Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Cookie Baking

Baking cookies always reminds me of my ma back in the day, every clip I acquire a pennant of that sweet smell, it always conveys me back and sets a smiling on my face.

Below are formulas and methods for a couple of different cooky varieites:

You will need:

Cassic or Spiced Cookies

Large mixing bowl

Cups and spoons for measurement

Pitchfork for stirring

Flour

Baking pulverization and sodium carbonate

Salt

Cocoa pulverization

Spices(optional)

Butter Melt Cookies

Another big mixing bowl or wash and reuse the other 1

A 2nd set of measurement cups and spoons

Food processer

Wooden spoon

Rubber spatula

Butter, oleo and pick cheese

White Person and brownish refined sugar

Egg

Vanilla infusions

Raisins, nuts and cocoa bits

Rolled oats

Any other ingredients that are added to the butter and eggs in your formulas

For the novitiate baker among you, to best avoid transferring spirits from one formula to another, you necessitate to begin with basic formulas that have got no spices, chocolate, or other over powering ingredients.

Starting with your first recipe, measurement your flour and baking hot sodium carbonate into 1 bowl. Then, compound the butter, sugar, eggs, vanilla in another bowl as directed. Gradually premix flour and bking sodium carbonate into the butter mixture and add any extras.

Next, scraping down the borders of the mixing bowl with the spatula to unclutter up any excess, form the dough into a ball and wrapper it in cleave film. Identify the different formulas by authorship the name on the plastic with a felt-tip marker and set it in the fridge.

Friday, May 04, 2007

The Joy of Convection Ovens - They're Not Just for Restaurants Anymore

Nowadays, it is easier for home cooks to buy professional equipment for their kitchens. For example, the convection oven is a tool used by professional bakers worldwide. Convection ovens that restaurants use are highly priced (a few thousand dollars for a good one) and need special wiring. But now, there are a line of table-top, home ovens that provide convection-style cooking, for only a few hundred dollars each.

When looking for convection ovens, decide what features do you want. And, compare different brands. There are many brands, such as German-made Wiesheu, US-made Kenmore or Viking. Do you want a professional oven or one for the home? Freestanding model or table-top? The bigger and fancier it is, the larger the price tag. Mine is a counter-top model that also includes a built-in breadmaker and jam-maker. There are many options to choose from, so check around. The most desired kind of convection oven is the European, or "third element" kind of convection oven (three heat sources). Mine is not a "third element" style, most countertop models aren't, and it does just fine, so don't rule out the two-element kinds, they are great, too. Whatever suits your needs the best, and fits within your budget.

Convection ovens cause breads to have superior crust and texture, just like a bakery. Pastries come out incredibly flaky, such as croissants or puff pastry. It is amazing how beautifully golden and evenly cooked my breads are now. Before, in a gas oven, they came out nice, but now they rise better. Breads baked in the convection oven even have a quality taste, since the strong heat carmelizes the exterior, they have a slightly nutty and sweet flavor. It's because the oven strongly circulates the air around the inside, distributing the heat more efficiently to the food.

Some foods aren't meant to be made using convection style, due to the air movement inside the oven. Making souffles, meringues or anything delicate is discouraged. Also, if you work with parchment, anchor it down in the oven to keep it from blowing all over the place. But, in general, nearly everything can be made in the oven, from cookies and cakes to breads of many kinds. The breadmaker in my unit is fantastic. Just load the included container with the ingredients, and the oven does the rest: mixing, poofing and baking. When it is finished, it just sounds a chime. Pies bake perfectly, my oven has a round baking rack for pizzas and pies, that rotates as it cooks. The oven also makes great roasts and includes both a vertical and horizontal spit to cook with. With convection, the possibilities are nearly endless.

When converting your recipes to convection cooking, the experts say to subtract 25 degrees from the recipe's given setting. Convection ovens cook faster, so also decrease the cooking time by about 25% as well. Multiple racks of cookies can be baked at the same time with superior results to the less evenly cooked multiple batches in a regular oven. That is why most bakeries and restaurants use convection ovens, because they can bake in quantity without sacrificing quality of the finished product.

Don't be afraid to switch to convection cooking. Once you make the change, you will be glad that you did. I know I am. After seeing others use them and tasting their artisan breads, I decided to get my own. If you are a serious bread baker or cook, this oven will be of great use to you. That is why cooking schools use and prefer them to conventional ovens. Give it a try, you won't be disappointed. If anything, you'll be finding excuses to do more baking. Your family will most definitely approve.