Puzzled By Pumpkins
Monday, December 15, 2003
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- Q: Is there a better way to prepare fresh neck pumpkins for recipes other than the usual peeling, cutting in chunks and cooking in small amount of water. The pumpkins are very hard to peel and I was wondering if they could be baked and the flesh scooped out when soft.
Any tips would be appreciated.
I also have another question. When a recipe tells you to sift the flour should you measure the amount that is needed in the recipe before or after you sift. Thanks! --OwlQuick Tip
I've had a lot of questions lately about "creaming" butter and sugar, which is to many minds the single most important step in baking cookies and cakes. If you've got a countertop Kitchen-Aid or other brand of fairly beefy mixer, this is your chance to crank that baby up to 10. Put the butter (remember to use unsalted unless other is specified!) into your mixer's work bowl about an hour before you're ready to work to give it time to soften. Add the sugar and run the mixer on speed 2 or 3 until the sugar is mixed thoroughly with the butter. Slowly increase the speed until you get to 8. Stop at this point and scrape the bowl and paddle well. Bring the speed up quickly to 9 or 10, whatever your noise comfort level. Let the mixer run for 2 minutes, then turn it off and finger-test the butter. If the creaming is done, you should feel very, very little graininess of the sugar when you roll a bit between your fingers. If you still feel a lot of granules, give the mixture another two minutes at high speed.This method may not have the old-time feel to it, but when you're doing high-volume baking around the holidays, there's not always time to get out grandma's old wooden spoon and spend an hour creaming butter and sugar.- Q: I have recently come across a recipe using cardamon. It is a very expensive spice. What could I use as a substitute? --Barbara
- Q: I make a lot of cakes from scratch. My problem is that they come out crumbly, but not dry. I use cake flour, bake them at the right time and temp, but I have cakes that fall apart on me. I even have problems with quick breads. My mom used to put a teaspoon of vegetable oil in her cake mixes to keep them moist, could this help?
- Q: Regarding an item I read in last week's column, about baking chocolate chip cookies ... you mention using regular cookie sheets (instead of the insulated sheets this gal was using with not so good results), "lined with parchment paper." I was not aware you could put any type of paper in the oven, is that what you meant to say? I'm sure it is ... but I just found that odd. Although I am not a baker by any means (obviously), but just wanted to clarify. --Betty
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