Archives For recipes

Finals again

victoria —  July 27, 2005 — Leave a comment

This summer school thing has been much rougher than I imagined. Not harder really, just more compacted and time-constrained. But, I have had my written final for Advance Baking and Pastry and am doing my production final tomorrow morning.

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Today started early. After running Keifel to work, I came home and made three batches of pizza dough for my Wednesday AM beginner class at Ye Olde Pot & Pannery. I have to say the recipe worked great, but it tastes much better if you let it sit in the fridge all day or over night. It’s not quite so “whitebread.”

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Crepes for Wizardress

victoria —  April 19, 2005 — Leave a comment

use the recipe out of my workhorse edition of The Joy of Cooking. It’s the one for basic sweet crepes, though I make a few adjustments occasionally.

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Foodieporn adventures

victoria —  February 28, 2005 — Leave a comment

Keifel and I got the flu for Valentine’s Day so there aren’t any sexy dinner plans to recount. It was nasty and I hope anyone else out there that’s gotten this thing is hydrated and resting and on the mend. Not something I would wish on my very worst enemy.

During our week of bed rest I did get a box of new cookbooks delivered and had lots of lovely new reading material. I also bought Once Upon a Tart which I have coveted since Heidi at 101cookbooks started posting recipes from it. My box of goodies contained The Bread Bible, John Ashe’s Cooking One on One, The Zuni Cafe Cookbook, and James Peterson’s Sauces and Vegetables. James Peterson is brilliant and I want to cook my way right through the veg book and I think the sauces one will really help my cooking at school. The Bread Bible, like Rose Levy Beranbaum’s other bibles for cakes and pie and pastry, is brilliant. It’s also something I want to bake my way through. Though my Sunday bread making yesterday consisted of an old family stand by.

Last week, the week after being down with the flu, was a big cooking week for me. Last Monday, my boss at Ye Olde Pot and Pannery asked me to cook lunch for the regional and district managers for their first corporate visit of the year. I agreed and we decided on a menu of mixed baby green salad with champagne vinaigrette and bleu cheese, pan-grilled salmon with the peach salsa we carry, steamed asparagus with hollandaise, and a wild rice pilaf. One of the other associates made a coconut cake we were featuring in our spring catalog. They were almost an hour late due to fog in Atlanta, but everything turned out fabulous and my boss and the assistant manager gushed. The most interesting thing about it was that the regional manager got promoted to vice president of the company the next day. So in effect I cooked for the vice president of the company.

In further cooking adventures last week, my culinary II class had their first buffet for paying customers, who just happened to be the Board of Directors and the President of the college. They were late too but all went well and they were very gracious and thanked us for the lunch.

This week is midterm so I have three exams this week. I think my baking on may be the most difficult of the three. The nutrition one is open book, so I’m not too worried about that one. Still. They are a big percentage of my grade and I of course want to do well. So, I am off to study but I will leave you with the bread recipe from yesterday:


High-Protein Honey Bread

4 to 5 cups bread flour
2 teaspoons salt
2 pkgs. dry yeast (scant 2 Tablespoons)
1 cup water
1/2 cup honey
1/4 cup butter
8 oz. (1 cup) cottage cheese
2 eggs
1 cup whole wheat flour
1/2 cup rolled oats
1 cup finely chopped walnuts or pecans

Using 2 Tablespoons of butter or oil per pan, generously grease two 8×4″ or 9×5″ loaf pans or two 8 or 9″ round cake pans.

In a large bowl, combine 2 cups of the bread flour, the salt and the yeast. Mix well and set aside. In a medium saucepan, combine water, honey, butter and cottage cheese and heat until very warm, about 120 degrees F.

Add the warm liquid and the eggs to the flour/yeast mixture and beat about 3 minutes by hand. Begin stirring in the whole wheat flour, the oats, nuts and enough of the remaining bread flour to form a soft dough.

On a floured surface, knead the dough by hand for about 10 minutes until the dough is soft and bounces back quickly when poked with a finger.

Place in an oiled bowl and flip to coat, cover with a damp towel and place in a warm spot until doubled in size. I like to combine baking and laundry day and let the dough rise on a hot pad on the dryer. This usually takes about an hour, but you can tell when the first rise is finished if you finger leaves an impression in the dough that doesn’t bounce back when you poke it.

When the first rise has finished, punch down the dough and give it a couple kneads. Cut it half and round each half on the counter and let it rest for about 15 minutes covered with a damp towel.

To shape the loaves roll of stretch the dough into two rectangles and tri-fold like a business letter pinching the seam together. Place the seamed side in the bottom of the loaf pans and return the pans to the dryer or other warm spot until doubled in size (about an hour).

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F and make sure one of the racks is in the approximate center of the oven. At the end of the second rise, place the loaves in the oven and bake for approximately 35-40 minutes until the loaves sound hollow when lightly tapped. Remove from the pans immediately and cool on racks.

This bread makes the most amazing toast. If it takes you awhile to get through a loaf of bread, be sure to tightly wrap the second loaf in foil and place in a large freezer bag and freeze. When ready to use thaw at room temperature and refresh in a 375 degree oven for about ten minutes to bring the crust back.

I heard about a pre-1984 Better Homes recipe for a refrigerator bread that you could make, say on Sunday, and leave in the fridge.

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Cooking with Doris

victoria —  January 13, 2005 — Leave a comment

I wish I had tales to tell that involved me being so busy with Christmas cooking and endless party giving that I haven’t had time to think about posting. Sadly, the truth of it is that I’ve been up to my eyeballs in retail. I really enjoy both my jobs, but working 60 plus hours in the weeks leading up to Christmas left me drained and Christmas itself went by in a whirl.

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I see Paris, I see France

keifel —  January 6, 2005 — Leave a comment

or the saga of Winnifred’s cakes.

About two weeks before Christmas we decided to attempt the next stage of Winnifred’s black cake recipe. We started with four different sized cake pans, three of which had been bought in the last month for this specific purpose, the other pan was a gift I’d bought for Victoria on my very first visit. We took the cake pans; one 8″, two 9″ and one 10″; to the dining table and cut patterns out of parchment and unprinted, brown paper, grocery bags to line them.

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in the Caribbean there is tradition of Black Fruit Cake at Christmas time, making this cake is an artform, my grandmother; Winnifred; was one of its masters. I’m reproducing her recipe here as it was passed on to my mother and now to me. reading my mother’s handwriting to transcribe here, i’m realising that this is not a single cake recipe and by my calculations it may be too late to get started on cakes for this year.

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I know that artisans and bread purists will be distressed by the whole bread machine thing. I do make bread by hand fairly often.

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I know that artisans and bread purists will be distressed by the whole bread machine thing. I do make bread by hand fairly often.

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