flour and a 5-1 ratio between water and flour in the roux.)
March 30, 2021 at 10:38 am #29288In reply to: Coming Through the Rye
I bought a 50 pound bag of clear flour from Stover Company in the Pittsburgh area in 2019 when we were there visiting my son and his family. I think it cost me about $25. It seems to be holding up well in storage. (I put at least a third of it in the freezer.) It was Bay State brand, but Ardent Mills also makes one.
My former neighbor, the head of the local Sysco office, checked with Pillsbury and ConAgra, they only sold clear flour in the east (maybe as far west as Ohio) and in a few places on the west coast, though he could order it by the pallet (40 bags.) It's probably a marketing issue, most of the large mills are in the central US, and the way roller mills work they generate LOTS of clear flour, but if there's no interest in it, it isn't worth packaging and storing it. I believe it is sold in bulk as animal feed.
I've ordered 50 pound bags of flour from Baker's Authority, most recently medium rye, but I also ordered 50 pounds of semolina from them, shipping for a bag that big is sometimes higher than the cost of the flour itself, but even $65 for 50 pounds is still a lot cheaper than King Arthur. If I buy semolina locally it costs me about $2.50 a pound, rye flour is next to impossible to find locally other than Bob's Red Mill, and only one type a dark rye that is a fairly fine texture, if I want medium rye or coarse rye meal, I will either have to buy it online or buy rye berries (also not easy to find at a good price) and grind my own.
If I was a little younger, I might think about trying to open up a store that specialized in bakery products including varietal flours, but I don't know if it would be successful enough and I'm not sure I've got the energy for it any more.
The rye flour came UPS and the box was pretty beat up by the time it got here, but the bag inside was still intact enough the flour hadn't been compromised. I kind of feel sorry for the UPS driver having to lug that thing around, though.
I think the semolina I ordered was prepared at a mill in Wyoming, then shipped to Ohio or Texas before it was shipped to me in Nebraska. Kind of a long trip.
Last spring I bought a small chest freezer when our main freezer needed some repairs, the plan was to use it mainly for storing flours afterwards and that's working out pretty good.
I've been using plastic jars that I buy M&M's in at Sams (62.5 ounce size), they work pretty well for storing 2-3 pounds of flour, but when I bought my rye flour recently I also went out to Sams and bought some 6 quart round Cambro-style containers.
March 29, 2021 at 7:52 pm #29280In reply to: Coming Through the Rye
Report on Jewish Bakery Pumpernickel (Ginsberg pps 93-96):
This is a really good pumpernickel bread, but I did fiddle with the recipe a little. It produced two loaves about 650 grams each from (730 grams pre-baking weight), the loaves are about 10 inches x 5 inches by 2 1/2 inches.
Both of the sponge stages call for coarse rye meal, and the coarse rye meal I have is almost like cracked grain, which I thought might be too coarse to be the only rye in the recipe, so I used coarse rye meal for the first sponge and medium rye meal for the second.
I used first clear flour in the final dough, and I added about a tablespoon of caraway seed.
It uses some caramel color to produce a darker loaf.
I also used an egg wash rather than a cornstarch glaze, because cornstarch glaze always seems to produce a white pasty exterior, and this produced a nice shiny one.
It produces a fairly stiff dough, but it mixes well and it rose decently. I did let the final rise go for about 90 minutes as opposed to the 45 minutes in the recipe. Actual baking time was in the middle of the range in the recipe, by which point the internal temperature was about 206.
It slices easily and has a good internal crumb.
We used this bread for a batch of Reubens, and they were great. It was also pretty good with just little butter on it.
It also passes the toast test with flying colors.
This recipe is a real keeper, I'm sure I'll be making it again--soon!
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You must be logged in to view attached files.March 29, 2021 at 6:42 pm #29278In reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of March 28, 2021?
I made the whole dinner tonight (it helped to have the day off). I grilled chicken tenders in a lemon/Parmesan/mayonnaise marinade. It was nice, but I’ll make chicken salad with the rest and I think that will be really good. We also had baked rice and roasted green beans, mushrooms and garlic tossed in olive oil, balsamic vinegar and s&p.
March 28, 2021 at 6:05 pm #29265In reply to: Search question
I had a FB account at the company I worked for but maybe used it twice.
My wife was big on Farmville for a while (a Zynga game on FB) but lost interest. She keeps in touch with a few people on FB, including my sister and possibly one of my brothers, but I've never gotten into it and don't care if I ever do.
I do use Instagram a little, which I think is owned by FB these days, but I don't check it very often and seldom post to it.
March 28, 2021 at 1:47 pm #29256In reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of March 28, 2021?
Will made Greek Lamb Meatballs with Avocado Goddess Sauce (HBH) that I requested for my birthday dinner. We've had enough for 2 nights of leftovers.
Tomorrow, since I'm off. I'll figure out something fun.
March 28, 2021 at 1:42 pm #29254In reply to: King Arthur Has Updated The Baking Companion
The two libraries (one in Massachusetts and one here) I've been involved with accept donations only for their book sales. They don't bother going through them to see if they could use any. They also have auxiliary groups that manage the donations and the sales.
March 28, 2021 at 9:52 am #29242In reply to: Search question
The advanced search feature has the ability to search specific areas (ie, recipes only) or tye author field, but in the case of something posted by someone else with the original author's name as a reference, that's just a free text search.
I don't think shaboom was ever a member of this site.
I've tried to contact Zen to see if I could get access to her archive, but she hasn't responded to my emails, maybe she's not online these days? Anybody in touch with her?
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