Do we have any bakers out there?

May 08, 2016 11:06

I love Madelines. I used to always buy them at Trader Joe's in Phoenix, but they stopped carrying them. A woman there suggested I buy them in bulk at World Market, but I (A) don't want larger madelines, and (II) don't want them in bulk.

So I bought a gorgeous medeline pan from Williams-Sonoma. I found a great recipe from Food Network, and it ( Read more... )

cooking

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Comments 2

porsupah May 12 2016, 12:48:28 UTC
I'd say this calls for application of the scientific method. ^_^ Perhaps keep it to two variables: amount of baking powder (direct ratio, a bit more, and a bit less), and lemon or orange zest.

I wonder if you could do without the baking powder, and subject the mix to high vacuum instead? Although, you might not have such a pump handy.

Maybe I'll see if jharish can shed some light on the matter - he's been known to get up to some sophisticated baking shenanigans, though I've admittedly yet to taste proof. =:)

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wuglet May 13 2016, 21:40:23 UTC
So this is my gut-feeling plus some experience with meddling with baking recipes. Baking is all about the relations/ratios, but it is not that mathematical that you can just halve stuff. Usually it works better to halve the dry ingredients and eggs, but use about 3/4 of the wet ingredients.

So in this recipe, I would try 2 eggs and half of the flour, sugar, and zest, but leave the 1 teaspoon of unsalted butter, vanilla extract, and baking powder whole. The 1/4 pound of butter should go to somewhat more than 1/8. I'm better in the metric system, so if 1/4 pound is 125gr, I'd try the reduced recipe with 80gr instead of the 60-odd grammes.

The type of zest shouldn't make a difference, both lemon and orange have more or less the same oils. ;)

PS: The large bubbles indicate that you over-mixed the batter; it shouldn't be soupy-smooth but rather smooth with some texture left.

http://www.joyofbaking.com/madeleines.html

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