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Foodiefy by Goddess of Scrumptiousness

Everything you want to know about food, cooking, baking, eating, foodie lifestyle and the art of deliciousness

Posts tagged baking

Jan 31 '12

BAKING SMARTS:
TIPS FOR MAKING THE PERFECT COOKIES, BARS, MUFFINS AND QUICK BREADS
I am a self-taught baker. I’ve been baking since I was 11 years old using an Toaster Oven. When I turned 14 years old I became decently good at baking (this means that the cookies and mini muffins I baked in our toaster oven were no longer like that of flat stones and cute hard weapons for throwing whenever I had those teenage tantrums) I was permitted to use a Turbo-Broiler (this baking/roasting appliance is now on display at the Smithsonian I believe! joke!). Then when I finally got my baking mojo at the age of 17 years old, my father bought me a mighty fine Italian made oven large enough to fit two baking sheets. I became more confident and have started modifying and creating my own recipes of cookies, cakes, muffins, tarts, candies and even flavor combinations (some were a  success, others were absolutely, Yuck!)
I learned through Trial and Error. If the product came out not tasting and looking like I want it to taste and look like, I would analyze it and tweak at the ingredients, I add and deduct one or three ingredients and start over with the whole baking project again.
I also relied on as many baking books and magazines as I can learn and get techniques from. It was my absolute passion for baking that also lead me to pursue a culinary career.
Some people are quite intimidated with baking, and I believe it’s because most of them just look at the recipes and go through the whole ingredients list and procedure without having the proper understanding of the certain “behaviors” of some flours, the temperament, size, material of various cookie sheets and baking pans, and the “sensitivity” of different batters.
So I decided to share with you some mish mash of baking wiz I learned through the years.
_______________________________________________________
Cookies:
On Baking/Cookie Sheets
- Look for shiny, heavy-gauge cookie sheets with very low or no sides, this will ensure even browning of cookies.
- Avoid using dark cookie sheets (those teflon finished baking sheets), these kind tends to make the bottom of the cookies to overbrown.
- Instead of spraying your sheets with vegetable spray to avoid cookies from sticking, use either baking parchment or silicone mats (silpats) to line your cookie sheets. You will never have a problem taking out your baked cookies, plus you also don’t need to add fat (from vegetable sprays).
- Always let hot cookie sheets cool before you place another batch of cookie dough on it, otherwise the butter in the dough will instantly melt and separate.
- To avoid having your cookies fall apart when you take them off the cookie sheet, let them cool for a good minute to firm up on the sheet before removing them.
How come your cookies came out perfect and mine did not?
- Never substitute margarine or shortening when the recipe calls for butter. Because nothing beats the flavor and richness that butter adds to cookies and mostly other baked products. It also contributes to the texture and browning properties of cookies.
- When your cookie dough or baked cookies turned out dry, you may have been too heavy handed when measuring the flour. To measure properly, stir flour in the container to lighten it. Gently spoon the flour into a dry measuring cup and level the top with an off-set spatula or the back of a knife. Never pack the flour into the cup or tap the cup with the spatula or on the counter to level.
- Do not substitute baking soda for baking powder and vice versa.
Do not omit when the recipe calls for both or either of them.
Although it is true that both baking soda and baking powder are leavening agents and produce carbon dioxide which causes baked products to rise, each do not react the same way because they differ chemically.
- Do not replace a cup and a half of sugar in a standard recipe with  3-4 packets of sugar substitute. It will never work! Instead, find another low-sugar and/or sugar free recipe of the same kind of cookie or any baked product.
- Most if not all cookie recipe uses large eggs.
- I use an ice cream scooper to make my cookies in uniform shape and size… this might also tell you that I suffer from acute OCD! :)
Storing Cookies
- Most types of cookies keep at room temperature for up to 3 days.
- Make sure cookies have completely cooled on a wire rack before storing them, otherwise they will stick together.
- Never store crisp cookies and soft cookies on the same container. As crisp cookies will absorb moisture from the soft cookies.
- Most drop, sliced, bar and shaped cookies freeze well. Place cookies in flat containers. Place the cookies in layers separated by parchment or wax paper so they won’t stick.
__________________________________________________________
Bars or Slices:
- Use the right size baking tin for your bars. A tin that is too small will make a thicker and more cake-like base, not a chewy one. A tin that is too large will make the base dry or brittle. And tins with dark color are usually non-stick, these make your bars cook faster and brown more quickly, so check the bar for doneness 5 minutes before the end of the cooking time.
- It is always the best idea to line your tins with baking parchment, doing so will prevent the bar from sticking to the tin and provide handles so you can lift the whole product out of the tin.
- Most bar recipes have a pastry base. When making pastry, butter should always be diced and well chilled. I find that the easiest way to make pastry and not make the butter melt is to just use a food processor.
- Blind baking - when a recipe ask for pastry base to be partially baked before the topping or filling is added. This ensures that the base is cooked and firm and not made soggy once the filling is added and baked in the oven. Method: once the uncooked pastry is in the tin, cover with a sheet of baking paper, then fill the top of the sheet with either uncooked rice or baking beans (this weighs down the pastry and prevents it from puffing up) and bake. Remove the beans or rice and cook the pastry again until lightly brown and firm.
________________________________________________________
Muffins and Quick Breads:
- The most important thing to remember about muffin and quick bread batter is that it requires minimum mixing and SHOULD look coarse and lumpy. A large spoon or serving fork is the best implement for mixing.
- Muffins and quick breads are cooked when they are browned, risen, firm to touch and beginning to shrink from the sides of the pan. You can also insert a wooden skewer in the center. When skewer comes out clean then it is done.
- I always bake my muffins in cupcake liners just to avoid the fuss and to just easily take them out of the tin once they come out of the oven. And for quick breads, I always use a baking parchment paper to line the inside of my loaf pan so that I can just easily lift out the whole bread out of the pan.
- Muffins and quick breads freeze well. Just wrap them really well with cling wrap and place inside a ziploc bag and can be kept in the freezer for 3 months.
- I find the use of sour cream or buttermilk in muffins and quick breads makes them more tender, moist and flavorful. :)
________________________________________________________
Ingredient Substitutes that works just as great:
No Buttermilk: I add the juice of half a lemon to evaporated milk to make a cup. Let stand for 5 minutes to curdle a bit and lightly stir.
No Self-Rising flour: Add 1 1/2 teaspoons of baking powder and 1/2 teaspoon salt to every cup of all-purpose flour. Sift thrice to blend.
No Cake flour: Add 2 tablespoons of cornstarch to every cup of all-purpose flour. Sift 3 times.
Article and Food Photography Credit: Jeannie Maristela (August 6, 2011)

BAKING SMARTS:

TIPS FOR MAKING THE PERFECT COOKIES, BARS, MUFFINS AND QUICK BREADS

I am a self-taught baker. I’ve been baking since I was 11 years old using an Toaster Oven. When I turned 14 years old I became decently good at baking (this means that the cookies and mini muffins I baked in our toaster oven were no longer like that of flat stones and cute hard weapons for throwing whenever I had those teenage tantrums) I was permitted to use a Turbo-Broiler (this baking/roasting appliance is now on display at the Smithsonian I believe! joke!). Then when I finally got my baking mojo at the age of 17 years old, my father bought me a mighty fine Italian made oven large enough to fit two baking sheets. I became more confident and have started modifying and creating my own recipes of cookies, cakes, muffins, tarts, candies and even flavor combinations (some were a  success, others were absolutely, Yuck!)

I learned through Trial and Error. If the product came out not tasting and looking like I want it to taste and look like, I would analyze it and tweak at the ingredients, I add and deduct one or three ingredients and start over with the whole baking project again.

I also relied on as many baking books and magazines as I can learn and get techniques from. It was my absolute passion for baking that also lead me to pursue a culinary career.

Some people are quite intimidated with baking, and I believe it’s because most of them just look at the recipes and go through the whole ingredients list and procedure without having the proper understanding of the certain “behaviors” of some flours, the temperament, size, material of various cookie sheets and baking pans, and the “sensitivity” of different batters.

So I decided to share with you some mish mash of baking wiz I learned through the years.

_______________________________________________________

Cookies:

On Baking/Cookie Sheets

- Look for shiny, heavy-gauge cookie sheets with very low or no sides, this will ensure even browning of cookies.

- Avoid using dark cookie sheets (those teflon finished baking sheets), these kind tends to make the bottom of the cookies to overbrown.

- Instead of spraying your sheets with vegetable spray to avoid cookies from sticking, use either baking parchment or silicone mats (silpats) to line your cookie sheets. You will never have a problem taking out your baked cookies, plus you also don’t need to add fat (from vegetable sprays).

- Always let hot cookie sheets cool before you place another batch of cookie dough on it, otherwise the butter in the dough will instantly melt and separate.

- To avoid having your cookies fall apart when you take them off the cookie sheet, let them cool for a good minute to firm up on the sheet before removing them.

How come your cookies came out perfect and mine did not?

- Never substitute margarine or shortening when the recipe calls for butter. Because nothing beats the flavor and richness that butter adds to cookies and mostly other baked products. It also contributes to the texture and browning properties of cookies.

- When your cookie dough or baked cookies turned out dry, you may have been too heavy handed when measuring the flour. To measure properly, stir flour in the container to lighten it. Gently spoon the flour into a dry measuring cup and level the top with an off-set spatula or the back of a knife. Never pack the flour into the cup or tap the cup with the spatula or on the counter to level.

- Do not substitute baking soda for baking powder and vice versa.

Do not omit when the recipe calls for both or either of them.

Although it is true that both baking soda and baking powder are leavening agents and produce carbon dioxide which causes baked products to rise, each do not react the same way because they differ chemically.

- Do not replace a cup and a half of sugar in a standard recipe with  3-4 packets of sugar substitute. It will never work! Instead, find another low-sugar and/or sugar free recipe of the same kind of cookie or any baked product.

- Most if not all cookie recipe uses large eggs.

- I use an ice cream scooper to make my cookies in uniform shape and size… this might also tell you that I suffer from acute OCD! :)

Storing Cookies

- Most types of cookies keep at room temperature for up to 3 days.

- Make sure cookies have completely cooled on a wire rack before storing them, otherwise they will stick together.

- Never store crisp cookies and soft cookies on the same container. As crisp cookies will absorb moisture from the soft cookies.

- Most drop, sliced, bar and shaped cookies freeze well. Place cookies in flat containers. Place the cookies in layers separated by parchment or wax paper so they won’t stick.

__________________________________________________________

Bars or Slices:

- Use the right size baking tin for your bars. A tin that is too small will make a thicker and more cake-like base, not a chewy one. A tin that is too large will make the base dry or brittle. And tins with dark color are usually non-stick, these make your bars cook faster and brown more quickly, so check the bar for doneness 5 minutes before the end of the cooking time.

- It is always the best idea to line your tins with baking parchment, doing so will prevent the bar from sticking to the tin and provide handles so you can lift the whole product out of the tin.

- Most bar recipes have a pastry base. When making pastry, butter should always be diced and well chilled. I find that the easiest way to make pastry and not make the butter melt is to just use a food processor.

- Blind baking - when a recipe ask for pastry base to be partially baked before the topping or filling is added. This ensures that the base is cooked and firm and not made soggy once the filling is added and baked in the oven. Method: once the uncooked pastry is in the tin, cover with a sheet of baking paper, then fill the top of the sheet with either uncooked rice or baking beans (this weighs down the pastry and prevents it from puffing up) and bake. Remove the beans or rice and cook the pastry again until lightly brown and firm.

________________________________________________________

Muffins and Quick Breads:

- The most important thing to remember about muffin and quick bread batter is that it requires minimum mixing and SHOULD look coarse and lumpy. A large spoon or serving fork is the best implement for mixing.

- Muffins and quick breads are cooked when they are browned, risen, firm to touch and beginning to shrink from the sides of the pan. You can also insert a wooden skewer in the center. When skewer comes out clean then it is done.

- I always bake my muffins in cupcake liners just to avoid the fuss and to just easily take them out of the tin once they come out of the oven. And for quick breads, I always use a baking parchment paper to line the inside of my loaf pan so that I can just easily lift out the whole bread out of the pan.

- Muffins and quick breads freeze well. Just wrap them really well with cling wrap and place inside a ziploc bag and can be kept in the freezer for 3 months.

- I find the use of sour cream or buttermilk in muffins and quick breads makes them more tender, moist and flavorful. :)

________________________________________________________

Ingredient Substitutes that works just as great:

No Buttermilk: I add the juice of half a lemon to evaporated milk to make a cup. Let stand for 5 minutes to curdle a bit and lightly stir.

No Self-Rising flour: Add 1 1/2 teaspoons of baking powder and 1/2 teaspoon salt to every cup of all-purpose flour. Sift thrice to blend.

No Cake flour: Add 2 tablespoons of cornstarch to every cup of all-purpose flour. Sift 3 times.

Article and Food Photography Credit: Jeannie Maristela (August 6, 2011)

375 notes Tags: food baking baking techniques baking methods re-post

Jan 8 '12

Bread-Baking Cheat Sheet: 13 Bread Terms to Know

Photograph: Donna Currie

This isn’t a complete list and the definitions have been simplified, but it should help make reading just a little easier.

Autolyze: Resting the dough after the first mixing of flour and water. Things happen in the dough (the flour hydrates and gluten develops) but from the baker’s perspective, you just let it rest.

Baker’s Percentages: A method of determining the amount of each ingredient based on its relationship to the weight of the flour. If you like math and percentages, you’ll love this. Otherwise your brain will melt. Read more here.

Baguette: A long rope, sometimes with tapered ends. Used for baguettes as for strands of dough for braided breads, pretzels, and similar shapes.

Batard: Bread dough shaped into a fat log with tapered ends.

Bench: Your work surface. Bench Rest means letting the dough rest on the work surface before proceeding with shaping. Bench Flour is flour that you’ve sprinkled on the work surface.

Boule: A round squished ball-shaped bread.

Couche: A sheet of fabric used to hold and separate loaves as they are rising. Usually linen. You can use a thick, clean, fuzz-free kitchen towel. Terrycloth is a bad idea.

Ferment/Proof: Letting the dough rest and rise. Yeast can also be proofed by adding dry yeast to warm water with sugar or flour to prove that it is still viable.

Fold: Just like it sounds; you fold the dough over itself. This is gentler than kneading but serves much the same purpose.

Lame: A tool used to score or slash the top of a loaf of bread. A razor blade or sharp knife can also be used.

Preferment: Any of a number of mixtures of flour, water, and yeast (and sometimes salt) that is combined and left to develop before being added to the rest of the dough components. The biga, levain, pate fermente, poolish, and sponge are all types of preferments. If you need to use one of these, the recipe should give you the instructions for making it.

Pull a window: A test used to determine the development of the gluten. A small bit of dough is gently pulled and stretched. If it can create a thin membrane without tearing, the gluten is fully developed. Read more on the windowpane test.

Retarding: Slowing down the fermentation of the dough, usually by refrigerating it.

Source: Entirely from www.seriouseats.com

186 notes Tags: food baking bread making culinary arts gastronomy food article food information

Dec 11 '11
BAKING 101 :  HOW TO CHOOSE AND BUY BAKEWARE
Having the right bakeware will make the time you spend in  your kitchen both more efficient and more enjoyable. There are few things more  annoying than having a fantastic dessert that took you hours to prepare ruined  because you didn’t have the right tools to bake it properly. This guide to bake  ware will help you ensure that you have the most essential bakeware for your  kitchen, made of the materials that best suit your cooking style.
 What bakeware do you need?
There are  all kinds of bakeware that you can use if you are planning to open a bakery or  become a pastry chef. You could spend a near-infinite of time and money trying  out fancy tools and equipment. However, if you’d simply like to have a good  array of bakeware on hand to cover most household needs, here is a good overview  of what you’ll need to buy. • Two baking sheets • A 22.5cm/ 9-inch pie tin • A loaf tin • Two 2 x 17.5cm/ 7-inch shallow cake tins  • A  32x22x5cm/ 13x9x2-inch baking tin • An 20cm/8-inch square or round cake tin • A 6 or 12-hole muffin tin • A 4-hole Yorkshire Pudding tin With this selection, you can create most common cakes, pies, muffins,  tray  bakes and Yorkshire puddings.
If you’d like to spread out a little more, you could also  invest in a Bundt pan for fancy cakes, a spring form pan for cheesecakes and  other very moist confections, and a pizza stone for creating home-baked pizzas.
How Finishes Affect  Your Baking
How your bakeware looks can actually have quite an impact on your  baking. The darker a material is, the faster it heats and the longer it retains  that heat. For some types of baked goods, such as cakes and muffins, a dark  finish is an advantage: the goodies come out a bit crispier and they are less  likely to stick to the pan. However, more delicate pastries such as pies can  burn if they are heated too quickly.
What type of bakeware should you buy?
With today’s modern technology, we have more options for our baking  materials than ever before. The problem with having more options, however, is  that it also becomes more difficult to choose the bakeware for your kitchen. Not  only do you have to decide which pieces you want to have, but you have to set a  budget and determine which features are most important to you. Here are some of  the pros and cons of the most popular bakeware materials.
Stainless Steel CookwareAdvantages • Attractive,  sturdy,  long-lastingDisadvantages • More expensive,  poorer  			heat conductivity
Aluminium  			CookwareAdvantages • Lightweight, inexpensive, no  			hot spots, resists rusting and corrosion, also comes in non-stick  			varieties.Disadvantages • Dents and scratches easily,  			reacts with some cooking ingredients, shorter lifespan.
SiliconeAdvantages • Very light-weight, flexible, can  			withstand very high temperatures, can be frozen.Disadvantages • Cakes and other baked goods  			may stick in these forms.
GlassAdvantages • Will not scratch, can see progress  			of baked goods, heats evenly, non-reactive.Disadvantages •  Heavy, can shatter if  			dropped or heated improperly.
While there is no one perfect form of bakeware for every cook, following your  own preferences and buying the best quality that you can will help you to create  better baked goods with less hassle.
Photo by Jeannie Maristela
SOURCE: http://www.recipes4us.co.uk/Cooking/Cookware%20Bakeware.htm

BAKING 101 :  HOW TO CHOOSE AND BUY BAKEWARE

Having the right bakeware will make the time you spend in your kitchen both more efficient and more enjoyable. There are few things more annoying than having a fantastic dessert that took you hours to prepare ruined because you didn’t have the right tools to bake it properly. This guide to bake ware will help you ensure that you have the most essential bakeware for your kitchen, made of the materials that best suit your cooking style.

What bakeware do you need?

There are all kinds of bakeware that you can use if you are planning to open a bakery or become a pastry chef. You could spend a near-infinite of time and money trying out fancy tools and equipment. However, if you’d simply like to have a good array of bakeware on hand to cover most household needs, here is a good overview of what you’ll need to buy.

• Two baking sheets
• A 22.5cm/ 9-inch pie tin
• A loaf tin
• Two 2 x 17.5cm/ 7-inch shallow cake tins
• A  32x22x5cm/ 13x9x2-inch baking tin
• An 20cm/8-inch square or round cake tin
• A 6 or 12-hole muffin tin
• A 4-hole Yorkshire Pudding tin

With this selection, you can create most common cakes, pies, muffins,  tray bakes and Yorkshire puddings.

If you’d like to spread out a little more, you could also invest in a Bundt pan for fancy cakes, a spring form pan for cheesecakes and other very moist confections, and a pizza stone for creating home-baked pizzas.

How Finishes Affect Your Baking

How your bakeware looks can actually have quite an impact on your baking. The darker a material is, the faster it heats and the longer it retains that heat. For some types of baked goods, such as cakes and muffins, a dark finish is an advantage: the goodies come out a bit crispier and they are less likely to stick to the pan. However, more delicate pastries such as pies can burn if they are heated too quickly.

What type of bakeware should you buy?

With today’s modern technology, we have more options for our baking materials than ever before. The problem with having more options, however, is that it also becomes more difficult to choose the bakeware for your kitchen. Not only do you have to decide which pieces you want to have, but you have to set a budget and determine which features are most important to you. Here are some of the pros and cons of the most popular bakeware materials.

Stainless Steel Cookware
Advantages
• Attractive,  sturdy,  long-lasting

Disadvantages
• More expensive,  poorer heat conductivity

Aluminium Cookware
Advantages
• Lightweight, inexpensive, no hot spots, resists rusting and corrosion, also comes in non-stick varieties.

Disadvantages
• Dents and scratches easily, reacts with some cooking ingredients, shorter lifespan.

Silicone
Advantages
• Very light-weight, flexible, can withstand very high temperatures, can be frozen.

Disadvantages
• Cakes and other baked goods may stick in these forms.

Glass
Advantages
• Will not scratch, can see progress of baked goods, heats evenly, non-reactive.

Disadvantages
•  Heavy, can shatter if dropped or heated improperly.

While there is no one perfect form of bakeware for every cook, following your own preferences and buying the best quality that you can will help you to create better baked goods with less hassle.

Photo by Jeannie Maristela

SOURCE: http://www.recipes4us.co.uk/Cooking/Cookware%20Bakeware.htm

224 notes Tags: food baking bakeware baking 101

Dec 10 '11

Carl Kleiner: Flour Power


The Swedish Photographer Captures Culinary Artisan Sebastien Boudet’s Inspired Pastries

Photographer and filmmaker Carl Kleiner’s geometrically composed still lifes portray the delectable ingredients and produce of French-born chef Sebastien Boudet’s celebrated Stockholm patisserie-café-bistro, Petite France. With work featured in Wallpaper* and Dansk after some iconic collaborations with Ikea, Kleiner illustrated Boudet’s new book of simple culinary dishes, Den Franske Bagaren [The French Baker], which brings together the chef’s French-inspired cuisine with the tricks behind baking superb viennoiserie and the Swiss killer breakfast: a healthy bowl of muesli. “To me, a recipe is a living thing, it has a soul and should be continuously redefined,” says Boudet, who has almost two decades of kitchen innovation as a restaurateur, baker and pastry chef behind him. Journeying with the gastronome through the south of France to shoot confit de canard, cassoulet, and pistou, Kleiner experienced Boudet’s idealism at first hand. “He’s a political activist in his area, trying to force the big Swedish flour companies to produce better and healthier products,” rhapsodizes Kleiner. Here the baker behind the most popular sourdough bread in town reveals his desert island pastry and love of Swedish berries.

What sets your baking style apart? 
I go with a feeling that I have from my childhood. I grew up in a bakery. I care about the flour, the wheat, how it is grown and treated. I take time to meet with the person who makes my ingredients. I can look my customer in the eyes because I know exactly what has gone into the product.  

Is there a particular Swedish ingredient that you are crazy about? 
I love the berries. These you can only find here. And these give the French pastries amazing taste. It is produced in a natural way and I love that. 

Anything you absolutely cannot stomach? 
I hate Kalles kaviar [Swedish brand of fish roe spread]. 

How do you create the perfect pastry? 
You have to put your soul into it. When you serve a dessert, you are telling a story. You are telling people who you are and what you are.

If you could only eat one pastry for the rest of your days, what would it be? 
Depends on the mood. But I would choose a strawberry chocolate cake with vanilla cream or almond cream, with raw pistachio nuts and with Espelette pepper. Put that on top of the strawberries and I’m set.

http://www.nowness.com/day/2011/12/5/1748/carl-kleiner-flour-power

134 notes Tags: food gastronomy photography food photography chef pastry baking culinary arts Sebastien Boudet