T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2157.1 | Chewy cookies | WMOIS::P_RIVETTS | | Tue Dec 19 1989 14:12 | 5 |
|
I know this works with some cookie recipies. Try under cooking
them. Toll House cookies are great under cooked. Nice and chewy!
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2157.2 | or mix by hand | LEDS::BLODGETT | The fjords are calling me... | Wed Dec 20 1989 07:34 | 8 |
| I find cookies come out cakier if I use a mixer, rather than mixing by
hand. Also baking soda, baking powder and eggs can affect the cakiness
of things. If you use all butter in Toll House cookies the spread out
more than if you use margarine or a combination of butter and
shortening.
I'd try cooking them a couple of minutes less than the recipe calls for
first, then play around with ingredients if necessary.
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2157.3 | empirical kitchen science | VIA::GLANTZ | Mike, DTN 381-1253 | Wed Dec 20 1989 15:02 | 22 |
| Adding baking soda or baking powder will make cookies and cakes come
out lighter and drier. Adding fats (shortening, butter, oil) will make
them moister. Adding sugar will make cookies chewier and heavier
without cutting the amount of rising action from the leavening agent.
Eggs have some effect on the chewiness, but have more effect on the
crumbliness (they bind the dry ingredients). Adding liquids (like
milk) will require a longer cooking time, which will result in a
firmer (or tougher, depending on the final product) texture (the
binding ingredients set more). It gets a little complicated when you
realize that most ingredients interact and affect each other to some
extent, and also when you realize that some ingredients have more than
one function (e.g., eggs not only bind, but can provide "loft" if you
beat air into them; sugar affects both texture and taste, etc).
If you do enough experimental baking (i.e., where you don't follow the
recipe exactly), you can learn to predict what will happen, and can
adjust recipes more to your liking. Also, you can detect potential
disasters before they occur. For example, variability in ingredients
can lead to unexpected results: gluten and moisture content in flour,
strength of baking powder, size of eggs, etc. You can "feel" that your
batter or dough has something wrong with it and correct the problem
before you commit it to the oven.
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2157.4 | No Spread - thats the problem !! | DELNI::EDWARDS | | Thu Dec 28 1989 11:28 | 14 |
| I tried some again last night and have a few comments which might help
you point me in the right direction. I made up the Betty Crocker recipe
which is exactly the same as the one on the back of the Nestle
chocolate chips bag except it uses one egg instead of two. The first
tray did not spread at all - the mixture was very thick and it just sat
there - hence the " cakey " description I mentioned earlier. Now betty
suggests adding some mike if they don't spread - so I did that - about
two tablespoons. The next lot spread a little but not much. The third
batch got even more milk and they did sort of spread - but still not as
thin as the ones you get in the LKG caff !. Also the kids reported that
they did not taste so good. What gives here ?
Rod
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2157.5 | What are you using for "shortening"? | DOCS::DOCSVS | | Thu Dec 28 1989 12:24 | 12 |
| For what it's worth, I find that cookies made with margarine spread
more than those made with butter. It really does make a difference.
I don't know if this will help with the basic texture of your cookies,
though.
Did you ask the people in the LKG cafeteria for their recipe? The
ones here in APO are very large, flat, and tend to be more sugary
than the ones I make at home. (I also suspect they don't use butter.)
They tend to be best when they're fresh out of the oven, and they
don't last very long.
--Karen
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2157.6 | more flour? | XCUSME::BARRY | | Thu Dec 28 1989 16:12 | 7 |
|
I make the tollhouse cookies on the back of the back of chocolate
chips. I follow the recipe exact, except I add an extra 1/2 cup
of flour and cook less than it says. They usually come out spread
out just perfect, but not too flat.
janice
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2157.7 | Oops, I forgot to add... | XCUSME::BARRY | | Fri Dec 29 1989 11:25 | 7 |
|
I made some last night, and remembered one thing...
You can use an electric mixer for the butter/sugar/eggs, but when
you add the flour mixture in, mix it in by hand. This definately
makes them better!
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