T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3817.1 | in a word, yes | KAOFS::M_BARNEY | Formerly Ms.Fett | Mon Jun 28 1993 17:29 | 8 |
| Karen,
Time after time, I have found that substituting margarine in a
recipe that specifically calls for butter leads to disappointing
results. Especially in baking.
Monica
|
3817.2 | | ADSERV::PW::WINALSKI | Careful with that AXP, Eugene | Mon Jun 28 1993 18:49 | 8 |
| The various forms of fat used as a shortening agent in baking (butter,
margarine, lard, solid vegetable shortening, various vegetable oils) all have
quite different compositions and differ widely in melting point and other
significant properties. Many baking recipes are very sensitive to which type
of shortening you use and just don't come out quite right if you make
substitutions.
--PSW
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3817.3 | | ASABET::TRUMPOLT | Liz Trumpolt - 223-7195, MSO2-2/F3 | Tue Jun 29 1993 14:02 | 7 |
| Some recipes will tell you if you can substitue margarine for butter.
But if the receipe specificly calls for Butter than that is what I use.
Like in the pie that the base noter said she made. I would have used
the butter instead of useing the margarine.
Liz
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3817.4 | title change? | RANGER::PESENTI | And the winner is.... | Wed Jun 30 1993 08:58 | 7 |
| Could the moderator/base noter change the title to something along the lines of
"Butter vs Margerine" or "Substituting Margerine for Butter"?
I don't think "Use Butter Always?" captures the discussion all that well.
-JP
|