BakerAunt
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I missed it. The answer does not make me want to rush out and try it.
I found a link to the cookie recipe. I was going to edit my post, but as that seems to cause them to go to junk mail, I'll give the link here:
https://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/walnut-topped-spice-cookies-5920
Earlier in the week, I sorted through a stack of recipe pages, discarding the ones that dietary restrictions will no longer allow me to make. Sigh. About half the stack went into the trash, but I found some promising recipes as well. On Saturday morning, I baked “Walnut-Topped Spice Cookies,” from the “Too Busy to Cook?” column of a February 1999 issue of Bon Appetit (p112). It’s a Sephardic recipe, submitted by Rebecca Levy from Los Angeles that uses vegetable oil.. I followed the recipe ingredients, although I suspect that my 1 Tbs. of natural creamy peanut butter may not be the same as her 1 Tbs. creamy peanut butter. I used a Zeroll cookie scoop (#40). Instead of topping each cookie with a walnut and brushing with egg glaze, I used a shamrock cookie stamp dipped in fine sugar. The recipe made nineteen, and they baked well in the time specified. With 9g saturated fat total in the recipe (8g from the oil and 1g from the peanut butter), they are fine for a serving of two each, and they are COOKIES! I let them cool on the baking sheet. They are delicate, so I did not stack them when I put them in a container. We each had one tonight for dessert. They have a pleasant “sandy” texture, and the combination of a little peanut butter, almond extract, cinnamon, and cloves combine beautifully while still being distinct. I will definitely bake these again.
I knew this one.
On Friday, I made another batch of yogurt.
I also made Salmon and Couscous with Penzey’s Greek Seasoning for dinner. I had been out of Greek Seasoning for a while, so it’s nice to have it in my spice cabinet again.
I don't usually try for clear broth, but I often add some lemon juice when I'm boiling up the meaty chicken or turkey bones. I had read that it leaches the calcium out of the bones, thus making it more available nutritionally. However, it seems to me that it does make the broth more cloudy.
I guessed correctly, but I appreciate the explanation.
Mike--My cooking post (for Thursday) disappeared. Again. The posts seem to disappear after I edit them, but not always.
Aaron--it looks like you're running a pizza parlor!
On Thursday, I baked our favorite cornbread to go with soup for dinner. I again used two Nordic Ward heart muffin pans, coated with the Grease for a perfect release.
I made soup for Thursday night dinner. I had a package of Pereg Soup Mix (Pereg is a natural foods company that has been around since 1906), which I had picked up at T.J. Maxx, then forgotten about. It’s a mix of barley and various kinds of beans, with an expiration date of fourteen months ago. Oops. I’d used another expired package a while back, and I had trouble softening the beans, despite lengthy soaking. So, I grabbed my newly purchased copy of J. Kenji Lopez-Alt’s The Food Lab and read that beans should be soaked in salted water and cooked in salted water.
I used about 1 Tbs. coarse salt for the soaking, which was about 14 hours by the time I got around to them. I drained them, then used another 1 Tbs. coarse salt in the water in which I cooked them. I had beautifully done beans and barley in an hour. In a separate, larger pot, I sautéed carrots, celery, half a leftover red bell pepper, and mushrooms in olive oil. I added three cloves minced garlic, then ¼ cup Penzey’s dried onion re-constituted in 1 cup chicken broth. (That’s my workaround, since my husband seems to do ok with dried onion.) I added leftover browned ground turkey from the pizza earlier this week, and some more chicken broth. I seasoned with 1 Tbs. Penzey’s Bouquet Garni and 1 tsp. of Penzey’s Forward (salt free substitute of spices to use instead of salt). I simmered it for 15 minutes, then added the bean mixture, along with freshly minced parsley, and let it simmer for 40 minutes. It has fabulous taste, but it is a bit salty from how I cooked the beans, so perhaps I’ll use somewhat less salt next time. (The Food Lab does not specify how much salt is needed to get the good result.) We ate it with cornbread.
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This reply was modified 5 years, 10 months ago by
BakerAunt.
I guessed correctly.
I'm going to have to try some shaping experiments. I never realized that shape impacts flavor.
Welcome back, Chocomouse!
On Wednesday, I made another batch of Wholegrain Maple Granola. (My husband is snacking on it a lot.)
I also made up dough for another batch of his favorite snack foods, my lower-saturated fat Whole Wheat Sourdough Cheese Crackers. These, however, won't be baked for 4-5 days, which improves the flavor of the dough.
My third baking project on Monday was to bake Barley Crispbread for a second time, using as its basis Jan Hedh’s recipe—with my guesses as to what the flours should be. With barley and rye, topped with sunflower seeds and sesame seeds, it is very tasty and mostly wholegrain. I cut the salt back from 18 to 10g this time, as when I first baked it, my husband and I both disliked how overly salty it was. I also changed the mixing directions a bit, so it wasn't quite as bad to knead, although I was still stopping the mixer and adjusting the dough over the 15-minute period.
I also roll each dough half to 40x36 inches, as I do not have a baking sheet or an oven would accommodate a depth of 40 inches. The 40-inch length of the pan just fits.
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This reply was modified 5 years, 10 months ago by
BakerAunt.
For Tuesday night’s dinner, I cooked ½ cup freekeh in 1 ¼ cups chicken broth, with a bit of dried rosemary and chives. We had it with leftover chicken thighs and microwaved broccoli.
Report on the Earl Grey Yogurt Cake: We cut some for dessert last night. I’m not sorry that I tried this cake, but it does not wow me or my husband. If I were to make it again, I’d use the entire 2 tsp. vanilla, but even that is unlikely to change my verdict. The texture is good, so I do not regret cutting the oil in half or using half whole wheat pastry flour. I think that those changes improved the recipe. Although the Earl Grey and the vanilla flavors are nice, it is a rather bland cake, which is not overly sweet, that would likely go best with afternoon tea. I don't plan to bake it again.
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This reply was modified 5 years, 10 months ago by
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