What are you Baking the Week of April 14, 2024?

Home Forums Baking — Breads and Rolls What are you Baking the Week of April 14, 2024?

Viewing 14 posts - 1 through 14 (of 14 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #42382
    Mike Nolan
    Keymaster

      No baking plans yet.

      Spread the word
      #42386
      chocomouse
      Participant

        I made two loaves of maple oatmeal whole wheat bread.

        #42387
        BakerAunt
        Participant

          I wanted to try the soft barley cookie adaptation again. I used the same proportions, except that I doubled the milk powder to 2 Tbs. This time, I baked them at 450 F, as the original recipe specifies. The cookies are firmer than the batch I baked at 425 F about ten days ago. We will test them tomorrow and see what we think about taste and texture.

          #42389
          Joan Simpson
          Participant

            Last night I had a hotdog with sauerkraut and peaches and cottage cheese.Tonight I had Dairy Queen hamburger and fries.

            #42395
            BakerAunt
            Participant

              My husband says that I have nailed the soft barley cookies with oil rather than butter. I agree, so I will type up the recipe and put it in my notebook.

              I have found an excellent source of barley flour from Joseph's Grainery. The flour is wholegrain and excellent. Shipping was free. I did have to buy an 8 lbs. bag, but that is fine. I was just glad to locate a source after Bob's Red Mill stopped carrying it.

              #42402
              chocomouse
              Participant

                I made chocolate chip oatmeal cookies today. Too bad it makes only 4 dozen. 😢

                #42405
                BakerAunt
                Participant

                  I needed to use up some blood oranges, so on Tuesday, I baked Chocolate Olive Oil Cake, a recipe that came from Bake magazine about five years ago. I have made some changes in that I used half barley flour, reduced the oil from 1 1/3 cups to 1 cup and increased the milk, which I replaced with buttermilk, from 1/3 to 2/3 cup. I also add 2 Tbs. powdered milk. Instead of baking it in a 10 cup Bundt pan, I baked it in a 6-cup small Bundt pan, and a 5-cup Solera Bundt pan, which is not so tall and flatter. The smaller cake baked in a little less than 30 minutes. The larger cake needed about 40 minutes. Both came out of the pans well, thanks to the miraculous Grease. I plan to freeze the smaller one. I will make the Blood Orange Glaze for the other tomorrow, and we will cut into it for dessert.

                  #42411
                  BakerAunt
                  Participant

                    I made the Blood Orange Glaze for the Chocolate Olive Oil Cake, so it was ready to be sampled on Wednesday. The barley flour worked well, and the cake seems to have a deeper chocolate flavor. For the "glaze," I made it thick and used some evaporated milk for the cream, which gives it a nicer texture than 1 % milk.

                    #42419
                    BakerAunt
                    Participant

                      I have some lovely Cara Mia oranges--great zest and sweet flavor--so I used one on Friday morning to bake Orange Sesame Muffins, a Carnation Evaporated milk recipe that I have not baked in ages. I followed the recipe, except for adding 1 Tbs. milk powder, using just ¼ cup of water, and reducing the brown sugar to 1/2 cup. I came close to burning the sesame seed in the toaster oven but managed to get it in time. I made the recipe as six-large muffins and used muffin liners spritzed with no-stick spray. Eating a muffin for breakfast brought back great memories. I think that I first baked the recipe when I was in graduate school. I froze four for future fast breakfasts and will eat the other one for breakfast tomorrow. The recipe uses 1/3 cup of coconut and ¼ cup of sesame seeds (I toast both), so they are not food my husband eats.

                      In the afternoon, I baked three loaves of my Whole Wheat Oat Bran Bread. Two loaves go into the freezer, and we will begin slicing the other one tomorrow at lunch.

                      #42421
                      Joan Simpson
                      Participant

                        I had a baking day one coconut pie ,Georgia Cornbread cake and a new recipe I found in my mother's recipe box for a coffee cake..I'm going to Jacksonville ,Fla. in the morning for a reunion on my husbands side.I will be taking coconut pie and corn bread cake. The corn bread cake is like eating pecan pie in a bar form like a brownie.,very good and easy.

                        https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/233353/georgia-cornbread-cake/

                        #42422
                        BakerAunt
                        Participant

                          Enjoy the reunion, Joan. I'm sure that your goodies will be welcomed as well.

                          #42424
                          BakerAunt
                          Participant

                            I had 5 oz. of ricotta left over from cooking that needed to be used. I did some googling and found the recipe, Lemon Ricotta Muffins, at the blog She Loves Biscotti, which I baked on Saturday for teatime.

                            I halved the recipe, which called for a cup of ricotta and guessed that 5 oz. of low-fat ricotta was probably close to a half cup. I substituted half barley flour. I also replaced the almond extract with vanilla and added ½ cup of frozen blueberries. The recipe states 18-20 minutes at 400 F, but my pan needed the full 20 minutes. The muffins have a nice texture, but are slightly bland, so I am glad that I added the blueberries. I will keep the recipe for when I have ricotta left from making my Turkey, Spinach, and Mushroom lasagna.

                            I also made dough on Saturday for my Whole Wheat Sourdough Cheese Crackers. I will bake those in four to five days.

                            #42426
                            Italiancook
                            Participant

                              BakerAunt, your post reminded me of a Giada DeLaurentis recipe we like. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to copy and paste. It's at foodnetwork.com if you want to search for it:
                              Nonna's Lemon Ricotta Biscuits.
                              It calls for butter, and I have baked them that way. I've also used oil and been pleased. Either way, they are more like a biscuit than a muffin even thought baked in muffin liners.

                              I also want to let you know . . . belatedly, you were correct. The packing box for my Emile Henry ciabatta baker was larger than the product box. Especially in height. Once unpacked, the box would have been manageable if I truly had room for it. I will when a niece takes a set of china. In the meantime, it's resting on top of a tall bedroom dresser. Resting is the key word. I haven't opened it yet. I'm blaming that on my small kitchen. I can't visualize what I'm going to do with it after I wash it unless I make bread and wash it in the same day. That hasn't happened yet, because it still comes down to having no where to store it once it's out of the box. Niece is making plans to pick up the china, so homemade ciabatta is in my future eventually.

                              #42428
                              BakerAunt
                              Participant

                                Thank you, Italian Cook. I was able to find the recipe and copy the link:

                                https://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/giada-de-laurentiis/nonnas-lemon-ricotta-biscuits-recipe-1916098

                                I might try the recipe, but it has double the sugar of the one that I baked, so I would want to cut it, and like you, use oil rather than butter. I noticed that various people in the comments said the biscuits were not flavorful enough. I think that may be because ricotta is rich but not with obvious flavor when baked into cakes, etc., where it primarily adds moisture.

                                Added Note: the muffins have much more flavor after the day they are baked. That was when the lemon flavor came through. I would still include the blueberries.

                                I wish you well with your ciabatta baker and look forward to hearing about your experiments with it once you are able start using it.

                              Viewing 14 posts - 1 through 14 (of 14 total)
                              • You must be logged in to reply to this topic.