Showing posts with label sherbet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sherbet. Show all posts

Sunday, June 28, 2015

Sourdoughs, buckwheat bread, and cold stuff

Last week I made a bunch of bread, plus some frozen goodies. All the bread turned out well, though not without incident. The ginger ice cream was delicious, like before, the waffle cones were fine, and the mocha sherbet was... well let's just say it was great in a shake.

Breads

First, let's cover the breads. I made the usual adjustments to the recipes, generally reducing the salt and yeast (if any) by half.

Sourdough #1

I made the first sourdough Friday from dough that had been in the refrigerator since Sunday. By the time I was ready to bake, the dough smelled slightly alcoholic. This would be one sour loaf of bread! But in a good way.


The temperature in the kitchen was mild

I shaped the bread around 9:30 a.m. I smooshed it flattish (it had risen fairly high), folded it in thirds, and then started moving the edges under, to create a tight surface.

After shaping

By 11:20 it had risen quite a bit.

During the final rise

I put it in the oven around noon.

Scored and ready to bake

I forgot to put a pan over the bread, so it cooked faster than usual, but otherwise I couldn't tell any difference. It's possible that the crust was harder than usual, which is not a bad thing for me. The inside was still moist.

The crust sang again!

By Saturday night the bread was all gone.

Sourdough #2

Sunday morning I mixed the dough for a loaf of sourdough with poppy seeds and toasted sesame seeds (both of which I'd soaked in hot water the night before). I'd tried making this bread before, when I was just getting started with Josey Baker sourdough, but I'd accidentally omitted the salt, and the result was inedible.

Unfortunately, when I happened to notice that the cookbook's definition of the weight of the required amount of dough (375 g) conflicted with the flour bag's definition for the same volume (300 g), I chose the flour bag's definition. So this was one very wet loaf. I couldn't really slash it.

Just after "shaping"

Shaping was a messy affair, but we managed to roll it in seeds and plop it into a basket. This was at about 12:40, just before I left for a baseball game.

When I returned, at about 4:30 (A's won!), the bread had risen above the basket. Yikes! It wasn't that warm out (maybe 68 degrees), but this new sourdough starter is very enthusiastic. I put the dough in the refrigerator while waiting for the oven to finish preheating.


The end result was very tasty and had a nice texture, but it was very flat. I'll make it again with the full amount of flour.

Buckwheat bread with cinnamon and pecans

I made some buckwheat bread using a Hensperger recipe, but not from the usual cookbook. This recipe was from p. 38 of The Pleasure of Whole-Grain Breads.

Buckwheat bread with cinnamon and pecans

The bread was tasty and good, although everyone had been eating the sourdoughs so much that they rather ignored this bread.

Three-seed whole wheat bread

This half-whole-wheat bread from p. 116 of Hensperger's bread machine cookbook was supposed to have sunflower seeds, sesame seeds, and poppy seeds. I couldn't find the poppy seeds, so I substituted black sesame seeds.

1 T sesame seeds, .5 T black sesame seeds

Other adjustments I made:
  • Used light sesame oil instead of sunflower seed oil
  • Reduced the salt from 1 t to 3/4 t
  • Reduced the yeast to a scant 2 t
It was a tasty bread, and I ate way too much of it.

Tasty warm, with a crunchy crust that'll no doubt go soft

Cold stuff

To help celebrate three birthdays, we made ginger ice cream, mocha sherbet, and waffle cones, all from recipes in The Perfect Scoop. I'd made the ginger ice cream before, but the other two recipes were new to me.

Ginger ice cream

This was delicious, just like before. It's so creamy and subtle that my son initially mistook it for coconut, but then the ginger bite comes on.

Mocha sherbet

This tasted kind of weird, possibly because I used King Arthur's espresso powder instead of real coffee. Or maybe the Dutch cocoa wasn't great. Whatever the cause, we didn't like it as an ice cream-type treat. It smelled and tasted like frappuccino mix instead like delicious mocha.

However... it made great milk shakes! We blended it with milk (no additional sugar) and topped it with whipped cream and a few candied cherries in syrup. Delicious!

Waffle cones

This was the first time we broke out the cone maker I'd gotten a year or so ago. Somehow, I'd thought it would make sugar cones, but it doesn't. It makes waffle cones. I don't really like waffle cones. They're too big, for one thing. If I'm going to have a cone, a sugar cone is the only kind I've ever liked.

Still, the machine and the recipe (from The Perfect Scoop) made reasonably good waffle cones, though it took us a while to figure out how to shape them without burning fingers or leaving a big hole at the bottom.

I'm going to see if I can find a sugar cone shaper and recipe.

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Coconut-coffee-almond "ice cream" and raspberry sherbet

A few months back (near someone's birthday, probably mine), I made two not-quite-ice-creams in a row. Here's a picture of them with some birthday cake.

 

The first was a coconut cream based ice cream, flavored with coffee and with toasted chopped almonds mixed in. It was inspired by an internet recipe, although I don't recall which one. The base had 2 cans of Trader Joe's coconut cream, 3 packets of Starbucks Via instant coffee, less than a cup of sugar, and some vanilla.

The ingredients for the coconut-coffee base

The second dessert was a simple raspberry sherbet (raspberries, milk, sugar, a bit of lemon juice). I believe the recipe was from The Perfect Scoop.

Raspberry sherbet

Both were great, but I loved the sherbet best. It was fresh and clean tasting, and raspberries have such a pretty, intense color.

The coconut-coffee-almond seemed bitter at first (something I've noticed with other coconut-coffee combos) but after a couple of bites I really liked it.


Coming soon: goodbye to a broken bread machine, and hello to a beautiful new one.

Monday, April 28, 2014

Three that didn't work out

Of all the recipes I've made from The Perfect Scoop, only 3 weren't utterly delicious: chocolate-coconut sorbet, piña colada sherbet, and coffee ice cream. Still, I'd try everything but the sherbet again.
Great for drinking, not so great for ice cream

Chocolate-coconut sorbet

This sorbet had problems with both taste and texture, both of which were probably my fault.

The taste problem might have been caused by me using bittersweet chocolate (Valrhona from Trader Joe's) and not adding enough sugar. I once had a similar problem with the lean chocolate sauce recipe, although that wasn't fatal since I wasn't eating the sauce on its own.

The lack of sugar was a by-product of me cutting down the recipe by 7/8. Yes, 7/8. The recipe called for 16 fl oz of coconut milk, but the can had 14 fl oz. I converted everything accordingly, doing the math in my head, but I think I goofed the math for the sugar.

So add more sugar, right? Well, I didn't want to bother with heating up the stuff again, so I tried adding some almond extract, and it pretty much worked. The taste wasn't amazing, but it was pretty darned good.

I could've (and should've) fixed the texture problem as soon as I noticed it, but I figured I'd just go ahead and churn anyway. What a mistake. When a house full of 17-year-old boys doesn't polish off your sorbet because it's too grainy, you have recipe failure.

Fixing the texture was easy: just reheat the sorbet over a double boiler until the chocolate smooths out. Then cool and churn again. The texture was fantastic, as you'd expect from using coconut cream (what I happened to have on hand) instead of coconut milk.

Next time, I'll do the math on paper (or find 2 oz more of coconut milk) and try a different chocolate.

Piña colada sherbet

Pineapple and coconut milk: I eat these all the time, without any trouble, and yet this dessert set off an allergic reaction that had me grabbing the Benadryl.

I made this sherbet because it was a hot day and we wanted something cold, stat. It tasted fine, but it languished in our freezer. Maybe we're just not sherbet people.

Coffee ice cream

Too bitter. I'll try again, though, because coffee is one of my favorite ice cream flavors. I think we used Peet's Major Dickason. Next time I'll try a lighter roast. Maybe the blonde roast from (gasp!) Starbucks.