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I made 2 loaves of semolina bread today.
September 30, 2021 at 11:19 am in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of September 26, 2021? #31602I have a tapered wood rolling pin, I seldom use it because I can't figure out how the tapering is supposed to make it easier to roll out pastry. Are you supposed to rock it from side to side?
We also have one of the old traditional maple ones with handles, it is 11 inches long and 2 1/2 inches in diameter. My younger son liked using it for rolling out pizzas, but with my arthritis my hands don't fit around the handles very well any more.
I have two straight wooden rolling pins, one is 20 inches long and 2 inches in diameter, the other is 19 inches long and 1 1/2 inches in diameter. I also have a silicone coated one that is 20 x 2, and I use a 3/8" dowel for making creases in a celebration Challah so that the upper layer nestles into the groove, and also for making fendu (split bread.)
I find more delicate pastries work better with the larger diameter rolling pin.
Irish baker Jimmy Griffin has a translucent plastic one he uses in the videos he uploads to Youtube: Jimmy Griffin Videos, it appears to be longer than 20 inches but I haven't found anywhere to order it yet, so I don't know the specifics or cost.
September 29, 2021 at 7:13 pm in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of September 26, 2021? #31595We had tomato and salami sandwiches for supper. I'm not sure if I'll get enough tomatoes to do another batch of tomato juice this season, the garden is really slowing down as the weather cools.
September 28, 2021 at 6:39 pm in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of September 26, 2021? #31577We had baked breaded fish and steamed broccoli tonight.
September 28, 2021 at 9:12 am in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of September 26, 2021? #31565Made In has several stainless steel pans including a 12 inch frying pan and a 3 quart saucier that I've been eyeing, price looks good and their stuff is getting good reviews and endorsements from chefs I respect. I don't know if they've got one with a glass lid, but personally I prefer a metal lid. They also have non-stick pans, but I prefer stainless steel ones.
I've got two 10" Ikea stainless steel saute pans that are also very good and reasonably priced, but the nearest Ikea for us is in Kansas City.
I looked up the Angel Biscuits recipe that was posted in the Johnson & Wales bread symposium recipe file, it makes 200 biscuits!
Angel biscuits are sometimes called bride biscuits, because they're so easy that even an inexperienced cook like a bride can make them.
September 26, 2021 at 5:22 pm in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of September 26, 2021? #31549I haven't made carrot cake for a while, but I need to make another batch of carrot vinegar soon, and I'll run 10 pounds of carrots through my juicer to do it, use the juice for the carrot vinegar and use some of the pulp for carrot cake, freezing what I don't use up right away.
September 26, 2021 at 5:17 pm in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of September 26, 2021? #31548We're doing a lavash pizza tonight.
I see what may be two biscuit recipes from dvdlee, but they're pretty similar and neither appear to be angel biscuits, which are supposed to have both baking powder and yeast.
I do see one from Mrs. Cindy, and there's a 7-Up angel biscuit recipe, too, with discussion over whether it makes any difference if you use club soda or ginger ale.
There was a presentation on angel biscuits in the J&W symposium, but I was travelling that day and didn't see it.
You need to click on the 'advanced' button to get to the detailed search parameters.
September 25, 2021 at 9:05 pm in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of September 19, 2021? #31533Prepping the turducken was interesting, you fully debone the chicken and the duck and partially debone the turkey (not the legs or wings, but you remove the breastbone and back.) I prepped it on Christmas eve and we cooked it on Christmas, but several of us came down with some kind of cold or flu starting around noon on Christmas, while the turducken was in the oven, and we only picked at the turducken a bit.
Would I do it again? Probably not. I've done a deboned chicken a few times, it is fun to fill it with stuffing, roast it, and then slice it at the table, so each slice has white meat, dark meat and stuffing it it.
The stores sometimes have a turducken in the freezer section at the holidays but it is usually prepared Cajun style and that's too spicy for us.
September 25, 2021 at 8:59 pm in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of September 19, 2021? #31531Probably doesn't make much difference if they ever swam or flew, their bodies are still engineered for that.
September 25, 2021 at 6:50 pm in reply to: What are you Cooking the Week of September 19, 2021? #31527I deboned a duck once, to make turducken. The breast isn't that big, but the wings are huge, because ducks need strong wings to fly. The leg bones are bigger too, because they use them for swimming. It took a lot longer to debone than a chicken does.
I know you can use kefir as a seed to make more kefir, like you do with buttermilk.
It strikes me as strange to find kefir but not buttermilk. That'd be like finding octopus but not shrimp.
I seldom read the reviews on Amazon, because I assume the really positive or negative ones are often fake.
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