Mon. Apr 6th, 2026

BakerAunt

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  • in reply to: What are You Cooking the Week of September 15, 2019 #18340
    BakerAunt
    Participant

      For Saturday night’s dinner, I made ratatouille. I got behind and explained to my husband that my sous chef had not come into work, nor did the dishwasher. 😊 It was a late dinner. We had the ratatouille over some mixed, mostly brown rice, with some of the turkey breast that my husband roasted earlier this week.

      • This reply was modified 6 years, 6 months ago by BakerAunt.
      in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of September 15. 2019? #18338
      BakerAunt
      Participant

        The rolls rose well in the refrigerator overnight. I do not regret using the gold yeast. They were ready to go into the oven as soon as it reached temperature, and I baked them for 25 minutes. I used too small of a pan (a 10x10 rather than a 13x9), so we had very squished together rolls. Next time, if I want to make more than 12, I'll roll the dough up from the long side.

        For a glaze, I used 1 cup powdered sugar, 1 Tbs. of 1% milk, and 2 Tbs. maple syrup. When I couldn't taste the maple flavor, I added 1/8 tsp. maple extract, and that did the trick. the filling seemed to bake into the rolls. My husband, my stepson, and I managed to devour about half a pan. (Hey, we all know that they are best when freshly baked and slightly warm!.)

        Although I said that I would only do one test run of a recipe, I'm going to try the Snails recipe from the cousin's collection, sneak in some white whole wheat flour and flax meal, and replace the 4 Tbs. of butter with at least 3 Tbs. oil. For the filling, I have looked at a recipe in The Red Star Centennial Bread Sampler. It uses 1/4 cup packed brown sugar, 2 Tbs. sugar, and 2 tsp. cinnamon. I will also look at some other cookbooks, including the Fleischmann's ones I have. I won't butter the dough before adding the filling. I'll spritz it with water before and after I sprinkle on the filling.

        in reply to: What are You Cooking the Week of September 15, 2019 #18337
        BakerAunt
        Participant

          It sounds like a lovely soup, Italian Cook. My husband won't go near brussels sprouts, although he politely ate roasted ones when we were invited to dinner last Thanksgiving. If they come up at the farmers' market, I may buy some and try this soup for me.

          in reply to: Daily Quiz for September 21, 2019 #18328
          BakerAunt
          Participant

            I had to guess and got it wrong.

            in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of September 15. 2019? #18322
            BakerAunt
            Participant

              Skeptic--my stepson is happily branching out after having eaten half of a blueberry pie. 🙂

              On Friday evening, I started an experiment. I have a recipe for Maple Breakfast Buns that came out of Breads, Breads, and More Breads, a Pillsbury booklet from the 1980s. It has been a longtime favorite. Although it is titled “buns,” these are a roll with a brown sugar maple filling. Last time I made them, I worked in some white whole wheat flour (1 cup), added ¼ cup special dry milk, added 2 Tbs. flax meal, and used the special Gold yeast. The results were good, but I want to get the rolls a bit lighter in texture and increase their keeping quality. I substituted in ¾ cup buttermilk for that much water and pre-soaked the ½ cup of oats in it. I also added a egg, which meant that I ended up needing about 3 Tbs. more flour; I put in 2 Tbs., and it was slightly sticky but ok to pat out and shape. After the dough rises, I will make the filling and shape it, then refrigerate overnight and bake it in the morning.

              The regular filling is 1/2 cup brown sugar plus 1/2 tsp. maple extract. I wondered about using maple sugar, which would not have been readily available when the recipe was published, but after looking at some internet recipes, I'll stick with the regular filling.

              After I bake them tomorrow, however, I may try the maple syrup glaze that KAF has for one of its doughnut recipes.

              • This reply was modified 6 years, 6 months ago by BakerAunt.
              • This reply was modified 6 years, 6 months ago by BakerAunt.
              in reply to: Epicurious 4 levels series — Episode 15: Cinnamon rolls #18321
              BakerAunt
              Participant

                I've decided to see if I can do a rift on a maple breakfast sweet roll. Details will be forthcoming in the baking thread.

                in reply to: Epicurious 4 levels series — Episode 15: Cinnamon rolls #18312
                BakerAunt
                Participant

                  I just googled challah cinnamon rolls, and as Mike notes, there are a number of recipes.

                  I have a wonderful challah recipe gifted to me by Cass. Converting it into cinnamon rolls would take some experimentation in terms of the filling and baking time. With the reunion fast approaching, and a need to lock in what I'm going to bake--I probably only have time for a single experiment.

                  Last year, I also made a delicious braided 6-strand(!) pumpkin loaf from a KAF recipe and used oil in the dough. That might make for a nice holiday sweet roll with a cinnamon-brown sugar filling and the candied ginger omitted. Here's the link: https://www.kingarthurflour.com/recipes/ginger-pumpkin-braid-recipe

                  This discussion is helping a lot!

                  in reply to: Epicurious 4 levels series — Episode 15: Cinnamon rolls #18310
                  BakerAunt
                  Participant

                    Eggs are not an issue. An egg has 1 1/2-2g saturated fat--depending on whom you believe--but it also has important nutrients, which, alas, butter does not. So, I don't worry about them in my baking. Butter and cream cheese are bigger problems. I've used oil successfully in yeasted sweet bread, so it should work with the right recipe. Adding some buttermilk also helps taste and texture.

                    in reply to: Daily Quiz for September 20, 2019 #18302
                    BakerAunt
                    Participant

                      I missed it too, as I did not know the answer.

                      Now that we have the list of those we need, what foods provide them?

                      in reply to: Epicurious 4 levels series — Episode 15: Cinnamon rolls #18300
                      BakerAunt
                      Participant

                        It's an interesting recipe that uses a technique--adding baking powder--that King Arthur also uses upon occasion. I do not understand the supposedly health conscious fascination with coconut sugar or coconut whatever.

                        I've made the cinnamon rolls in the King Arthur Wholegrain Baking Book and substituted some oil for the butter (except in the frosting), and it is still a favorite recipe with my husband. I find the texture slightly dense, but the filling and a bit of frosting make up for it.

                        I also have an oat maple roll recipe that I got from a Pillsbury booklet years ago. It has only a token amount of oats, but I've subbed in some brown sugar. It also did well with an oil substitution.

                        I've suddenly developed an urge to bake cinnamon rolls. I need to be able to bake something for my husband's family reunion. We are staying at a place with a kitchen, and these occasions seem to bring out a kind of culinary one-upmanship, or at least focus on the recipes of one family that bring out its memories. His cousins are all into butter. (One told me that I should forget about the dietary changes and just take the cholesterol lowering drug.) They also appear to be whole wheat flour adverse--and some people do taste it as bitter--but I have worked in white whole wheat flour as well as barley or oats and no one noticed. (They do make their feelings known.) There will be fourteen of us at some meals, so I will need at least 16 rolls, and I'll need to be able to park the shaped sweet rolls overnight in the refrigerator.

                        I have the "Snails" recipe from the mother of one of the families. I can tweak it for less butter. It had no filling with it, so I would need to look at fillings.

                        I will experiment tonight--while my younger stepson is still here to eat some of what I produce. It won't be Level 1--because Level 1 seems to require copious amounts of butter--but I will NOT be using pizza dough. (Couldn't the Level 3 baker have just bought prepared bread dough?)

                        • This reply was modified 6 years, 6 months ago by BakerAunt.
                        in reply to: Epicurious 4 levels series — Episode 15: Cinnamon rolls #18292
                        BakerAunt
                        Participant

                          Hmm--I thought that Cass told us that with modern muffin pans, which are heavier, we don't need to use water anymore. I don't know if he told us that on this site or on the now closed baking circle site, or I would look for it.

                          in reply to: Epicurious 4 levels series — Episode 15: Cinnamon rolls #18289
                          BakerAunt
                          Participant

                            I find that spritzing the dough with water before sprinkling on the cinnamon sugar also works well, a technique that I learned from Bernard Clayton's bread book.

                            Aaron, I have a recipe for "Snails" (English word for Schnecken) from my husband's aunt. Although it did not have a cinnamon filling, it can be made with one. I've made it with no filling and frosting on the top.

                            • This reply was modified 6 years, 6 months ago by BakerAunt.
                            in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of September 15. 2019? #18288
                            BakerAunt
                            Participant

                              On Thursday, I baked a recipe from the King Arthur site that I baked last year and found this year while I was paging through the cookies in my binder trying to find one with lower saturated fat. I wrote excellent on it last year: Zucchini Chocolate Chip Pecan Bars. To find it on the KAF site, you need to go to a blog, so here is the link. It appears a little further down, past the zucchini brownies and the zucchini chocolate chip cookies:

                              https://www.kingarthurflour.com/blog/2015/07/07/zucchini-recipes?page=3&hierarchicalMenu%5Bcategory_lvl0%5D%5B0%5D=Cookies%20%26%20Bars&query=zucchini%20chocolate%20chip%20pecan%20bars

                              I used a bit more than 6 oz. zucchini (actually a summer squash that has a very long neck without seeds, then a bulbous bottom, so I used what I needed from the neck). I used the white whole wheat flour, but I added 2 Tbs. flax meal and ¼ cup BRM milk powder. I used 90g of large Ghirardelli chocolate chips (maybe about ½ cup or so—saturated fat is given for gram weights, so I weigh them). The ingredients come together very easily in the food processor. With my changes the whole batch has 28g saturated fat, which when cut into serving sizes is not that bad, and my younger stepson will happily help eat them!

                              • This reply was modified 6 years, 6 months ago by BakerAunt.
                              in reply to: Daily Quiz for September 19, 2019 #18277
                              BakerAunt
                              Participant

                                I did not know and guessed incorrectly. I suspect that the size of the apples matters.

                                in reply to: Epicurious 4 levels series — Episode 15: Cinnamon rolls #18276
                                BakerAunt
                                Participant

                                  I actually have a Cooks' Illustrated special issue that is titled Baking for Two. I need to pull it out and check over the recipes.

                                  I looked at the link to the recipe you posted, Mike. I noted that it has 49g saturated fat from the 7 Tbs. of butter alone. Even one, without frosting (I think regular cream cheese is 5g saturated fat per oz.), a single roll would put me over my limit of no more than 11g per day. I only allow myself such an indulgence, perhaps a small slice of cheesecake on the rare occasion we go out to dinner.

                                Viewing 15 posts - 5,896 through 5,910 (of 8,473 total)