Fri. May 1st, 2026

Search Results for ‘(“C’

Home Forums Search Search Results for '("C'

Viewing 15 results - 5,506 through 5,520 (of 9,565 total)
  • Author
    Search Results
  • #12537
    navlys
    Participant

      I put a closed bag of Penzey's bay leaves in a plastic container. I then removed them in favor of peanut butter pretzels from TJ's. I noticed the pretzels had a slight bay leaf taste so I washed out the container with soapy warm water. The bay leaf taste still lingers. I kinda like the taste and will use these bay leaves in everything.( Of course the bag must have 50 leaves!)

      As an aside I think the popular spice which you will probably see often is coriander. IMHO!

      #12531
      BakerAunt
      Participant

        On Wednesday evening, I baked a new recipe from the KAF website: Maple Millet Scones.

        https://www.kingarthurflour.com/recipes/maple-millet-scones-recipe

        I had inadvertently bought whole millet flour from Bob’s Red Mill instead of whole millet the last time that I ordered, so I need recipes to use it. I made two changes to the recipe. I do not have the KAF Six Grain Blend, so I substituted Bob’s Red Mill Five Grain Rolled Cereal. I also used buttermilk rather than regular milk, and so I adjusted the baking powder, reducing it from 1 Tbs. to 2 ½ tsp. and adding 1/8 tsp. baking soda. (Note: I accidentally used ¼ tsp. baking soda—oops.) I found the dough very sticky, even after letting it sit for 10 minutes to allow the millet to absorb the liquid, so I needed to use floured hands and surface to lightly knead it. I cut the circle into wedges, but they were too soft to separate, so I froze them for 10 minutes, then pulled them apart, then froze them for 20 minutes longer. The scones had great rise, and a lovely aroma. I let them cool for 5 minutes, then I spread the glaze over them. (Note: I used 1 tsp. heavy cream rather than milk in the glaze.) We will sample them for breakfast tomorrow, and I’ll add a note about taste and texture.

        Note: The scones have a surprisingly light texture. They do not have much maple flavor, even with the glaze, and are not overly sweet. These will probably not become part of my scone repertoire, but I might make them again to use up more of the millet flour, and to see if that extra 1/8 tsp. of baking soda is part of the issue.

        • This reply was modified 7 years, 11 months ago by BakerAunt.
        #12528
        BakerAunt
        Participant

          I have two doughnut memories. One was my father picking them up at Krispy Kreme for us on Sunday mornings for breakfast before church. The other is of my uncle, who had a doughnut delivery route in Memphis but her often gifted his nieces and nephews visiting their grandmother for the summer with doughnuts. I have a third memory of buying those little packages of Hostess crumb doughnuts (or occasionally powdered sugar) during my graduate school days.

          #12523

          In reply to: My Father

          wonky
          Participant

            Sadly my father passed away yesterday, May 29th at the ripe old age of 91. His death was expected, so we were all prepared as much as possible. He had always said "I am not leaving this farm until they carry me out", and that is exactly what happened. He was only bedridden for 3 days, and his passing was peaceful. The hospice organization that we had chosen a few months earlier was absolutely amazing, and we are forever grateful for their wonderful care.

            We will hold graveside services this Saturday, which was his wish, with a reception at the local golf course, which was also his wish. His favorite nephew will play and sing all of dad's Polka favorites on his accordion, and we are all looking forward to that. My Dad also played the accordion, mouth organ, and concertina, and entertained all of us siblings (7) grandchildren (27) and great grandchildren (54) for many many years.

            Dad will have full military services, and my brother, and BIL will participate (both are Vietnam veterans) in the three gun salute. My dad started going to Memorial Day services at the Cemetery where he is being buried when was discharged from the Army, and has never, ever missed a Memorial day Service, and we as siblings have also never missed a service, although some were at different cemeteries according to where we lived.

            We will miss Dad, but we are grateful for having him as our father for so many years.

            Rest easy Dad and thank you for being the father you were.

            #12514
            chocomouse
            Participant

              Perfect timing! We'll be in Maine, and there is a new Krispy Kreme about a mile up the road from our campground. I'll get a dozen raspberry filled - yummy. I don't make donuts (I don't like donuts, except for fresh Krispy Kremes) but if you like a basic donut, my husband says the KAF recipe for Doughnut Muffins makes a decent imitation.

              #12508
              Italiancook
              Participant

                BakerAunt, I have a typo in my original post. I used 4-1/2 tsp. instant yeast, not 5-1/2 tsp. (I'll try to correct it.) That's how much the Red Star Yeast conversion chart said to use for 4-8 cups flour. I don't recall how much flour I used, but it was more than the recipe called for. The recipe said the dough should not be sticky, so I added flour up to that point.

                We discussed Butterhorns in a weekly thread a few months ago when I made a Taste of Home recipe for them. That recipe calls for refrigerating the dough overnight.

                Thanks for you input. The recipe you referenced sounds similar, although yours uses more liquid.

                #12505
                BakerAunt
                Participant

                  It's good to hear from you, again, Italian Cook. You have been missed.

                  I've not used cake yeast and doubt that I ever will. However, I have a similar recipe for Swedish Cinnamon Butterhorns. It's in Beatrice Ojakangas' The Great Scandinavian Baking Book. These are also spread with butter before rolling them up, but they are also sprinkled with sugar and cinnamon.

                  This recipe uses 6 cups of flour and one package of yeast (2 1/4 tsp.). You didn't mention how much flour your recipe uses or how much liquid. Ojakangas refrigerates the dough after mixing, for 2-24 hours. She divides the dough into four parts and rolls each to a 12-inch circle. She cuts each circle into 8 wedges. I've baked the recipe once, and it was a VERY sticky dough with 1 1/2 cups milk, 1/2 cup butter, 3 eggs, and 1/4 cup water. (Some swearing may have occurred while shaping 🙁 ) She baked at 375F for 13-15 minutes.

                  You didn't say how much flour was in your recipe, but I'm thinking that 5 1/2 tsp. may have been too much, which is why there was such a fast rise. However, if the recipe has a higher sugar content (this one has 1/2 cup sugar), the higher amount of yeast would allow it to rise faster than it might otherwise, hence the refrigerator rest. Another possibility would be to use the special Gold yeast.

                  One reason for not using too much yeast is that it seems to contribute to the baked product drying out faster. (I have a hazy memory of a Cook's Illustrated discussion on this point.) A lot of older recipes use higher amounts of yeast than we would today because our modern yeast works more efficiently. I find that I can cut back on yeast from recipes from the 19870s and 1980s and they work fine.

                  One other suggestion--You might want to post questions like these in their own thread under baking. That would make it easier for the community to refer back to them. Discussions in the "What are You Baking" threads tend to be hard to locate. On a couple of occasions now, I've thought, "I KNOW we discussed this matter," but I could not find it easily, and sometimes not at all.

                  Kudos to your husband for eating that first batch!

                  • This reply was modified 7 years, 11 months ago by BakerAunt.
                  #12503
                  BakerAunt
                  Participant

                    A Note on the Chocolate Icebox Pie:
                    I make a few changes, based on what other reviewers had to say. I add 1 tsp. of espresso powder with the cocoa and water. (I'm surprised KAF missed the chance to push a product!) The original recipe used all bittersweet chocolate. That would be a bit strong for me, especially as I do not plan to use the whipped cream topping. (You have to cut back SOMEWHERE 🙂 ) I used one 4 oz. bar Ghirardelli semisweet chocolate and one 4 oz. bar Ghirardelli 60% bittersweet chocolate, which is the same proportion I use when I make fudge. (One of my sister's suggested that to me for the fudge recipe.) I increase the sugar from 1 Tbs. to 3 Tbs., again based on a comment in the recipe reviews.

                    Further Note: I did not use cinnamon in the graham cracker crust.

                    • This reply was modified 7 years, 11 months ago by BakerAunt.
                    #12502
                    Italiancook
                    Participant

                      I mentioned my newer acquisition, "Mennonite Community Cookbook" a few months ago. Since I did, I think I should tell people about a huge variation I found in the cookbook. I made Butterhorn Rolls (should butterhorn be one word or two?) from this cookbook. Probably, as a novice baker, I should not have, but I did.

                      First problem was the yeast. It called for 1 cake compressed yeast, which I didn't feel like trying to find in the store. I called KAF and a baker asked me what weight the cake yeast was cited in the recipe. No weight. Off the top of her head, she said 1 tablespoon. I decided to search for a yeast website conversion. I found one by Red Star Yeast: https://redstaryeast.com/yeast-baking-lessons/yeast-conversion-table/ Based on that, I used 4-1/2 teaspoons instant yeast. That worked out okay, I think.

                      The recipe doesn't say how many circles come out of the dough. I guessed at 4, which I now believe is wrong. Should have been 3, I think. By doing 4, the rolled out circles were only 10 inches, and I now think too thin. The result was that the recipe is stated to make 3-1/2 dozen small rolls, but I ended up with 60! They're quite small.

                      The real problem was the oven temperature. Recipe calls for 425 degrees for 20 minutes. I foolishly agreed to that and burned the first batch of 20 rolls. But hubby rescued them, put in a plastic bag and has been eating them as snacks. I baked the others at 350 degrees, and ended up with good-looking rolls. I'm now thinking that old-timey stoves heated much differently than modern ones.

                      I have a question for you experienced bakers. The recipe says to let dough rise until it is "light." I have no idea whether "light" means proofed, or if it is to go beyond the finger-poke test for proofed. I only let it rise for 30 minutes, and at that time, the finger indentation stayed, so I divided and used the dough. Thanks!

                      (Edited to correct amount of yeast used.)

                      • This reply was modified 7 years, 11 months ago by Italiancook.
                      #12501
                      BakerAunt
                      Participant

                        On Sunday afternoon, in spite of the heat (we turned on the air conditioning), I baked my Whole Wheat Sourdough Cheese Crackers from the dough I made up last Monday evening. They really are best when the dough has 5-6 days in the refrigerator. They also rolled out easily in the warmer weather. If my husband will pace himself, the crackers will last about two weeks.

                        I am also making KAF’s Chocolate Icebox Pie—and I planned to do that before I saw their email suggesting it for Memorial Day weekend. It will be for dessert on Monday and into the week. Originally, I had planned to do red/white/blue cookies, but since I had to do the crackers today, I did not feel like a cookie project.

                        #12492
                        BakerAunt
                        Participant

                          We are having hot weather in northern Indiana as well. I've been very glad the past two days to have cold chicken and potato salad, and a cooked a side vegetable in the microwave.

                          I will cut back on the celery seed in the potato salad next time. It seemed somewhat bitter. However, my celery seed is quiet old (as in, I-don't-recall-when-I-bought-it-old), and there is only a bit left. I just ordered some more from Penzey's, so I will do a sniff test when it arrives, before throwing out the old stuff. I did some internet sleuthing, but I could not find any suggestion that celery seed can go bad.

                          #12479

                          In reply to: Semolina as a Coating

                          Mike Nolan
                          Keymaster

                            If you can use couscous as a coating, semolina should work well, too.

                            I don't do a lot of coating on foods, since we don't fry much and my wife is trying to stay on a low carb diet, but panko stays crisper than bread crumbs. (I've used it instead of cheese on the sides of the dish when doing a souffle.)

                            #12472
                            BakerAunt
                            Participant

                              Back in February, I posted a link (in Desserts) to a recipe that is a twist on the usual lemon bar. On Friday morning, I finally got around to baking "Classic Lemon Bars," a new recipe from an email from Taste, an occasional online magazine. The recipe was adapted by Jessica Reed from one by Mrs. Eleanore Mickelson, that appeared in Chicago Daily Tribune, August 27, 1962 (Pt. 3, p. 12).

                              We will have some for dessert tonight, at which time, I will add a note to this post as to what we think of them.

                              Added Note: These bars are terrific! They have a lot of lemon flavor. I will definitely make them again.

                              • This reply was modified 7 years, 11 months ago by BakerAunt.
                              • This reply was modified 7 years, 11 months ago by BakerAunt.
                              • This reply was modified 7 years, 11 months ago by BakerAunt.
                              #12471
                              BakerAunt
                              Participant

                                Friday morning, I made a half recipe of Mike Nolan’s mother’s potato salad. I used two eggs, since I did not want half a hard-boiled egg left. I used 2 Tbs. of celery seed, which is the amount halved of the original posted recipe. I used green onions instead of regular, as my husband prefers them. I accidentally put in 2 Tbs. of red wine vinegar rather than 1 Tbs.; I was distracted because my husband was talking to me. I had to use yellow potatoes, as I did not want to go back to the store. I followed Mike’s cooking suggestion, and they came out well, although they tend to be slightly less firm than red potatoes. I reduced the salt in the half recipe from 1 tsp to ¾ tsp. While I know that it should rest overnight, we will start eating it tonight, along with a rotisserie chicken we picked up on the morning’s grocery run. (They mark down the ones that were left over from the day before.) I think that our menu, along with the dessert I baked this morning, are perfect for the start of the Memorial Day Weekend.

                                #12468
                                BakerAunt
                                Participant

                                  If you need to restock some spices, Penzey's is offering free shipping with $15 purchase (usual is $30) AND they are offering a free 1/4 cup, 1/2 cup, and 3/4 cup of certain spices (list on site).

                                  The offer is only good until 10 a.m. PST today--that's 1 p.m. Eastern time.

                                  I was low on several staples, so I ordered.

                                Viewing 15 results - 5,506 through 5,520 (of 9,565 total)