recipes that don't use specified ingredients



B

Ben

Guest
I have this cookbook that for the second time I noticed
listed an ingredient and didn't use it. I followed a pastry
recipe requiring 2 eggs and the instructions say explicitly
to use 1 egg yolk and doesn't mention eggs again. It also
mentions 1 teaspoon of water and doesn't use that either.

btw. the recipe called for margarine, flour salt, ice water,
vinegar, 2 egg yolks, 1 tsp water and optional sesame seeds.

I have the dough in the fridge for 2 hours right now as it
specified (is that really necessary? - I'm impatient). Aside
from ingredients that aren't used (in 2 cases) I really like
the cookbook.

regards, Ben

--
"What passes for wisdom may only be eloquent foolishness"

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Juding from the order.... the 1 egg yolk , 1 tsp water and
optional sesame seeds are the egg wash for the top crust....

just a guess.

take care Liz

Hey! Look what ben <[email protected]> wrote :

>I have this cookbook that for the second time I noticed
>listed an ingredient and didn't use it. I followed a pastry
>recipe requiring 2 eggs and the instructions say explicitly
>to use 1 egg yolk and doesn't mention eggs again. It also
>mentions 1 teaspoon of water and doesn't use that either.
>
>btw. the recipe called for margarine, flour salt, ice
>water, vinegar, 2 egg yolks, 1 tsp water and optional
>sesame seeds.
>
>I have the dough in the fridge for 2 hours right now as it
>specified (is that really necessary? - I'm impatient).
>Aside from ingredients that aren't used (in 2 cases) I
>really like the cookbook.
>
>regards, Ben
 
in article [email protected], ben at [email protected]
wrote on 3/8/04 5:38 PM:

> I have this cookbook that for the second time I noticed
> listed an ingredient and didn't use it. I followed a
> pastry recipe requiring 2 eggs and the instructions say
> explicitly to use 1 egg yolk and doesn't mention eggs
> again. It also mentions 1 teaspoon of water and doesn't
> use that either.
>
> btw. the recipe called for margarine, flour salt, ice
> water, vinegar, 2 egg yolks, 1 tsp water and optional
> sesame seeds.

Sounds like egg wash for the top of the pastry. The seeds
are for decoration.

>
> I have the dough in the fridge for 2 hours right now as it
> specified (is that really necessary? - I'm impatient).

Yes, it's really necessary. It's called a resting period. It
lets the gluten in the pastry relax so you can roll it out
without struggling with the dough. If you don't let the
gluten relax, the dough will "fight" being rolled out. It
won't stretch out, it will snap back.

A good cookbook will tell you not only WHAT to do, but WHY,
so that you learn something.

> Aside from ingredients that aren't used (in 2 cases) I
> really like the cookbook.

It sounds like a sloppy editing job.
 
Fire the editors.

``````````````

On Mon, 08 Mar 2004 17:38:52 -0500, ben <[email protected]> wrote:

> I have this cookbook that for the second time I noticed
> listed an ingredient and didn't use it. I followed a
> pastry recipe requiring 2 eggs and the instructions say
> explicitly to use 1 egg yolk and doesn't mention eggs
> again. It also mentions 1 teaspoon of water and doesn't
> use that either.
>
> btw. the recipe called for margarine, flour salt, ice
> water, vinegar, 2 egg yolks, 1 tsp water and optional
> sesame seeds.
>
> I have the dough in the fridge for 2 hours right now as
> it specified (is that really necessary? - I'm impatient).
> Aside from ingredients that aren't used (in 2 cases) I
> really like the cookbook.
>
> regards, Ben

Practice safe eating - always use condiments
 
Sheryl Rosen wrote:

> A good cookbook will tell you not only WHAT to do, but
> WHY, so that you learn something.

Amen.

--
Reg email: RegForte (at) (that free MS email service) (dot)
com
 
Sheryl Rosen wrote:

> in article [email protected],
> ben at [email protected] wrote on 3/8/04 5:38 PM:
>
>>I have this cookbook that for the second time I noticed
>>listed an ingredient and didn't use it. I followed a
>>pastry recipe requiring 2 eggs and the instructions say
>>explicitly to use 1 egg yolk and doesn't mention eggs
>>again. It also mentions 1 teaspoon of water and doesn't
>>use that either.
>>
>>btw. the recipe called for margarine, flour salt, ice
>>water, vinegar, 2 egg yolks, 1 tsp water and optional
>>sesame seeds.
>
> Sounds like egg wash for the top of the pastry. The seeds
> are for decoration.

Hey, I think you're right there!

> A good cookbook will tell you not only WHAT to do, but
> WHY, so that you learn something.

This book is very dry bones in that it has the recipes and
basic instructions and no pictures at all. Though, the few
recipes I have made from it have worked out very nicely. I
bought another cookbook recently that goes into explanations
for things though I don't like its recipes. Either I can't
figure out what to substitute for various ingredients that I
don't have or can't use (like milk based ones etc.) or the
recipe is more complicated and drawn out than I'd like (I
only have so much time to spend on making dinner for the
family). Also with the exception of these franks in a
blanket, I generally like to make food which is more health
conscious.

regards, Ben

--
"What passes for wisdom may only be eloquent foolishness"

Cheap long distance calling using Onesuite
(http://www.onesuite.com).
2.5 cents/min anywhere in the U.S., to Canada or the U.K. No
monthly or connection fees! Use promotional code 038664643
for 20 free minutes.