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  • #8640
    Mike Nolan
    Keymaster

      My wife (a certified HS math teacher) completely agrees with her. She has a 'Math is Fun' T-shirt that she got at a regional math conference.

      #8637

      In reply to: Eclipse Cookies

      Mike Nolan
      Keymaster

        Yesterday was our test day, today was production day, I baked 5 pans full of cookies and one partial. Assembly is next, then I'll take and post some good pictures. We did take a plate of cookies across the street to our new neighbors who have 3 young kids (the oldest girl is 11, about the age of our granddaughter.)

        Most of the cookies will be going in to my wife's office in the morning. Some will be in her office for faculty and staff, the rest will be on the snack table that they set up every fall to welcome students back on the first day of classes.

        #8629
        Italiancook
        Participant

          I baked 2 loaves of "Cuban Bread" from "The Complete Tightwad Gazette." I like this recipe, because it only takes 90 minutes from start to finish. I didn't like the appearance of one of the finished loaves (boules ? they're round). It had a side blowout. Online sources say this can be caused by uneven oven temp, or something else I've forgotten. I think mine were from poor slashing. I was in a hurry when I slashed. When the finished loaves came out of the oven, I could tell by both of them that I my hurry had led to poor slashes.

          I also reduced the salt from 1 tablespoon to a guesstimated 2 teaspoons. Definitely, I used less salt. One online article makes me think that could have helped cause the problem. So I won't reduce the salt again.

          The blowout loaf is for bruschetta for tomorrow's lunch & French Toast on Tuesday, so I hope it tastes okay and looks somewhat normal inside. I'm going to freeze the one that looks okay.

          • This reply was modified 8 years, 8 months ago by Italiancook.
          • This reply was modified 8 years, 8 months ago by Italiancook.
          • This reply was modified 8 years, 8 months ago by Italiancook.
          • This reply was modified 8 years, 8 months ago by Italiancook.
          #8618
          Mike Nolan
          Keymaster

            I haven't ordered the powdered cheese at nuts.com, because I find their prices not very appealing, but I have ordered the powdered cheese at bulkfoods.com, it's very similar to the cheese powder you got in Kraft Mac & Cheese before they reformulated it a few months ago to get rid of the artificial food colors. (I would order it again, too.)

            #8617
            BakerAunt
            Participant

              This is probably a question only S. Wirth can answer, but maybe someone else has tried the product. I noted that nuts.com has cheese powder, and that it costs less than the Vermont Cheese powder that KAF sells. It's a key ingredient for my sourdough cheese crackers (and I sometimes use it for macaroni and cheese), but it now costs over $10.95 for an 8 oz. jar at KAF. I noted that nuts.com has a white cheddar cheese powder for $8.99 a pound. Has anyone used it? If you have used it, is it equivalent to the KAF product in taste?

              #8612
              BakerAunt
              Participant

                Whole Wheat Sourdough Cheese Crackers

                I adapted this recipe from one on the King Arthur website. My sourdough starter is not particularly thick, so instead of 1 cup of flour to 1 cup of starter, I use 1 1/4 cups of flour to 1 cup of starter. I've made some other changes as well. I usually make a double recipe because a single recipe is eaten too fast in our house.

                1 1/4 Cups Whole Wheat Flour
                2 Tbs. flax meal
                1/4 cup cheese powder (King Arthur Vermont Cheese Powder)

                1 cup unfed sourdough starter (what would be removed before feeding the starter)
                4 Tbs. unsalted butter, softened

                Grapeseed oil and coarse salt

                Mix together all ingredients until combined into a smooth dough. (I use the flat beater of my Cuisinart stand mixer and mix on speed 2.)

                Divide dough in half, weighing to make equal amounts. Flatten into a small rectangle--about 5x4 inches--and wrap in plastic wrap. Refrigerate for a few days. The dough is easier to work with after that period, and the taste is even more excellent. I've refrigerated it for as long as a week but prefer 3-4 days.

                Bring the dough to room temperature. I usually let one wrapped piece sit on the counter, then take out the next piece before I start working with the first one,

                Preheat oven to 400F.

                On a half-sheet sized piece of parchment paper, place the dough, cover with a large piece of plastic wrap, and roll out to a rectangle with dough 1/16th of an inch thick. I use "pie wands" that are 1/16th inch and a long cylindrical rolling pin to get the dough even. The rectangle should not be too long or too wide; that way the crackers will bake more evenly. Remove the plastic wrap.

                [Note: Since posting this recipe, I've discovered that it is best to dock the dough all over with a fork--or if you have one a dough docker--before brushing with the oil.] Lightly brush the dough with grapeseed oil. (I've tried olive oil and canola oil, and I prefer the neutral taste of the grapeseed oil.) Using a pizza wheel cutter, cut the dough into 1 1/4 inch squares or 3 cm. squares. (Hint: measure in centimeters; it makes doing the division a breeze!) Sprinkle with coarse salt. Slide the parchment onto a large baking sheet.

                Bake for about 18 minutes, turning the sheet around after 9 minutes. The time will depend on your oven and the thickness of your baking sheets, as well as how thin you were able to roll the dough. You might want to check at 18 minutes. When crackers are lightly browned, remove from oven. I usually break apart any that have not yet separated. I remove the parchment (and reuse it!), push around the crackers so they are spaced away from each other, and leave the crackers on the metal pan so that the heat can continue to crisp them on top of the stove. After 18 minutes, I then move them to a rack to finish cooling.

                When completely cool, store in an air-tight container.

                Variation: Omit the cheese powder and use 2 Tbs. {Penzey's Buttermilk Ranch Dressing Base.) Their Italian salad dressing blend would probably also work well.

                Other Possible Variations: Use 2 Tbs. of the herbs of your choice and add 1/2 tsp. salt. (The salt is omitted in the other versions because cheese powder and spice mixes always include salt.)

                • This topic was modified 8 years, 8 months ago by BakerAunt.
                • This topic was modified 7 years, 10 months ago by BakerAunt.
                • This topic was modified 7 years, 10 months ago by BakerAunt.
                • This topic was modified 7 years, 10 months ago by BakerAunt.
                #8610

                In reply to: Eclipse Cookies

                Mike Nolan
                Keymaster

                  Our first test batch is out. We tried a few different methods, in the next batch we will be baking the sun and various degrees of eclipsing moon cookies separately, gluing them together with some yellow lemon icing. (I have some KAF powdered lemon extract that works very well for this.) That has the advantage that we can do a tray of one then a tray of the other, the sugar cookie recipe we're using gets soft really fast. My wife also wants to try dipping the chocolate cookies in icing to create the eclipse effect, I'm skeptical of that.

                  We're tried a fluted round cookie cutter for the first batch of suns, but the flutings are so small that you can't really see them under the icing, so we're going to try some scalloped edge cookies in the next batch.

                  I'll try to include some photos later today.

                  #8589
                  BakerAunt
                  Participant

                    Friday morning I tried a new recipe, "Peach Oatmeal Bread," from KAF's Whole Grain Baking, p. 57, since I had the rest of the peaches to use up, and I feel that I have not used this baking book enough, although I've probably baked more of its recipes than from my other KAF baking books. I followed the recipe except that I substituted in buttermilk and adjusted the baking powder and baking soda accordingly. I also reduced the salt from 1/2 to 1/4 tsp., since I had increased the baking soda by 1/4 tsp. Instead of using a 9x5-inch loaf pan, I used two 7 1/4 x3 1/2 loaf pans. (I found them years ago and bought them for an apple-cheese bread recipe I have.) The breads are now cooling on a rack. One I will freeze, and the other will be for desserts and tea/coffee time the rest of the week.

                    #8586
                    Mike Nolan
                    Keymaster

                      I'd welcome some threads on kitchen design, there were some good ones back on the KAFBC.

                      We spent a lot of time designing our kitchen. The counters and cabinets are all deeper than the standard, the top drawer under each counter has a pull-out so there's expandable work surface area, there are multiple types of surfaces (butcher block, granite and marble) at several different heights. (I could use an even higher counter for some tasks, I've been tempted to buy a 24x36 butcher block that is at least five inches thick to build up an area for my baking work, as I'm 5 inches taller than my wife, but it'd cost at least $500 and would weigh at least 40 pounds.)

                      One thing I wish we had added is some kind of stainless steel surface next to a sink for easy cleanup after doing something like cutting up a chicken.

                      The floor surface is another area where I MIGHT have done something different. We put in a slate surface tile, because we were concerned that a smooth surface tile might get too slippery. The problem is that the surface has lots of little places where dirt collects. A steam cleaner seems to be the best solution for keeping the tile clean. I've considered ordering commercial kitchen mats a few times.

                      The overall kitchen dimensions are 17 x 18 feet, with a center island that has a prep sink on one side and an electric cooktop on the other. There's also a dual fuel 48" range on one wall.

                      The home kitchen design 'experts' spend a a lot of time talking about the 'work triangle' but commercial kitchens follow different rules, as one of their goals is to have multiple work areas so several people can be working at once. (If you do a good job with mise en place, it doesn't matter whether the refrigerator and freezer are 2 steps away or 10.) We once hosted a party with 3 professional chefs doing the catering, they loved our kitchen!

                      #8585
                      BakerAunt
                      Participant

                        Tonight I made a double batch of dough for my Sourdough Cheese Crackers. (There is no such thing as "discard" sourdough in my kitchen.) I'll let it refrigerate for a few days, then bake it.

                        #8583
                        BakerAunt
                        Participant

                          Our first phase of remodeling on the house took longer than expected, so I'm anticipating this one will as well, especially since we also plan to have the front bedroom extended over the front of the house, and will be taking part of the downstairs bedroom closet for the kitchen. The front part of the house is original, built in 1907, but it had some not great 1960s remodeling decisions (in one case a major structural one, and there were also electrical issues). We did a first phase of remodeling almost four years ago. The back part of the house was added on in the 1960s at the same time as the remodeling, and it had more issues than the 1907 part.

                          I may start a thread on kitchen remodeling thoughts. I do not have it pinned down yet.

                          • This reply was modified 8 years, 8 months ago by BakerAunt.
                          #8582
                          Mike Nolan
                          Keymaster

                            Good luck on your kitchen remodeling project, they always take longer than you want them to. The house across the street from us was recently bought by a young couple and they're redoing the kitchen and a bunch of other things. (The house was built in the 60's and nearly every room on first floor has a step up or step down from another room, they have--or will soon have--little kids so all those steps have to go.) They were hoping to be done by the end of July, but I think the contractor is still working on stuff. And now the house next to theirs is apparently undergoing some changes. (Both the owners have passed away in the past year and the house needs a lot of updating, plus it may have termite issues, several of the houses in this neighborhood do.)

                            #8581
                            Mike Nolan
                            Keymaster

                              Jeffrey Hamelman listed 12 steps for making bread in his book, "Bread":

                              Scaling
                              Mixing (which may include Autolyse as a sub-step)
                              Bulk Fermentation
                              Folding
                              Dividing
                              Preshaping
                              Bench Rest
                              Shaping
                              Final Fermentation
                              Scoring
                              Baking
                              Cooling

                              Some sources list additional steps, such as making pre-ferments, mashes or soakers, recipes that use a sourdough starter might have steps to deal with getting a portion of the starter ready for use. (The way this is done in a commercial kitchen is somewhat different than how it is done in many home kitchens, a professional baker is never going to throw away half of his starter when feeding it, so feeding the starter becomes part of the process of getting a portion of the starter ready for the day's breadmaking.)

                              Many of the recipes on the BBGA site have First bulk rise, Folding and Second bulk rise steps. I've seen some baguette recipes that go through as many as four bulk rises, with folding or punching the dough down between bulk rises.

                              This is one of those books that every time I read it, it messes with my mind for a while. I"m not sure why, I guess I may take some of his steps a bit too literally.

                              "You have to know when to break the rules." (from The Golden Child)

                              #8579
                              BakerAunt
                              Participant

                                Thanks for the recipe recommendations, Mike. I will try puff pastry--but not until the kitchen has been remodeled. Right now, it is challenging, because we have not organized from our move, since we know that everything is going to be moved out. We do not have a start date yet, since our contractor is tied up right now on another project.

                                I have a beautiful maple rolling pin with handles that I bought years ago from Williams-Sonoma. However, I only use it for rolling out sweet roll dough. I stopped using it for bread because I think it was contributing to the blow-outs in the loaves. I now pat the bread out with my hands and shape it. I have a Joseph Joseph rolling pin where rings are screwed in on either end for the width. It's a Canadian company, so the rings are in metric with approximate English measurements. There is no 1/8th, I seem to recall. It works well for rolling out cookie dough. Otherwise I use the long straight rolling pin without handles or any tapering that came with my dobard (sp?) that I bought from KAF years ago. I use the pin all the time, but I find adjusting the board for different heights is not worth the effort, as it is too small for most of the doughs I want to roll out. I use that straight pin with a set of pastry wands that I bought from an independent place after it was mentioned on RLB's blog. I love them for rolling out crackers and pie crust.

                                #8578
                                BakerAunt
                                Participant

                                  For breakfast on Thursday, I baked the Basic Muffin recipe from the KAF website. I had done a search for berry muffins in their recipes, and this one came up. I used the variation that is 1 1/4 cups whole wheat pastry flour and 1 cup oats. I reduced the sugar from 1/2 to 1/3 cup. (One-third cup for me is a muffin; 1/2 cup or more verges toward cupcake.) I used buttermilk instead of regular milk, so I reduced the baking powder to 2 tsp. and added 1/4 tsp. baking soda. I used the scant 1/4 cup of blackberries from the bushes on our terrace (we got here too late for the major crop) and diced three leftover strawberries. I made the recipe as six large muffins, so I baked them for 18 minutes. They are very good, and the berries did not sink (mixed them in with the dry ingredients), so I will use this recipe for non-blueberry muffins.

                                Viewing 15 results - 6,361 through 6,375 (of 9,562 total)