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#1
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| Hi, Anybody got a gooey thick spreadable caramel recipe. To be used in between cake layers. I've tried so many that are runny,saucy,etc. And kinda tired of experimenting w/ reducing this and that. I just want a thick recipe. Thanks. |
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#2
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| You might want to add a thickener to your mix. Good Luck. |
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#3
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| It's at work so I can't quote it..a recent issue of Bon Appetit that featured Paris has a recipe from Pierre Herme involving French macaroons and a spreadable caramel filling.
__________________ It's not Dairy Queen. |
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#4
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| a basic caramel 4 cups granulated sugar enough water to moisten the sugar caramelize to desired color and add: 3 cups heavy cream to arrest the process 4 ounces butter cubed 2 tsp salt pinch of baking soda to colour enjoy and be careful!
__________________ bake first, ask questions later. Oooh food, my favorite! ![]() http://www.myspace.com/chefmbrown Professor Culinary and Pastry Arts www.CCCCD.edu |
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#5
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| Spoons, I think I saw a caramel topping recipe(which can be used as a filling) at the finecooking.com website. I remember trying it out and liked the consistency. |
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#6
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| Wow thanks! Bighat- got it right in front of me. pg. 219 looks good. ooey gooey. M brown- I'll try it. Yeah, I got some battle wounds from making caramel long time ago. Nice scar to proove it. It just jumped out of the pan and stuck to my skin. Yeow!!!! Angry- I printed it out. You know I forgot about that book, Beranbaum's Pie & Pastry. It lists some variations- Ruby Port Caramel, and Bourbon Butterscotch Caramel. Those sound good in a cake. (?) Thanks- I appreciate it. |
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#7
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| D. how do I get to that web site, finecooking, I can't rememeber if I've been there??? tia
__________________ "Bakers are born, not made. We are exacting people who delight in submitting ourselves to rules and formulas if it means achieving repeatable perfection", Rose Levy Beranbaum |
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#8
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__________________ K «Money talks. Chocolate sings. Beautifully.» «Just Give Me Chocolate and Nobody Gets Hurt.» «Coffee, Chocolate, Men ... Some things are just better rich.» |
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#9
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| I always end up burning it -- and sometimes myself -- when I try to caramelize sugar. Any tips? ![]() |
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#10
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| Add sugar little by little, melting each amount before you add more. The more you have in the pot, the longer it takes to burn. If you are only making a tiny amount, keep the flame low.
__________________ www.cakesuite.com |
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#11
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| just watch your heat and pay attention to what you are doing. have a bowl of ice water by your burner and when you think you have reached the right temp and oclor, plop it into your ice bath to stop the cooking. just pay attention. sugar is not forgiving. be carefull when cooking and handling it. once it is burnt, there is no going back. |
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#12
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| If your burning it because you still have a few lumps of white sugar that aren't melting and your waiting for them to melt, then I do have the answer for you. But if your burning it and your-self because your not paying attention, oh well. How to get your sugar to melt evenly....using plain reg. sugar mix in the smallest amount of lemon juice, like 1 tsp. to 3c. of sugar. Make sure you mix it in well so the whole pot of sugar is sandlike in consistancy before you begin melting. Then you'll notice the sugar won't go thru the stage where it turns into dry lumps (that you have to break up).
__________________ "Bakers are born, not made. We are exacting people who delight in submitting ourselves to rules and formulas if it means achieving repeatable perfection", Rose Levy Beranbaum |
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#13
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| I do that too. ![]()
__________________ www.cakesuite.com |
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#14
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| Thanks for the help! I think perhaps the ice bath is the trick I need. Honest, W, I pay attention - it just seems to go from not quite the right color to burnt it a flash! Thanks again for the tips! |
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#15
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| Thanks for the recipe, MBrown. I have some good ones, but they're at work and I won't be going back until August. I love to make butterscotch fudge. I'll take it over chocolate any day ![]()
__________________ Laughter is the medicine of life |
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