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August 19, 2019 at 11:40 am #17744
In reply to: Pizza-Making ?
Thanks for the extended post.
We prefer whole milk mozzarella, which we can get in shredded form in 5 pound bags at Sams, though most recently I had to go to the Sams that is further away in Lincoln to get it. (NONE of the grocery stores carry whole-milk mozzarella.) As to the argument that whole milk mozzarella is higher in fat, I think you use less of it when it's whole milk compare to part-skim, because it spreads out more, so it kind of balances out.
I haven't found a jarred pizza sauce I like, mainly because most of them have garlic in them. I use Hunts Traditional or Mushroom sauce for spaghetti, they're both garlic-free. I haven't tried it on pizza, mainly because I haven't actually made pizza from scratch other than the lavash pizza in a while, because there's just two of us.
If I'm making spaghetti and meatballs, I take one can of Hunts, add one 15.5 ounce can of diced no-salt tomatoes and one (sometimes two) 4 ounce can of mushrooms, and I cook the meatballs in that. If you're going to cook meatballs in sauce, as opposed to frying or baking them, I think it helps to use meat that is at least 85% lean.
I also have a no-garlic marinara recipe posted here that makes quite a bit of sauce, it starts with a #10 can of diced tomatoes. It's enough for a batch of lasagna and is very good on both pizza and spaghetti. I puree it with a stick blender, but for spaghetti I'd be tempted to do what I have been doing lately with the Hunts sauce and mix some sauce with some diced tomatoes, because we really like having chunks of tomatoes in our spaghetti sauce. If I put tomatoes on pizza, I prefer them to be sliced, not diced.
August 19, 2019 at 11:30 am #17742In reply to: Ice Cream Cones
Anyone here looking to unload bake goods can always send things to my kids. I have two rail thing teenage boys who will happily help you as will their little sister.
This article was great. I didn't know ice cream cones had ever gone way but clearly people are doing knew things with them.
Making ice cream sandwiches out of ice cream cone material. I would break a lot, particularly if I was rushing. We've had chocolate chip cookie ice cream sandwiches here in New England at least since I was in college (just had my 35 reunion in May). We sold Chipwhiches at the school snack bar at night. Now, they too, have gone fancy with various cookie choices and making them on demand.
August 19, 2019 at 6:49 am #17738In reply to: Pizza-Making ?
Just made pizza for the whole family last night for the first time all summer. It's the first time everyone has been home since mid-June. I probably make pizza about 45 weeks a year. What I do has been customized specifically to my family's tastes.
I have definite, discreet tasks and they do not (and actually should not) need to be done the day off.
I make a big batch of dough every couple of weeks - about 3.5 pounds. I let the dough rise for about 36 hours. I let it go longer if the rise is chilled and less if the rise is on the counter and less still if it rises on the counter in the summer. I took a cooking class in Italy years ago and the instructor said in Naples the dough rises for three days before it is used so I started trying that. I gone as long as five days and as short as a few hours and found what my family likes best. I mix the dough by hand as my KitchenAid cannot handle near that much dough and I've done it enough now that it takes me about 10 minutes so I'm not sure the mixer would be any faster.
My dough is a mixture of KAF white whole wheat which is about 14% protein according to the label mixed with a lower gluten flour. I've used KAF pastry flour and a variety of cake flours. I started with the Queen until she was banished from the realm and then went to Bob's which is also no longer available. Now I use Soft as Silk. I also use flax meal and chickpea flour when I have it, both of which are gluten free. I use flax because I don't use any oil in my dough and it adds a fullness to the flavor that was otherwise missing. I use chickpea to add some nutritional protein for my six year old who does not eat a lot of proteins in her diet. I use Bob's flax and chickpea flours. I use these because they are (or were) readily available at reasonable prices in local markets. I supposed I could use the oo Italian flour but it's more esoteric AND must be ordered from KAF. I use 50% cake flour, 40% WWW, and 10% other.
After I divide these up into 5.5 ounce rounds and wrap them individually and either put them in the refrigerator or freezer depending on when I will need them. Usually half go in the freezer and half in the refrigerator. I wrap each round in plastic and then put them in Ziplock bags. They last a few days in the fridge and a few months in the freezer. I use a rolling pin because it allows me to make a very thin, even crust that is between 11 and 12 inches. My dough is not very stretchy because of the low gluten flours. I could hand stretch it but it would not be as flat and would have a big crust edge that my family does not prefer. Tossing dough, while entertaining, is messy and sends flour all over the kitchen so I stopped that a while ago. The Giordano's in my neighborhood in Chicago used a sheeter but they were making hundreds of crusts a day. They used it for thin crust and stuffed.
My wife used to make sauce but she doesn't since she found a jarred sauce she likes. I was starting to make it because the sauce she likes is crazy expensive at the grocery stores but then Costco started carrying it for a little more reasonable price. But it's still on my list to start making my own sauce. Again, while this can be done day of, it can also be done way ahead. We used to have frozen sauce and dough waiting to be used.
The stuff I always do day off is grate the cheese - I could use shredded cheese but haven't found one my family likes yet - and prepare any of the toppings. Of these two tasks I could actually grate the cheese a couple of days a head of time if I thought about it.
My wife usually cuts up the vegetables but I did that last night since she was out with two of our kids.
I let the ovens heat for about 45 minutes before I start to bake so I turned them on when I started grating cheese and cutting vegetables.
I did the day-of prep, made six pizzas, and cleaned up and it took me under two hours.
Making pizza is like anything else, the more you do it the more practiced you will become and it will be faster and more routine. Also by breaking things down into discreet tasks and figuring out what can be done ahead to make day-of prep easier.
August 18, 2019 at 3:13 pm #17731In reply to: What are you baking the week of August 18, 2019?
I baked my variation on the KAF Wheat-Oat Flax Buns on Sunday afternoon. As usual, I used water not orange juice and buttermilk for the remaining liquid. I cut the yeast to 2 tsp. and use just 1 1/8 tsp. salt. I reduced the honey to 2 ½ Tbs. I added 2 Tbs. special dry milk (to increase calcium). I reduced the AP flour by 2 Tbs., because the last few times I’ve made these, the dough was too dry and harder to shape into smooth balls. That seemed to work well. I did the dough in the bread machine. I decided to make ten rather than twelve buns, because they otherwise seem a bit small. We will use them for Sloppy Josephines for dinner.
Note: I was tempted to make Len's buns, but since I just made them as a bread, I decided some variety is in order.
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This reply was modified 6 years, 8 months ago by
BakerAunt.
August 18, 2019 at 1:57 am #17724In reply to: What are You Baking the Week of August 11, 2019?
It's possible to make white chocolate ganache, but you need a recipe tailored to that, because there are factors such as balancing the fat contents that enter into a ganache recipe. (And it helps to know the specifics of your white chocolate, which isn't always readily available.)
August 17, 2019 at 11:40 pm #17718In reply to: What are You Baking the Week of August 11, 2019?
I removed it from the fridge this morning, let it come close to room temperature and whipped it so I could use it a spreadable frosting. It was perfect in texture and it tastes great. While it isn't the white frosting I was shooting for, I'm pleased with it.
I watched some youtube videos last night and found out what was wrong. With regular chocolate you would use a 2 to 1 ratio (by weight, 2 parts chocolate to one part cream or milk) white chocolate requires a 3 to 1 ratio. Of course, if you are making a dipping sauce, you can use a 1 to 1 ratio for dark or milk chocolate, not sure what it would be for white. I also learned that milk can be used instead of cream but the appearance won't be as shiny. You can also use just about any liquid, such as coffee. I think I've learned a lot about it now. I think next time I'll try some fresh brewed decaf and see how that works out.
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You must be logged in to view attached files.August 17, 2019 at 7:08 pm #17714In reply to: Storage Container 4 Capers
Sams Club has 18" wide food service wrap, Costco might have it as well, and it's available on Amazon for around $25 including shipping.
Gordon Food Services has 3 locations in Indianapolis and is open to the public.
I'm going to miss having a restaurant supply showroom in Lincoln, Restaurant Depot in Omaha is members-only and you have to have a food service tax permit to become a member. I might be able to order through Sysco (my former neighbor manages their Lincoln office), but they don't have a showroom. A friend of ours is talking about opening up a food truck for barbecue and I may be helping him develop some recipes (like cornbread), so that might give me some other options.
August 17, 2019 at 2:57 pm #17707In reply to: Ice Cream Cones
My grandfather's drug store had rectangular pieces of ice-cream cone material for making ice cream sandwiches. I've not seen those anywhere in recent years, though. (As a former soda jerk, the challenge was to press down slowly enough that you didn't crack the shell.)
The only ice cream sandwiches you can buy these days have a soft cake-like exterior, often chocolate flavored. I've got a Norpro gadget for cutting and pressing the sandwiches once you've baked the cake-like exterior.
August 17, 2019 at 2:44 pm #17706In reply to: King Arthur and Chef’s Catalog Offers
Bagels are fairly easy to make, boiling them in an alkali bath leaches some of the starch from the surface, which helps achieve the firm exterior but creamy interior. I've seen some pretzel recipes (which are also boiled in an alkali solution) that just dipped them in a cold solution of water and baking soda, but I've never tried that with bagels.
Traditionally, a lye solution was used, but food grade lye is not something most kitchens have on hand. Baking soda only produces a mildly alkaline solution, no matter how much of it you add. (Anything over a couple of tablespoons is a total waste.) I usually add a little honey which is also mildly alkaline.
Baking the baking soda in the oven for an hour to produce sodium carbonate is something that's on my 'to do' list, that would raise the pH significantly, but still well below that of lye. (The New York Times suggested this some years back.)
Peter Reinhart's recipe in BBA produces nine full-sized bagels (4 to 4.5 ounces of dough each), but we prefer smaller ones, 3 ounces each. That's still about 45 carbs! His recipe in the Artisan book is similar but produces 6 bagels rather than 9.
August 17, 2019 at 1:54 pm #17695In reply to: What are you cooking the week of August 11, 2019?
On Saturday morning, I made the Bob’s Red Mill recipe for Ensalade de Quinoa, which I’ve made twice before. We like it, so I double everything except for the feta. (It is high in saturated fat, but 4 oz., spread around in a large salad is ok.) I used the last of the lime juice I had frozen from last year’s lime crop. This year’s crop will be at least eight limes. We will have the quinoa salad for dinner tonight, as the lima beans and corn, along with the quinoa and feta, make a nice vegetarian meal.
August 17, 2019 at 1:21 pm #17691In reply to: King Arthur and Chef’s Catalog Offers
As I recall, their 'everything' bagel topping includes garlic powder. We're pretty basic when it comes to bagels, I like mine with Asiago cheese (actually I use a 4 cheese blend from Sams Club) and my wife likes hers with some poppy seeds on them, or sometimes a combination of poppy seeds and sesame seeds.
August 17, 2019 at 1:18 pm #17690In reply to: Daily Quiz for August 17, 2019
I couldn't find anything on where the name comes from, but apparently they developed in Lebanese communities in central Mexico. They're apparently similar to döner kebabs. (When our younger son was studying in Berlin, he basically lived on döner kebabs, which are the most common form of fast food there.)
August 17, 2019 at 1:06 pm #17689Topic: Ice Cream Cones
in forum General DiscussionsThe Wall Street Journal has a story on ice cream cones, apparently they're experience a rebirth with new flavors and shapes. Hopefully this permalink will work for everyone. (The sidebar picture of a fish-shaped ice cream cone is hilarious!)
August 16, 2019 at 10:11 pm #17677In reply to: What are You Baking the Week of August 11, 2019?
I have a KA "Professional 5 plus" model, it's a 5 quart and has the spiral kneading hook. That's one of the reasons why I bought it. I had a KA "Heavy Duty" before that has the old C hook. When I bought it, it was a close out model and I got it at a nice price. I still have it, wrapped in plastic sitting on a basement shelve. I bought the other one because I wanted a blue one, my older one is white, and as I said above, I wanted the spiral hook.
Today I made a chocolate cake from my regular recipe. While the recipe calls for a cup and a quarter of oil, I used only 5 ounces (by volume) and a 5.3 ounce container of Greek yogurt. I won't slice into it until tomorrow but it baked up nicely. I was planning to use a white chocolate ganache as a frosting. I followed a recipe from KAF that calls for bittersweet chocolate (which I have made before, it's in their chocolate fudge birthday cake recipe) but apparently white chocolate is not a one for one substitute in ganache. It came out pretty thin so I put it in the fridge and when it reached 45 degrees it was still far too thin to use as a frosting. So I added a half cup of bittersweet chocolate chips and nuked it to melt it. It has thickened up and tastes pretty good. I put it back in the fridge but if it doesn't look suitable to use as a frosting tomorrow I will not invest any more chocolate in it, I'll use it as a sauce for ice cream, maybe pancakes etc. and frost the cake with coconut pecan frosting from a can.
August 15, 2019 at 1:05 pm #17668In reply to: What are you cooking the week of August 11, 2019?
Green, kidney, garbanzo (though the label calls them ceci), pinto and wax.
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