Showing posts with label baking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baking. Show all posts

Sunday, April 2, 2017

Breakfasts and Berry Crumble Recipe

Whenever we have buttermilk in the fridge we usually make a big batch of waffles, and freeze them for quick weekday breakfasts.  We just pull them out, break them in half, and toast the two halves for a beautifully crisp, but tender waffle.

I've been topping them with a bit of Greek yogurt lately (sometimes also with a drizzle of maple syrup), and then other topping such as cacao nibs:


And another day I added fruit and granola too:


We've had a couple breakfasts out:


Other breakfasts have included oatmeal with almond butter, melon, a sprinkle of dark chocolate and coconut:


And another oatmeal bowl with PB, coconut, dark chocolate, and Saskatoon berries:


Speaking of Saskatoon berries, I had a few people ask for my berry crumble recipe, which is adapted from my sister's apple crisp recipe.  


Saskatoon Berry Crumble (Crisp) 


- 4 cups fresh or frozen Saskatoon berries* (thawed, and drained)
- 1 T butter
- 1/2 cup white sugar
- 1 tsp cinnamon
- 2 T (approx) tapioca pearls*

- a layer of Mary Macleod's butterscotch shortbread crumbs (optional)

Topping (maybe double or increase this if you can't find the butterscotch crumbs, as the topping is the best part)

- 3/4 cup flour
- 3/4 cup brown sugar
- 1/2 cup margarine
- 1/2 cup quick oats

Butter a casserole-type dish.  Toss the berries with the sugar, cinnamon, and tapioca pearls.  Dump the berry mixture into the dish.  Sprinkle the berries with a layer of the butterscotch crumbs.  Melt the margarine, and mix with the flour, brown sugar, and oats.  Sprinkle this over everything.  Bake at 350 for 40 minutes.  I covered it for 20, then uncovered for 20, but you can really do whatever you like.  Serve it warm with ice cream! 

*  Google Saskatoon berries, as they go by other names depending where you live (in the US they might be June-berries).  You could sub for blueberries.  Mine were mostly thawed, but I was impatient, and it still turned out great.
* Tapioca pearls will soak up extra liquid; you won't even know they are in there.  Find them in your baking aisle. 


What have you been eating for breakfasts these days?   
 Have you ever had Saskatoon berries?  How was your weekend? 

Friday, December 23, 2016

You (Probably) Don't Suck at Baking

I've heard a lot of people say, "I suck at baking," or "nothing I bake ever turns out."  I'm here to tell you that you don't suck at baking, you're probably just doing something wrong.

For most average baking recipes, skill really isn't necessary (think cookies, cakes, pies), but you do need to follow the instructions exactly.  If you're not an experienced baker, then you should not be experimenting, substituting any ingredients, or altering the original recipe in any way.


Tips to help you not suck at baking:

- Follow the recipe exactly.  I cannot stress this enough.  A lot of these tips will reiterate this point.  Until you've really got the hang of a recipe, don't mess with it. 

- If the recipe calls for unsalted butter, use unsalted butter.  If the recipe just calls for "butter," use salted butter.  It does make a difference.  If you only have unsalted, use 1/4 tsp of salt per 1/2 cup of butter (1 stick).  Also never cut or reduce the salt from a recipe.  Or the sugar for that matter (unless it's icing, which often has way too much sugar).


- If the recipe calls for butter, use butter.  Don't use margarine, or oil, or apple sauce, or any other weird thing you think is okay to substitute with.  Substitutions aren't for people who "suck at baking".  If it calls for margarine, use that.  You get the idea.

- Buy sticks of butter, or use the lines on the package for accurate measurements.

- Don't estimate with ingredients.  Use measuring spoons/ cups, and level them off with the flat side of a butter knife.  Use liquid measuring cups for liquids (the glass ones are for liquids, and then you can look at the line and see if the liquid is in the right spot).  Use dry measuring cups for dry ingredients (like the metal ones pictured).  I have multiple sets of dry measuring cups and spoons, which makes baking easier and more pleasurable, as I don't have to constantly wash as I go.  I have a variety of metal and plastic sets.


- If a recipe calls for salt, use table salt.  If it calls for kosher salt, use that.  Again, the exactness matters.  Bulk Barn, or somewhere similar, is a great place to get little bits of things if you don't use them regularly.

- The pan you bake in matters.  Recently my sister told me that she "sucks at baking" because her cakes always turn out dry.  What she didn't realize, is that a glass 9x13 pan with rounded edges/sides is not good for baking cakes.  You should be using a good metal pan, and the sides should be straight.  Metal cookie sheets, 9x13 pans, square pans, and loaf pans are all baking necessities.  I like to bake pie in a heavy, ceramic pie plate. 


- If a recipe says don't over-mix, it's very important that you stir gently (with a wooden spoon or spatula) just until the ingredients are incorporated.  Over-mixing results in tough baked goods.


- Lean towards under-baking everything.  If a cookie recipe says to bake them for 8-10 minutes, I always, always take them out at 8 minutes.  Even if they don't look completely done to you, they probably are, and will firm up once out at room temperature for a few minutes.  If a cake recipe says, for example, to bake it for 35-40 minutes, I do the toothpick check at about 32 minutes.  I don't want the toothpick to be completely clean, but rather have a crumb or two stick to it.  This ensures you have a moist cake.

 
 

- Use room temperature ingredients, especially butter and margarine (for most things - but not for pies or anything requiring a flaky crust).  Most recipes have you cream the butter or margarine with sugar to start, and you want the fat to be nice and soft for this so that it blends together easily.  For pies, etc., you want very cold butter (the recipe should specify this).


- Unless the recipe specifically says which rack to bake on, use the rack in your oven that is second up from the bottom; I've found that this one works the best (I DON'T have a convection oven; I just have a regular oven).

- Don't open the oven while the food is baking, rather use the oven light to peek on it.  Keeping an eye on your baking is a good thing, because you can pull it out when it's just barely done, which is when it's best.


- Folding ingredients in should be done with a spatula, and you don't want to stir, but rather fold the ingredients over each other (YouTube should have a video).

- Cutting in means to use a pastry blender (they're cheap - buy one) to cut the fat into little pieces inside the flour (YouTube should have a video).


- Take your time, and make sure you have all the ingredients before you start.  It sounds obvious, but it's worth mentioning.


- All purpose flour is not the same as pastry flour, or self-rising, or whole wheat, etc.  These are all different, and are not interchangeable.  If a recipe simply says "flour", use all-purpose.  Don't try to be all healthy, by substituting whole wheat flour for all-purpose, unless the recipe states that you can do so.  It's baking - it's not supposed to be healthy, but it is supposed to taste good.

- Instead of spraying cookie sheets, I line them with parchment paper.  I spray cake pans though (or butter them, depending what the recipe says).  If I'm making squares that are firm, like puffed wheat or Nanimo bars, I'll press them into a parchment-lined pan, then just lift the parchment out later to cut them (once firmed up).  I'll occasionally do this with loaves too.

 

- If using yeast, make sure you have the liquid you're dissolving it into at the right temperature.  Your warm water/milk should be between 105-115 F.  I use a digital meat thermometer.  It doesn't matter which meat setting you have it on, just watch the temperature.  Have your yeast (and sugar if the recipe calls for it) already measured out in a small dish.  Run your tap water warm and hold the thermometer under it.  Once it's around this temperature, measure out what you need and put it into a bowl.  Check the temperature again, and if it's in the range, quickly add your yeast/sugar.


- Need a warm place for your dough to rise?  Place it on the stove top (if the stove isn't on), and turn the light above your stove on.  Or, if your oven isn't on, put it in the oven with the oven light on.  Or just set it on the counter, and if your house isn't really cold, it will be fine.  Speaking of house temperatures, they can affect baking, as can humidity.  If you don't air condition when it's really hot out, or you keep your house really warm, it could affect your baking.  You might want to chill your cookie dough if this is the case, and handle any dough as little as possible to prevent it from getting too warm/ soft. 

- Lastly, have fun with it!  If nothing you bake ever turns out for you, you probably don't enjoy baking.  Take your time, be accurate, and keep an eye on what you're baking.  Hopefully, after you have a bit of baking success, you'll start to enjoy it a bit more.


If you're an experienced baker, you'll know what you can get away with, and what you can't.  I don't always use liquid measuring cups for liquids, etc., but I have done enough baking to know where it will matter and where it won't.  I change recipes, and create my own, but I didn't always do this.  It takes a lot of practice to figure out the science of it all, and to get comfortable experimenting.  Baking is not like cooking; it's not as forgiving or as flexible. 


Are you a good baker?  Do you enjoy baking?

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Baking

A good portion of yesterday afternoon was spent baking.  


I got a bunch of rhubarb the other day (thanks Vicki!), and so I made rhubarb snacking cake using this recipe.  

 
I also made dough for pie crust which I chilled overnight, and a couple loaves of my favourite bread.


I gave Christopher a container last night to fill up with snacky cake for his sister and Will, since they had provided me with the rhubarb.  I said, "Give them lots, because you won't eat it all, and I'm making pie tomorrow too."  He agreed.

He snapped the lid on the container for his sister.  

I burst out laughing when I saw this:


Need a closer look:


Somebody doesn't want to share his snacky cake ;-)  After a good laugh, he grudgingly happily filled the container to the top.  

Do you like rhubarb?  Have you ever cooked/baked with it?