Showing posts with label molasses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label molasses. Show all posts

Friday, 8 March 2013

2007 - Coconut Cream Is a Dream!



I was all set to make Coconut Cream-Filled Macaroons today but I didn't have any cream of coconut so Charlie and I had to walk to town. Before we left, I called my friend, Lucy, to see if she would look for molasses while she was Christmas shopping in Oxford. I told her she can probably find it at a health food store.

When we got home, I made 4 1/2 dozen macaroons. I gave Lucy a dozen for bringing the molasses for tomorrow's Gingerbread party. I LOVE these cookies at every stage. The cookies that you sandwich together are crispy on the outside and chewy on the inside. And the filing is just scrumptious - thick and creamy and coconutty. Next year, just make the filling and eat it up with a big spoon! Yum!
Mom telephoned while I was putting the macaroons in the fridge to set. She called because she was sad about Lisa. Poor thing! She was thinking about her because she was making Coconut Cream-Filled Macaroons too! They made her think about Lisa because she was making them last year when Mike called with the awful news of her death. We talked, cried, laughed. Eventually, she was OK and ready to finish her cookies.


Afterward, I cut out and baked all the Gingerbread Kids. Charlie helped me count them - we got 47 boys and 41 girls. I made the icing too and divided it among 10 piping bags and stashed it all in the fridge. We're all set for tomorrow's party now. YAY! We can't wait! 

Monday, 4 February 2013

2005 - A Molasses by Any Other Name Would Taste As Sweet

Lyle's, Britain's oldest brand,
was purchased by Domino
(American Sugar Refining) in 1921.

I walked to town in search of molasses on Wednesday (Dec. 7). Neither of the two grocery stores carried them. They sold treacle and golden syrup (and sometimes even maple syrup, as a specialty item) but no molasses. I finally found it at the health food store, of all places! So many of my cookie quandaries have led me to research a food that I previously took for granted — like molasses.

So let me share what I know now: I could have bought the treacle! It's basically the same thing: uncrystalized syrup made during the refining of sugar.

See, sugar cane is boiled three times during the refinement process. The first boiling produces golden syrup, which is the sweetest of them all. Golden syrup is not used in the States, where corn syrup is the predominate choice.

Treacle or molasses result from the second boiling of sugar cane. The third boiling produces blackstrap molasses, which has the lowest amount of sugar and the most pungent taste. 
Brown sugar — including turbinado, muscovado and demerara — is also a by-product of the first boiling. It is the molasses in these sugar crystals that make it brown sugar (3.5 percent for light and 6.5 percent for dark).

Molasses, treacle, golden syrup, honey and corn syrup are all prized by bakers because they are non-grainy (invert) sugars, which are sweeter than sugar in baked goods, keep them moist longer, and prevent crystallization.

Molasses contain iron, calcium, magnesium
and potassium, and a low glycemic index.
I didn't know any of this until after I bought the molasses though. So, molasses in hand, I mixed up the dough for Moravian Spice Cookies and popped it into the fridge overnight. It is a very stiff dough and the cookies are a lot of work but I enjoyed making them again. I wound up with 16 dozen (182 disks). Martha says you get more than 300! No way. Again, my pet peeve — yield predictions that never come close to my actual yield. There is a lot of waste with these cookies too because you bake the dough as a sheet and then cut out the cookies. I don't mind though because Mom loves the scraps to put on vanilla ice cream!

Meanwhile, I made a double batch of Snickerdoodle Pinwheels. They're so cute! And Charlie loves them. The recipe made four logs, which produced 8 1/2 dozen cookies. I love making these  — rolling them up so they get a nice spiral. They need to chill in the fridge before they can be baked;  I used paper-towel tubes to chill the dough so they kept a nice, round shape. I was able to get them into the oven right after I picked up Charlie from school. I had to be careful not to over bake, so that they come out nice and chewy.

Mom called a few times today; she's been having problems with her cookie results; they have been too wet. So we kept going over everything and decided it was due to the fact that she had melted (instead of softened) the butter. I also suggested she not use diet (or low-fat) butter. As for her Pumpkin Bread, which didn't rise well, she probably just needs a new can of baking powder.

While the Snicks were baking, I whipped up a batch of Coconut Cream-Filled Macaroons, from Martha Stewart's 2005 Holiday Cookies magazine. Mom turned me on to them. The recipe calls for unsweetened coconut but I use the same amount of sweetened coconut and reduced the sugar from 3/4 cup to 1/2 cup. They go in the fridge for at least an hour. I was doubtful the "dough" would produce much but I wound up with 28 sandwiches. I would have had 29 but ...

The cookies themselves looked like little potato pancakes! And they were so delicious. I have never had any other cookie like this. I'll be making more of these, for sure. And this year too! The filling is so yummy I could eat it all without the cookies! I usually make these at Christmas but I think they'd be fantastic at Easter too.

Mom sent me the coconut extract that I needed for these (also not to be found at the supermarkets here — although the coconut cream is widely available).

Charlie was watching the Christmas episode of The Simpsons and asked for a Tree Cookie! That means I'll be baking Sugar Cookies this weekend! And Gingerbread Men. And more!

Coconut Cream-Filled Macaroons

Coconut Cream-Filled Macaroons

For the cookies:
3 c unsweetened finely shredded coconut
3/4 cup granulated sugar
2 large egg whites
1 tsp coconut extract
1/8 tsp coarse salt

For the filling:
2 Tbsp unsalted butter, softened
2 Tbsp cream of coconut (or unsalted butter, softened)
1/4 c vegetable shortening
3/4 c confectioner's sugar
1 tsp coconut extract

Stir together coconut, sugar, egg whites, coconut extract, and salt in a large bowl. Refrigerate, covered, until cold, at least 1 hour or overnight.

Preheat oven to 325 degrees Fahrenheit. Form heaping teaspoons of dough into balls; space 1 1/2 inches apart on baking sheets lined with parchment paper. Gently flatten to about 1 1/2 inches in diameter. Bake cookies, rotating sheets halfway through, until edges begin to turn golden, 9 to 10 minutes. Transfer cookies to wire racks; let cool completely.

Put butter, cream of coconut and shortening in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Mix on medium speed until smooth, about 1 minute. Add confectioner's sugar and coconut extract; mix until pale and fluffy, about 2 minutes.

Eat filling with a big spoon. Naw, just kidding. You'll be tempted though — it's dreamy good stuff.
Place a heaping teaspoon of filling on the bottom of 1 cookie. Sandwich with another cookie. Repeat. Transfer to a platter; cover with plastic wrap. Refrigerate until filling is firm, about 30 minutes. Let stand at room temperature 10 minutes before serving. Makes about 2 dozen. Cookies can be stored between layers of parchment in airtight containers at room temperature up to 3 days, or frozen for up to 3 months.

This recipe was shared with Weekend Kitchen Creations, hosted by The Jenny Evolution.


Friday, 14 December 2012

2001- Separated by a Common Language


Charlie and I are going home to America for a visit soon, so I need to get my baking done before we leave. It's not always easy converting my recipe ingredients, supplies and measurements to "English". The first time I went grocery shopping in Waitrose, I cried. I didn't know where anything was, all the packaging was different, the labels weren't the same and some of the generic names weren't the same.

Let's start with Reynold's Wrap. Both Americans and Brits have a habit of calling things by their brand name, instead of their common name. Companies don't like that, of course, because their brand can become generic. That's what happened to Hoover in England and Aspirin in many countries. There is no Reynold's Wrap in Britain and I even struggled with the generic name of "aluminum foil". Store clerks (one says "clarks" here) gave me a bewildered look when I didn't say "alumin-EE-um". They would laugh at me, I would laugh at them. "There's no extra I in aluminum," I would insist. It seems there is in the UK, though.

And the list goes on. Seran Wrap (or plastic wrap), is cling film. Baking soda is bicarbonate of soda (reminds me of Bette Davis mixing up a remedy for Max in "All About Eve"). Finding molasses can be tricky (or treacly). Golden syrup and treacle are common in grocery stores, but I have to go to a health food store to find molasses. Vegetable shortening does not exist. Someone suggested "ghee", which is akin to clarified butter, but I don't think they are interchangeable. 

I brought my own measuring cups and spoons, so I'm OK there but I have to do conversions every time I bake because my oven temperature is measured in degrees Centigrade (or is it Celsius?) and Marks (as in Gas Mark 4=350 degrees Fahrenheit or 180 degrees Celsius). I also have to do conversions whenever I use butter, which does not come in sticks here! And so, many recipes call for butter in stick-quantities that I had to write the conversion (1 stick=1/2 cup) in the front of "Our Cookie Journal" for easy reference. Fortunately, I found a cheat-sheet in a notepad at a lighting shop, of all places, that I keep in my kitchen utensil drawer. 

There is no canned (or tinned) pumpkin either. Or chocolate chips. Or unsweetened cooking chocolate. My baking sheets are way too massive for the tiny ovens here. Peanut butter is not common. Christmas sprinkles and other decorations are scarce. Decorations seem to be of the Christmas-cake variety. Marzipan is plentiful; but not tubs of frosting. Coconut is referred to as "desiccated", and is unsweetened. Sigh!

Still, none of these hardships stayed me from my baking course. My "official" start this year was Nov. 25, when I made 7 1/2 dozen Nestle's Toll House Chocolate Chip Cookies. The chips, of course, aren't available in Blighty, but Lisa sent me two packs and I brought two back from my Halloween visit home. I had made one batch last week, to test the oven, but they're already gone! I also brought back some Libby's pumpkin, so I made Mom & Dad's Pumpkin Bread, which produced six lovely mini-loaves - but they were for Thanksgiving.

I've decided to make, in addition to the CCCs, Lime Meltaways, Moravian Spice Cookies, Grammy's Chocolate Cookies (new) and Checkerboard Cookies (new). I'm also going to bake Sugar Cookies but this year I'm going to use Martha's recipe with Royal Icing.

The trick will be finding everything I need over here. It's also been tougher with Charlie around! I'll be able to manage only a batch a day. The hardest part, though, has been being so far away from Lisa and Mom. True, we weren't able to bake together the past two years, but this is worse. So I'm separated from everyone here by a common language and I'm separated from my loved ones by an ocean.