T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2141.1 | EVERTHING you ever wanted to know... | FORTSC::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Thu Dec 07 1989 15:01 | 22 |
| Thin batters containing oil, eggs, flour, etc. generally are mixed with
vigorous action which beats in a LOT of air. If you want a thin, consistent
product, you want the air to settle out of the mix, and you want the flour
absorbtion to come up a little...hence, the suggestion that you let your
batter sit at least 30 minutes (at room temperature - warm up the batter
and make sure it cooks in the expected time) up to overnight(8 hours or so)
WELL CHILLED in order to avoid salmonella - warm up 30 minutes at room
temp before making your crepes or pizzelles.
Of course, the one flaw in the whole "scientific" plan is that flour
may absorb more or less liquid depending on the grind, the temperature
of the flour, liquids, and the way you look at it 8^}....the solution
to controlling that somewhat is to warm your flour in the oven before
using it (10 minutes at 150 degrees F) if you want it to absorb more
liquid and gain more elasticity and chill it for 30 minutes if you
need the reverse effect....like in the summer when making pancakes
or crepes on a really hot day.
Now, a batter that is "ripening" to grow natural yeast (sourdough, etc)
is left at room temp to promote growth of the desirable beasties...but
it is NOT recommended to add eggs or fats until just before using the
batter - in order to avoid the problems of salmonella, rancidity, etc.
|
2141.2 | Pizzelles Don't Need Refrigeration | GOLETA::GOHN_LI | | Fri Dec 08 1989 10:30 | 7 |
| We make pizzelles at least twice a year and we've never refrigerated
the batter. The only failure we had was one year when my dad forgot
to take out the butter. He melted it. Yuck!!!!
It wouldn't be Christmas at our house without these cookies.
Linda
|
2141.4 | I second that second reply! | ERWIN::FARINA | | Fri Dec 15 1989 19:07 | 8 |
| RE: .2: Ditto! I've never refrigerated pizzelle batter, nor has my
father, or his mother before him, nor any other relative. We've never
had a problem getting a thin, crisp cookie, even though we don't let
the batter sit for 30 minutes as .1 suggests. --Susan
PS: I've never let pancake batter sit for long, either. I'd guess it
depends on the type of pancake you're looking for. I like them high,
and "fluffy."
|
2141.5 | another reason... | CSG001::SCHOFIELD | | Wed Jan 10 1990 13:50 | 6 |
| I know with Sugar Cookie dough, you couldn't roll out the freshly
mixed dough, because it would be too soft. But after refrid-ing
it for a while, its stiff enough to cut with cutters... maybe thats
what of one of the reasons.
b
|
2141.6 | why are my cookies so thick? | CALS::HEALEY | M&ES, MRO4, 297-2426 | Mon Sep 27 1993 14:49 | 20 |
|
There was some discussion in here a while back about how
to get those Original Toll House Chocolate Chip cookies
to come out flat. I made a batch over the weekend and
they tasted pretty good but they didn't spread! They just
remained round lumps (ok, they spread a little). When I
was a kid, they used to come up really thin compared to
what I turned out this weekend.
Unfortunately, I cannot find the note on this but I think
it had something to do with either the temperature they
are baked at or the shortening/butter used. I used 2 sticks
of Land of Lakes Morning Blend I think (margarine... reduced
calorie maybe but I'm not sure).
So, anybody care to point that note out to me or tell me
the answer here? I searched under "cookie", "butter",
"shorten" and couldn't find it!
Karen
|
2141.7 | fattening agent | KAOFS::M_BARNEY | Dance with a Moonlit Knight | Mon Sep 27 1993 16:06 | 6 |
| I suspect its the margarine - I get very different results
for the same cookie depending on whether I use margarine,
butter, "diet" versions of both, or shortening.
Do some experimenting with this.
Monica
|
2141.8 | check out Consumer Reports | GOLLY::CARROLL | a work in progress | Mon Sep 27 1993 16:19 | 13 |
| Anyone interested in cookies should check out this months Consumer
Reports.
In addition to rating commercially available chocolate chip cookies,
they also talked about some of the results of variations on the
traditional Toll House cookies. (like using butter vs marg vs
shortening, halving the fat, halving the eggs etc.)
I didn't read it carefully, not being a cookie person, but I vaguely
remember that margarine made cookies thinner, crispier and greasier
than butter. Don't quote me on that.
D!
|
2141.9 | | CX3PST::PWAKET::CBUTTERWORTH | Give Me Wings... | Wed Sep 29 1993 19:30 | 5 |
| I tend to use more flour than "mom" when making toll house cookies
and mine don't flatten out as much as hers do. I like mine thicker,
she likes the really thin ones.
\C
|