This goes right to what to do with leftover pumpkin puree, but at the bottom there are entries for everything from egg whites to buttermilk
https://bakingmischief.com/leftover-pumpkin-puree/
My recipes, recipes I've ganked from elsewhere and my notes!
This goes right to what to do with leftover pumpkin puree, but at the bottom there are entries for everything from egg whites to buttermilk
https://bakingmischief.com/leftover-pumpkin-puree/
Maple Brown Sugar Buttercream - date of recipe is 1 year before wedding date, I’ve been thinking fall leaves as decor, it’s whitish, it could support the use of bacon in the wedding cake … almost ready to stop looking or only look for other maple frostings!
Now that I am changing roles and will be working from home, I have decided to bake our sourdough instead of payng $7 a loaf for the goooooood stuff! Don't get me wrong, it is worth every penny - its outrageously fresh, the taste is incredible, it makes next level toast, and because it has no preservatives, it goes moldy well before the date on the tag and well before we can use it all! Still worth it - it really is that good - but being able to bake more manageable loaves that are just as fresh - will be a better use of time and money!
The extra time in my day saved by commuting will go a long way toward upgrading so many things in our daily life! I bake plenty of bread and rolls - I have been enjoying learning the finer points and its really satisfying when you can start trusting your instincts instead of being a slave to the recipe and directions. (When I stopped following the direction "knead 5-7 minutes" and started to just "knead until windowpane is achieved" (when appropriate!) and had the confidence to blow well past those 7 recommended minutes to get to the stage I knew I needed to produce the best bread, the result was night and day!)
I wasn't supposed to start my new role (and officially working from home) until Monday, but after more than 2 years of dodging it, my office had a Covid exposure - since my boss knows that I have consistently taken precautions, he told me he had no issue with me finishing my last day working for him from home. It's not like I won't be heading back to pack up the rest of my stuff and to drop by to help train my replacement, but its the end of an era - I worked for Mike for 8 years and I will genuinely miss working for him and the office - both the people and the building itself. I was given a lot of responsibility and purview and it felt like "my house" since hospitality and daily operations were a large part of my role. But since the work from home aspect is starting unexpectedly early, I may as well get started on my starter!
ChainBaker on YouTube is my Bread God™ - today I am watching and taking notes on his method for Sourdough Starter!
Equipment:
https://www.onceuponachef.com/how-to/pizza-dough-recipe.html
This was great - just as written! I kneaded longer until windowpane, would increase salt a bit.
This pizza dough recipe yields a crispy, chewy, and flavorful pizza crust.
https://www.inspiredtaste.net/47394/drop-biscuits/#itr-recipe-47394
Next time I will try oven at 425 - would be great with cheese and/or bacon
8 tablespoons (115 grams or 1 stick) cold unsalted butter
1 1/2 cups (190 grams) all-purpose flour
1 3/4 teaspoons baking powder
1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt, see notes
1/2 cup (118 ml) cold whole milk, plus more as needed
Heat oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit (see notes for using a hotter oven). Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or silicone baking mat. Alternatively, set aside a medium cast iron pan for baking the biscuits in.
Whisk the flour, baking powder and salt together until well blended.
Remove one tablespoon of butter and set aside (this will be melted and brushed onto the biscuits once they are baked).
Cut the remaining 7 tablespoons of butter into small cubes. If you are not immediately moving on to the next step, place the butter back into the refrigerator to keep cold.
Scatter the cold butter cubes over the flour mixture then use a pastry blender or your fingers to cut or rub the butter in until the mixture looks like coarse crumbs (see photos or video for reference).
Using a fork, gently stir the milk into the biscuit mixture until the dough comes together. It will be a bit sticky and look shaggy. If the dough is too dry, add a little more milk, a tablespoon or two should do it.
Drop mounds of dough, about 3 tablespoons in size, onto the prepared baking sheet. Dough mounds should be about an inch apart from each other. Bake for 10 to 15 minutes or until the biscuits are puffed and starting to turn brown on top. If some butter pools out around the bottom, it’s okay.
Meanwhile, melt the reserved tablespoon of butter. When they come out of the oven, gently brush the butter onto the top of each biscuit. Serve warm.
If you make this recipe, snap a photo and hashtag it #inspiredtaste — We love to see your creations on Instagram and Facebook! Find us: @inspiredtaste
The full recipe post can be found on Inspired Taste here: https://www.inspiredtaste.net/47394/drop-biscuits/
1 bunch parsley (could do 2!), chopped
4 scallions, white and green, chopped
Tomatoes - 1 pt cherry tomatoes, quartered
Cucumber - 1 English cucumber, seeded and chopped
4 Tbsp lemon juice (1 lemon is usually 4 T)
4 Tbsp good olive oil
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp fresh black pepper
1/4 cup fine bulgur
Mix lemon, olive oil, salt and pepper with bulgur - let sit 1-2 hours
Chop all ingredients, combine, add lemon dressing, combine, refrigerate for 1+ hour
https://www.food.com/recipe/easy-peezy-pizza-dough-bread-machine-pizza-dough-35805
1/2 lb Atlantic Cod
2 T shiro miso
1 T mirin
1 T usukuchii soy sauce or tamari
2 t sugar*
1/2 t toasted sesame oil
30g fresh ginger, grated
Oven to 425 - place fish on foil, mix other ingredients together and pour over fish and tightly seal foil to make packet. Put packet in baking dish, bake 10 min. (check to make sure its actually flaked and done)
The recipe I based this on had no sugar and had the temp as 400 and time as 8-10 min - um ... wha? Flies in the face of everything I know about cooking fish and Japanese flavors. I tried following it as written (I mean, I am no professional and I was the one looking for directions ...) but when I tasted the marinade it REALLY needed sugar (and I almost accidentally left out the sesame oil ... don't do that, it really makes it) so I tossed in *2 scant sugar shells worth of sugar ... maybe 2 t? And I ALWAYS cook fish at 425, 10 min per inch thickness ... I just skipped past 8 min, went for 10 and of course it was not done! Opened the packet, tossed it back in at 425 for about 3-5 minutes and it was perfect.
May go with aka miso or 1 T shiro and 1 T aka or 2 T shiro and 1 aka since the marinade WAS a bit soupier than I would have preferred - could have used a bit more miso kick and aka vs. shiro could make the difference.
Japanese baked sweet potato
250-350g sweet potatoes
Wash and poke lightly with fork - not too deep
Place on foiled pan in cold oven
Oven to 375 - cook 55-65 minutes
Turn off oven rest 10 minutes then cool 15 minutes\
Store in the fridge.
https://okonomikitchen.com/baked-japanese-sweet-potatoes-yaki-imo/