Fri. Mar 13th, 2026

BakerAunt

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Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 8,419 total)
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  • in reply to: Chicken slab pie #48734
    BakerAunt
    Participant

      Your large pot pie looks great, Skeptic.

      in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of March 8, 2026? #48733
      BakerAunt
      Participant

        I've always wondered about wind turbines in a tornado. Thanks for posting, Mike.

        I roasted and processed my last pumpkin on Thursday. For dinner, to go with the remaining pork, I roasted potato and carrot chunks. We also had microwaved frozen peas and applesauce thawed from the freezer.

        in reply to: What are you Baking the Week of March 8, 2026? #48720
        BakerAunt
        Participant

          That is a lovely loaf, Len.

          I needed to bake bread on Wednesday. I had planned to bake the Millet Bread from King Arthur's Whole Grain Baking Book, but the millet must be cooked the previous night, and last night's storms, and two tornado warnings, kept me from doing so. Instead, I chose the Multigrain Bread that I have been developing but had yet to make with the Ankarsrum. This recipe uses malted wheat flakes, which King Arthur has discontinued, but I still have a partial bag and found an unopened bag in my second refrigerator, so I have enough of that ingredient for a while. I threw in about ¼ cup of buckwheat flour to use it up.

          The dough is a heavy one, due to the grains, so it took longer than expected to knead, although I may not have had the dough roller in the correct position initially. The dough required 90 minutes for the first rise, but the house was cooler than usual. The second rise, after Scott got the woodstove going well, took just an hour. While I have baked two 9 x 5 loaves in the past, it was almost too much dough for the pans, so I now bake this recipe as three 8 x 4 loaves.

          in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of March 8, 2026? #48714
          BakerAunt
          Participant

            To serve with the leftover pecan coated pork for Wednesday's dinner, I made a stir-fry with farro cooked in turkey broth from the freezer, and sauteed carrots, celery, mushrooms, and frozen peas. I also made yogurt today and roasted and pureed two butternut squash.

            in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of March 8, 2026? #48713
            BakerAunt
            Participant

              We had two tornado warnings last night, complete with sirens. However, Scott watched the radar and told me that it would miss us, and was headed toward a town northeast of us, but it went by there then dissipated. We were fortunate. After the storm crossed the border from Illinois into Indiana, before it came our way, it killed two people in a small town.

              in reply to: Any pie plans for Pi day (3/14)? #48704
              BakerAunt
              Participant

                Well, I do have apples to use, and I have been craving an apple pie.

                in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of March 8, 2026? #48703
                BakerAunt
                Participant

                  For dinner on Tuesday, I made pecan-coated boneless pork chops and roasted some potato and carrot chunks. We also had microwaved frozen carrots and peas. We are under tornado watch this evening with a nasty storm headed our way.

                  in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of March 8, 2026? #48696
                  BakerAunt
                  Participant

                    For dinner on Monday, I made Maple-Dijon Mustard and Pecan coated salmon with roasted potato chunks. We also had a salad of spinach, carrots, and mushrooms, with onion on mine.

                    in reply to: What are you Baking the Week of March 8, 2026? #48691
                    BakerAunt
                    Participant

                      On Sunday, I was looking through my piles of saved recipes and found "Leftover Apple Cake," a recipe from Laura Holmes Haddad that I likely printed from an email a long time ago, since the note on the recipe developer says she has a cookbook due out in November 2011. I mostly followed the recipe, except that I added 3 Tbs. milk powder and 2 Tbs. flax meal. I cut the salt from ½ to ¼ tsp. and replaced 4 Tbs. of melted butter with ¼ cup canola oil. Instead of a pinch of nutmeg, I used 14 tsp. I overdid the apples, so instead of 2 cups, it was over 3 cups. I used pecans instead of walnuts, as I have a large supply of pecans. She topped hers with 4 Tbs. large-grain sugar, which she noted is optional. She says that it is available in baking and specialty stores (she must have those in Los Angeles), but it is not a product that I have ever seen. I used some King Arthur sparkling sugar instead. We had some cake for dessert, and it is excellent. I would increase the nutmeg to ½ tsp. next time. The extra apple did not affect the structure, and indeed, I think it makes for a great cake.

                      in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of March 8, 2026? #48690
                      BakerAunt
                      Participant

                        For lunch on Sunday, I made a new recipe, "Caramelized Squash and Lentil Soup," which was featured in Daniela Galarza's new Substack, A Petite Feast. I actually had a bag of French lentils (probably bought at a TJ Maxx), and I had a butternut squash that needed to be used quickly. I made a 1 ½ recipe because of the size of my squash and used the broth I made on Friday, along with liquid I drained off of last week's roasted Fairy Tale Pumpkin that I let drain before I pureed it. I did not have cumin seed, so I substituted ¼ tsp. ground cumin. It is a very nice soup. I froze two containers for future lunches and will have the rest for three lunches this week.

                        For dinner, we had chicken salad sandwiches again.

                        in reply to: What are you Baking the Week of March 1, 2026? #48683
                        BakerAunt
                        Participant

                          Ok, I have to ask: Mike, what are all the eclair shells for?

                          On Saturday, I baked Whole Wheat Sourdough Cheese Crackers from the dough I made a week ago.

                          in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of March 1, 2026? #48682
                          BakerAunt
                          Participant

                            For dinner on Saturday, I used the rest of the roasted chicken to make a chicken salad that went very well on the Apple Cider Oatmeal Bread that I baked earlier in the week.

                            in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of March 1, 2026? #48677
                            BakerAunt
                            Participant

                              On Friday, I made a small pot of chicken broth using chicken bones from the freezer.

                              We had more of the roast chicken, the rest of the pasta with goat cheese, and microwaved fresh broccoli.

                              in reply to: What are you Baking the Week of March 1, 2026? #48676
                              BakerAunt
                              Participant

                                Skeptic--I have had several fails over the years with the small packages of yeast. When I have to buy it at the grocery, I usually buy the jar.

                                No baking here today, but I cut into my bread, and my husband and I both agree that the flavor is delicious. I think that I may have slightly overdone the flour, so I will use a different process next time and will also soak the oats in the milk initially for about 5-10 minutes. That will help me figure out how much flour to add later in the process.

                                in reply to: Adventures with my Ankarsrum Mixer #48669
                                BakerAunt
                                Participant

                                  Today, I used my Ankarsrum mixer to mix and knead a new recipe:

                                  https://www.kingarthurbaking.com/recipes/apple-cider-oatmeal-bread-recipe

                                  Details on the recipe itself are in the baking thread for March 1. I am finding that a rest during mixing, while important with my other stand mixers does not seem to work well with the Ankarsrum, because it confuses me on how much additional flour is needed. When I bake this recipe again, I will probably soak the oats for about 5 minutes with the liquid ingredients before adding the yeast. I will then omit the initial resting time, which I think was to hydrate the oats.

                                  I found that the roller and knife did a good job of kneading in the chopped apples and walnuts, something which my older mixer did not do well.

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