A little journal of my adventures in gardening, cooking and other constructive projects.
Showing posts with label dessert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dessert. Show all posts

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Cinnamon Buns

I made cinnamon buns!  It's been a while since I last made them.  They're the soft, sticky kind.  However, this isn't a recipe I'm ready to share yet, sorry!  When I've perfected it, then I'll be able to share it, but I've got to tweak a few things first.

For one, the caramel in the bottom of the pan needs to be thinned out, but I'm not sure how much water it would take.  Also, while pecans are fantastic with cinnamon buns, I think they need to go inside the rolls, not on top!


Below:  Rolls on their second rising.  Maybe I'll only make nine rolls next time...


Below:  Rolls, after baking.

 

I really like this cream cheese frosting I threw together.  I used a whole container of spreadable cream cheese (I didn't think I would use the whole container, and didn't want leftover non-spreadable cream cheese), maybe 2 teaspoons of cultured butter (mmmm!) and maybe half a cup of powdered sugar.  I didn't really measure these, I just added what I felt was needed until I was satisfied with the results.

The frosting is more tangy than sweet, which I really like!

 



Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Jin Deui Again

I made a  second attempt at jin deui on Monday.  Here's a quickie post; scroll to bottom for text.

Below:  Dough balls rolled in white sesame, uncooked.

Below:  Cooked jin deui!  The first few turned out over-cooked, a little burnt almost.  Only a few exploded.




Notes:

  • Used same recipe, but instead of making 12 dough balls, only made 8; this meant more thicker dough walls, and hopefully, less exploding.
  • My thermometer read somewhere around 250F, but the oil was actually much hotter--over 300F!!  As soon as I put the balls in, the temperature reading rose quickly.  I can only assume this is because the oil wasn't moving very much, and the thermometer was only reading a cooler area.  Next time, I will stir the oil before reading the temp.  
  • A good temperature is around 260F (last time I said 275F, which is still in the neighbourhood).  
  • Spritzing the balls with water before rolling in sesame seeds keeps the dough from drying out, helps the seeds stick better, and makes a crispier crust, I think.  
  • I need to keep the balls moving.  If the balls stay still, the dough expands unevenly; so there may be some places where it stretches very thin, and areas where it's thick.  
  • White sesame tastes better than in this application.  
  • I didn't get any photos, but the thickness of the dough for this batch turned out more like store-bought jin deui (thicker than last time).  I like it!  
  • I used about 1/3 tsp salt for the dough, and I liked it!  
  • I didn't accurately measure the sugar, but I used 3 slightly rounded tea spoons (as opposed to soup spoons) of cane sugar, because we're running low on demerara sugar.  



Monday, May 7, 2012

Jin Deui

I just tried my hand at making jin deui for the first time!  And I have to say, it's a lot of work!  This'll be a short post.  Here are the highlights:

Recipe: http://cant-live-without.com/2012/01/31/sesame-balls-with-red-bean-paste/


Dough wrapped around some red bean paste and formed into balls.  You can see some aren't as well wrapped as others!


Rolled in black sesame, because I was out of white.


Fry.  Since the recipe above didn't give a temperature, I tried frying at temperatures from 200F to 350F; about 275F was the best, I found.  Nothing burned and the balls took what felt like a comfortable amount of time to cook.


Some balls would explode, pushing out their tasty guts.  One actually exploded while in the oil, still.  That was a huge mess to clean up.


My rig:  a candy thermometer (the clip is crappy) set on our smallest metal saucepan, which sits atop a cast iron frying pan, to keep heat better.  To drain any debris, I would pour through a sieve into another pot, then back (again through the sieve) into the original pot.  


 

Finished products!  I like the one on the left *snicker*
 

The acts like a balloon, it seems!  It got stretched so thin, I'm impressed.  But there's still a reserve of dough in the right half on the right side.  I wonder how I can reduce that next time...


Final thoughts:
  • I will probably try this again.  Just, with more forethought next time!  
  • The dough could be sweeter.  I will follow the recommended sugar proportions next time.  
  • The balls had a slightly burnt taste.  I wonder if it's from the burnt debris, or if it's because black sesame cooks faster than white.  


Saturday, April 28, 2012

Popsicles - Part One

I came across the Chow.com series: Seven Ice Pops that Break the Mold and decided to try the milk tea with tapioca pearls, vietnamese coffee, and the red bean ice pops.  I'm making these popsicles for my work party on Sunday, who will help me shovel soil and otherwise tend the garden!

Here are my thoughts on the recipes.

Milk tea popsicles:

Because I like Hong Kong style milk tea, I used Red Rose tea bags for the milk tea popsicles.  And let me tell you, six bags of that stuff makes a powerful brew!!  I even subbed out one bag for two bags of the weaker Mother Parker's orange pekoe (which is absolutely atrocious, btw; I just got a free box from a friend who didn't want it, now I know why!).  I think next time I'll use five bags Red Rose and one bag Mother Parker.

I found it odd that the recipe calls for sweetened condensed milk.  We always use evaporated milk in our milk tea at home.  But I went along anyway.  I found the milk tea base to be too sweet.  I figured, since it's a cold dessert, it may need more sugar to taste sweet, so I let it slide.


I liked the idea of having tapioca boboa, especially when described so:
The tapioca pearls start out solid, but they slowly thaw and turn chewy in your mouth. It’s a little like the bubblegum ice cream of your youth: After the creamy part is gone, the pearls remain to prolong the fun.
I used the same black bubble tea pearls I've been using for a while now.  They're tasty and pleasantly chewy when warm, but get kind of grainy even at room temperature.  In the frozen popsicle, they do indeed start out solid, then turn chewy.  But the core turns grainy again.  This may just be a flaw in this brand of bubble tea pearls.

I think next time, I will not have so many pearls.  The recipe calls for filling the molds halfway, freezing for one hour, then making another addition of pearls and tea base.  I think I will use only half as many pearls next time.

And I think I will not put them at the very tip!  Next time, I will fill the molds with an inch of tea base, freeze for half an hour, then add the pearls and top off the molds.  This is because when I try to unmold the popsicles, the tips melt slightly and reveal bulbous black pearls sticking out of the tip like some grotesque alien appendage.

Here, the tip broke off when I tried to pull out the popsicle:


And after a few seconds of eating, the tip looks like this:


I suspect the appearance may put off some dinner guests!!


Red bean popsicles:

I made my own red bean paste based on this recipe.  (Btw, 250g of adzuki beans turns out to be close to 1+1/3 cups.)

I dislike that the paste comes out brown instead of red; but next time I will not boil the beans in the soaking water!!

I may have added too much salt to the paste recipe, but it worked out once the paste was in the popsicle base.

Instead of heavy cream, I used coffee cream; and instead of whole milk, I used 2% (because that's what we have).

Upon tasting, I'll concede that it could have used more sugar.  I had cut back, but now I know to make them sweeter!  I like that the whole (or mostly-whole) beans settled toward the tip.

But I think I would have liked more variety of texture.  It felt like there were only whole beans, and pureed beans, and nothing in between.

Red bean paste (leftovers are probably enough to make another batch!):


Finished popsicle:

Not quite as red as I had wanted, but still kind of pretty.  I don't really like the light-coloured band near the stick-end, though.  Maybe I will have to stir the popsicles after they've just set.


Vietnamese Coffee Popsicles

I actually happened to still have some Trung Nguyen coffee grinds, so I decided to use those.  Unfortunately, we don't have a working coffee maker, so I improvised, using a metal strainer and a coffee filter.  This took a few tries, because the strainer would sometimes tip, spilling coffee grinds into the coffee below.

Watching the coffee drip gives me a new appreciation for drip machines.  It's kind of painful to watch all that liquid sitting at the top, drip so slowly down--especially with so much coffee grinds!

I actually didn't have as much condensed milk as the recipe called for; so this may turn out to taste more like a plain, strong coffee than Vietnamese -style coffee.  Again, I used coffee cream instead of heavy cream, because that's what we have here.

The taste?  ...  A bit too much like regular coffee, actually.  The coffee cream gives it away.   Next time, I will open another can of sweetened condensed milk if I have to!


I really like the way the ice crystals look after sucking on the popsicle a little.  The crystals are so distinct, dark and clear amidst the creamy brown...


Since I started writing this post, I've actually made more popsicles--I think I've been bitten by the Popsicle-Making Bug.  But these will have to wait for their own post, next time.  The flavours I've made are:  lavender lemonade and blueberrygreen tea ice cream; strawberry and balsamic vinegar; and I may have time to make one more flavour before bed, though I haven't decided yet!

Meanwhile, I've removed each popsicle from its mold and wrapped in plastic cling wrap, then put into a zip-top freezer bag.  With the new popsicles, I've already filled two freezer bags and a third is on its way.  Hopefully I don't lose track of which flavour is which!



Friday, May 6, 2011

Baked Maple Dessert

So, in the Canadian Forces, we have these things called Individual Meal Packs, or IMPs.  (If you're interested in reading more, check out Operation RATION MAN, in which Darcy Knoll eats IMPs for 30 days and reports his results.)


Most IMPs are pretty predictable.  They contain:
  • "Meat" (the "main course" of your meal, sealed in a metallic bag like soups in Europe)
  • "Dessert" (usually fruit, and in one case, creamed corn, also in a metallic bag)
  • dry "side dish" mix (eg: instant mashed potatoes, stuffing mix, soup...) if Lunch or Dinner
  • candy, chocolate or something sweet (or a fibre bar), if Lunch or Dinner
  • cereal, if Breakfast
  • Juice or Sports Drink crystals (and in newer ones, a little drink baggie)
  • tea bag or instant coffee, dry creamer, sugar (sometimes you get, like, Nescafe instant latte stuff)
  • bread, in older ones; sometimes you get tortillas for "Mexican" meals
  • salt, pepper, sometimes condiments like soy sauce, tabasco sauce, mango chutney, raspberry jam, honey...
  • long-handled plastic spoon and a towel-like napkin
I happened to be bored and craving sugar today (a rarity for me!) so I dug around my basement looking for something sweet.  I came across the Baked Maple Dessert.

Anyone in the CF who has ever had a Baked Maple Dessert or a Baked Chocolate Dessert and is reading this...is probably flinching right now.  These things are intense.  The chocolate one is almost okay, because it isn't very sweet.

A baked chocolate/maple dessert is a dense brownie/blondie, soaked in chocolate/maple -flavoured syrup.

Also?  One portion contains 690 calories.  That's more than a Big Mac.  That's more than a Whopper (which is more than a Double Stacker, which is more than a Bacon Double Cheeseburger).  That's more than a Baconator (single).  That's more than a venti pumpkin spice latte with whole milk and whip.  That's roughly two cups of eggnog.  ...I think you get the idea.

But hey, I was craving something sweet!  So I plopped it into my bowl...



Yeeeeaaahhh, okay maybe not.  Let's go halfers.



Yeech.  That syrup looks disgusting.  Let's put some evaporated milk on that.



Better.



Okay....okay...  I can do this...



Verdict:  needs more evap, too sweet.  Imma be sick.