Mon. Feb 9th, 2026

Mike Nolan

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Viewing 15 posts - 7,336 through 7,350 (of 7,838 total)
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  • in reply to: Antacid in pizza dough? #6499
    Mike Nolan
    Keymaster

      Maybe it's like Velveeta or the Kraft jar cheeses, no refrigeration needed until it's opened.

      in reply to: How Many Different Flours Do You Have in Your House? #6489
      Mike Nolan
      Keymaster

        Well, now I need to itemize mine:

        KAF AP
        KAF bread
        GM unbleached
        pastry flour
        cake flour
        White Lily Flour
        bleached AP flour
        whole wheat flour (freshly ground in my mill) from both hard red and soft red wheat berries
        cracked wheat
        wheat bran
        vital gluten (seldom used these days)
        semoina
        sprouted wheat flour
        rye flour
        rye chops
        corn meal
        corn flour
        cornstarch
        potato flour
        potato starch
        sweet rice flour
        brown rice flour
        tapioca flour
        barley flour
        sorghum flour
        millet flour
        teff
        garbanzo bean flour
        arrowroot
        almond flour
        hazelnut flour
        pecan meal
        oat flour
        oat bran
        rolled oats
        steel cut oats
        buckwheat flour
        soy
        flax

        Listing whole seeds would take some time, too.

        And I may have missed a few.

        in reply to: Antacid in pizza dough? #6486
        Mike Nolan
        Keymaster

          I generally use whole-milk mozzarella on pizza and lasagna, but I do like to add a sprinkle of a four-cheese blend I get at Sams Club that has Romano, Parmesan, Asiago and Provolone. My mother used to say that a pizza without some Romano cheese on it is boring.

          in reply to: How Many Different Flours Do You Have in Your House? #6472
          Mike Nolan
          Keymaster

            If I include non-wheat flours, I'm probably at 20 or more.

            in reply to: ? 4 Aaron & Others #6465
            Mike Nolan
            Keymaster

              A cupcake-sized pot pie is small enough that I don't bother to cut vents in it.

              in reply to: Antacid in pizza dough? #6452
              Mike Nolan
              Keymaster

                There are enzymes present that might improve flavor by aging even in an unyeasted pizza dough.

                in reply to: Antacid in pizza dough? #6446
                Mike Nolan
                Keymaster

                  If you didn't age the dough a long time, the baking soda might provide some rise.

                  Has anyone seen a pizza crust recipe with double acting baking powder in it?

                  in reply to: ? 4 Aaron & Others #6442
                  Mike Nolan
                  Keymaster

                    I make individual sized chicken pot pies in a cupcake pan, topped with a little puff pastry, then I freeze them, take them out of the pans and put them in plastic bags. Pop one in the microwave for a few minutes and it's nice and warm.

                    Before my wife's mother died, we'd package up chili in individual servings for her. She always called it 'tomato soup' because it was heavy on tomatoes.

                    in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of January 22, 2017? #6433
                    Mike Nolan
                    Keymaster

                      KP posted his thoughts on bleached flour and cookies more than once on the old BC, I think/hope one of them got archived and posted here.

                      Short form: Bleaching flour weakens the gluten bonds, so you wind up with less chewy cookies.

                      Alton Brown's episode on cookie-making did an excellent job of talking about how to get soft, crisp or chewy cookies by manipulating the amount of sugar and fat.

                      in reply to: Pastry Cream #6432
                      Mike Nolan
                      Keymaster

                        A few years ago I made a large batch of eclairs (like 8 dozen) and wound up making about 6 batches of pastry cream (several of them gluten-free, to go in gluten-free eclairs). With practice, the prepping/cooking part is not where you spend the most time.

                        The most time-consuming part of making pastry cream is chilling it, and spreading it fairly thin on a sheet pan then putting it in a blast chiller is one way cooking competitors have to speed that up. Using a drum sieve to strain it saves time, too.

                        And they don't usually wait for it to get fully chilled and set, they just get it down to about 80. An extra egg yolk or two will produce a fairly firm pastry cream even when it's tepid. I have discovered, though, that it is possible to have a pastry cream get too eggy, it tastes more like scrambled eggs than pastry cream.

                        in reply to: What are You Cooking the Week of January 22, 2017? #6413
                        Mike Nolan
                        Keymaster

                          Today I'm making bottom round with onion gravy. I started the onions an hour before adding the meat, so they should get nicely caramelized.

                          in reply to: stand mixer glitch #6396
                          Mike Nolan
                          Keymaster

                            If it was me, I'd start by checking both the mixer and the beater to make sure nothing's clogged up or bent. I clean mine with a toothbrush every now and then, because stuff gets flung up into all sorts of nooks and crannies.

                            in reply to: Sweet Potato Biscuit Recipe That Did Not Work #6377
                            Mike Nolan
                            Keymaster

                              I'm skeptical of any recipe that calls for yeast but doesn't include significant rising time.

                              in reply to: What are You Baking the Week of January 15, 2017? #6345
                              Mike Nolan
                              Keymaster

                                Today I am making Vienna bread from the Clonmel Kitchens Double Crusty recipe. (Making this recipe reminds me that we haven't heard from Paddy L in a long time, I hope she's doing OK.)

                                With our lowered bread consumption, I am baking 3 loaves (about 17.5 ounces of dough each) and will slice them in half, freezing 2 1/2 loaves for future use. This'll probably last me 3-4 weeks.

                                in reply to: What are You Cooking the Week of January 15, 2017? #6323
                                Mike Nolan
                                Keymaster

                                  I haven't made pizza in a while, with just the two of us cranking the oven up for 1 or 2 pizzas seems like a waste of energy, and now that my wife's on a low-carb diet she isn't eating pizza or pasta much.

                                  Back in the day, We preferred whole milk mozzarella, which can be difficult to find in grocery stores, though we have been able to buy it in 5 pound bags at Sams Club. I like to top it with a 4-cheese blend: Parmesan, Romano, Asiago and Provolone.

                                Viewing 15 posts - 7,336 through 7,350 (of 7,838 total)