BakerAunt

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  • in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of December 30, 2018? #14458
    BakerAunt
    Participant

      Hello, again, Cass. I always like to read and consider your comments.

      I've done other crackers that do not use eggs, but I'll keep your suggestion in mind, just in case increasing the water a bit does not do the trick.

      Believe it or not, the 1/8th-inch thickness actually produces a nice sized graham cracker thickness. Previously, I did Peter Reinhart's recipe, and his 1/4-inch were too thick.

      Honey would certainly add some moisture, but I'm not sure that I want the honey flavor, since we really like the brown sugar taste.

      I will be baking these again because my husband adores them, and I also like them. I'll post updates on what I do with the recipe.

      in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of December 30, 2018? #14452
      BakerAunt
      Participant

        On Friday, I baked my version of Ellen's buns using some additional whole wheat flour. They are good, but I will go back to my original adaptation. We used them for sandwiches with some of the leftover maple pork tenderloin.

        I also baked my Eggnog cake, using low-fat eggnog, which I miraculously found in Kroger. The original recipe uses 1/2 cup oil and 1/2 cup butter; I substituted 2/3 cup oil for both. I also substituted in 1 cup of barley flour. I made it in the "Party" cake pan, which can be neatly sliced into 20 pieces, which comes to 1 g of fat per slice. I'll add a note tomorrow about whether this experiment is successful.

        Note: The low-saturated fat eggnog cake is delicious and compares well to the original recipe. I think that I posted it here, so I'll add a note to the recipe.

        • This reply was modified 6 years, 4 months ago by BakerAunt.
        • This reply was modified 6 years, 4 months ago by BakerAunt.
        in reply to: Blueberry Pie with No Top Crust? #14451
        BakerAunt
        Participant

          The blueberries came from a local farm. I canned the filling this summer. I still have 2 1/2 quarts, so I'll experiment later this winter and report back. I'm thinking it did not get hot enough. I'll use less filling, a higher temperature, and wait until it bubbles in the center.

          in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of December 30, 2018? #14450
          BakerAunt
          Participant

            I baked a new recipe on Wednesday, Graham Crackers, from Recipes from the Old Mill: Baking with Whole Grains, by Sarah E. Myers and Mary Beth Lind (Good Books: 1995), p. 73. I’ve been looking for a graham cracker recipe. I had tried Peter Reinhart’s and did not like the consistency or the flavor, as I’m not a molasses fan. This recipe also uses oil rather than butter, but it uses brown sugar for the sweetening. I substituted graham flour for whole wheat flour, since I have it. I suspect in 1995, it was harder for the average baker to purchase. I added the optional cinnamon. The dough was very crumbly. (I wish that recipe writers would indicate what its consistency should be.) It came together a bit after refrigeration, but it was still crumbly. I ended up squishy each third of the dough together, flattening it, then spritzing with water until I could get it rolled out 1/8-inch thick. I rolled them out on parchment paper, with saran wrap on top, then cut them into 5x5 cm. squares (metric rules in such matters) and poked each a few times with a fork. I pulled them apart from each other. I baked for 15 minutes. They have very good flavor and while firmer than what we would buy in the store, they are nice to munch. It made about 60 crackers, with only 4 g saturated fat for the entire recipe, and that is from canola oil.
            I’m wondering, if I bake them again, whether it would be best to add more water to the dough or to reduce the flour, as it was a bit of a pain rolling them out. However, I don’t want to change the consistency or the texture. It used 3 1/2 cups flour, 1/4 cup canola oil, and 3/4 cups water. It also called for 1/3 cup instant nonfat dry milk, and I used Bob's Red Mill brand for that, as I did for the graham flour. (For inclusiveness, it also used 1 1/2 tsp. baking powder, 1/4 tsp. salt, and 1/2 tsp. cinnamon.)

            in reply to: Blueberry Pie with No Top Crust? #14445
            BakerAunt
            Participant

              I had some issues with the Blueberry Pie.

              I tried baking the blueberry pie on New Year’s Day, using the oil crust, and reserving some of the crust ingredients to sprinkle on top. It came out more as a cobbler. The crust held up, but the filling did not thicken up. I used homemade blueberry pie filling that I canned last summer. I probably should have used just 1-quart rather than adding an additional pint. The pie would have been a bit low, but that would have been fine. I added 2 tsp. of lime juice and ¼ tsp. allspice. I may not have baked it-- after blind-baking the shell--for long enough at a higher temperature. I started it at 425F, then after 10 minutes reduced it to 375F and baked another 40 minutes. That works for my apple pie, which has a hot filling added, but not for this one with room-temperature filling. (The apple pie is also baked in a deep-dish Emile Henry ceramic pie plate; this one was baked in a regular 9-inch pie tin.) I probably would have left it longer, but we had Skype appointments with the kids, so I pulled it out, thinking it would gel as it cooled. It didn’t. The crust did come out crisp and not soggy, and I liked the topping. The filling is delicious, but we were hoping for regular pie.

              Next time, I’ll use just a quart of filling. Other possible issues that may have created problems include the different kind of oven, putting the pie on the center shelf rather than the lower one, since the top element only comes on for broiling, need for higher oven temperature, or maybe it would bake best with a top crust. There is also the possibility that the filling could have been thicker.

              • This reply was modified 6 years, 4 months ago by BakerAunt.
              • This reply was modified 6 years, 4 months ago by BakerAunt.
              in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of December 30, 2018? #14444
              BakerAunt
              Participant

                I baked a blueberry pie on New Year's day, that turned out rather soupy. Details are on the dessert thread.

                in reply to: What are You Cooking the Week of December 30, 2018? #14443
                BakerAunt
                Participant

                  For Tuesday’s New Year’s dinner, I made maple-glazed pork tenderloin, mashed Yukon Gold potatoes w/skins; and black-eyed peas. We also had applesauce that I made in November and froze. Dinner was great, the dessert not so great.

                  in reply to: Blueberry Pie with No Top Crust? #14439
                  BakerAunt
                  Participant

                    Thanks, Cass. Happy New Year to you! I was trying to cut back on the saturated fat by not having a top crust, but perhaps I could use a light streusel topping, like the one I used on the apple cake last week.

                    in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of December 30, 2018? #14434
                    BakerAunt
                    Participant

                      I baked on New Year’s Eve. I again used as my base recipe, the KAF recipe for Oatmeal Toasting Bread. I use half bread flour and half whole wheat flour, along with 1 Tbs. flax meal. I use 1 cup buttermilk, in which I soak my grains of choice. Previously, I’ve used KAF’s Harvest Grains, but I’ve also used rolled oats, and last time I used rolled barley. This time I used Bob’s Red Mill rolled Five Grain Flakes. I cut the salt to 1 tsp. I find that the bread bakes a nice high loaf in an 8x4 loaf pan. I bake it to about 200F, which takes 47 minutes rather than 40 minutes, although that may be the oven I currently am using.

                      in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of December 23, 2018? #14422
                      BakerAunt
                      Participant

                        I tried a new recipe on Friday, Maple Date Kamut Cookies, from Bob’s Red Mill. It was on a package of dates I bought from them, and apparently it is in their cook book, but it is not on their website. The only saturated fat comes from the two eggs, and the recipe made 26 cookies. It also has oats. The cookies stay as little balls. I left the first batch that way; the second batch I smooshed flat. I think that the flatter ones bake better. I was not that impressed with them Friday evening, but they improve the next day. If I make them again, and likely I will since my husband likes them, and I still have the rest of the bag of kamut flour to finish, I might cut the quick oats back from 2 ½ cups to 2 ¼ cups, as the cookies seem a bit heavy.

                        I baked another new recipe on Saturday, Fresh Apple Cake, from Recipes from the Old Mill: Baking with Whole Grains, by Sarah E. Myers and Mary Beth Lind, two sisters whose family, according to the blurb on the back, has operated a mill producing stone-ground flour in West Virginia for two generations. This recipe is on p. 213. (Publisher: Good Books, 1995). It’s a favorite baking book, and so far, every recipe has worked well. I was particularly pleased that the 13x9-inch cake has 18g of saturated fat, so reasonable pieces work within dietary parameters. I used one Jonathan and three Winesaps. I substituted Penzey's Apple Pie Spice for 1 tsp. cinnamon and 1/4 tsp. cloves in the cake itself, simply because I have the apple pie spice (a free sample) to use. I also substituted 1 cup buttermilk for 1 cup yogurt. We will have it for dinner tonight. I'll add a note after we sample it.

                        Note: The apple cake is delicious. I will definitely bake it again.

                        • This reply was modified 6 years, 4 months ago by BakerAunt.
                        • This reply was modified 6 years, 4 months ago by BakerAunt.
                        in reply to: What are You Cooking the Week of December 23, 2018? #14421
                        BakerAunt
                        Participant

                          We are also eating leftovers--and loving it!--but for dinner Friday night, I supplemented the small amount of leftover dressing by roasting a pan of potatoes, cut into cubes and rubbed with olive oil and sprinkled with poultry seasoning. 40 min at 400F worked perfectly.

                          in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of December 23, 2018? #14416
                          BakerAunt
                          Participant

                            On Thursday, I baked a bread that KAF called “Nelson’s Choice Rye Bread,” on a long-ago package, but which they now call something else. The recipe comes directly from Secrets of Jewish Baker, and it was so attributed at the time. It’s an iffy recipe, and KAF now has reduced the original amount of water in order to produce a better result. I used 1 cup plus 1 Tbs. water; next time, I will reduce that to 1 cup, although the rainy day may have also affected the dough. I baked it this time with dark rye flour (usually I do a mix of dark and medium rye flour), and I used non-fat plain Greek yogurt in place of the sour cream. (I’ve used regular sour cream and low-fat sour cream in the past.) I added 1 Tbs. canola oil to try to make up for the fat that isn’t there in the dairy. I do not have vital wheat gluten, an ingredient that I do not stock, so I omitted it. I had to add an additional 4 Tbs. of First Clear flour, which is the other flour in the bread. With this bread, the key is not to let the second rise go too long, or it will collapse when baking. I let it rise for about 35 minutes, then slashed and baked in a round 8-inch cake pan. The bread did not rise as high as it sometimes does, but it held its shape better. We will try it for sandwiches on Friday. I'll add a note to this post then about taste and texture.

                            Note: The bread came out delicious, and the crumb was even throughout.

                            • This reply was modified 6 years, 4 months ago by BakerAunt.
                            in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of December 23, 2018? #14411
                            BakerAunt
                            Participant

                              I found basic instructions for the Galaxy, which is from Sears. There was no mention of whether the broiler is supposed to come on for pre-heating. I think that Mike is correct, and that the broiler is not supposed to engage. As the oven holds a temperature that equates with what is on the dial, it's good for baking, even though my baked goods seem to need a longer time.

                              in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of December 23, 2018? #14405
                              BakerAunt
                              Participant

                                Skeptic--yes, I'll check the internet. The broiler does work, so maybe the oven just takes longer.

                                The pumpkin pie was excellent from the crust to the filling! At about 4.5 g. sat. fat per 1/8th, it is slightly high, but workable for my low-saturated fat parameters.

                                in reply to: What are You Cooking the Week of December 23, 2018? #14404
                                BakerAunt
                                Participant

                                  I made a vegetable soup (onion, celery, carrots from our garden, mushrooms, parsley) with chicken broth and Christmas shaped pasta for lunch on Christmas Day.

                                  For dinner, my husband roasted at 15 lb. turkey (smallest we could find when we bought it before Thanksgiving). I made a "lighter" version of my blue-bag Pepperidge Farm dressing, which means I used a bit more than 1 Tbs. butter (usually I use 8 Tbs.). I cut back the broth a bit so it would not be soggy. It was pretty good, even though my taste buds would have liked more butter. We also had steamed broccoli, before moving on to pumpkin pie.

                                Viewing 15 posts - 5,896 through 5,910 (of 7,835 total)