| Pastries and Baking General General discussion forum for all pastry and baking topics. |  | | 
03-13-2009, 07:43 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Line Cook | | Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 275
| | is shortening (crisco) necessary given the health concerns i have heard lately that although technically crisco doesnt have trans fat, the partially hydrogenated veggie oil is just about as bad.
according to my nutritionist friend you are better off using butter, lard or even suet in pastries, crusts, cookies, empanadas, patties, pastelles, pastelitos, puff pastry, pasties, pies, tarts, you get the idea.
the key is moderation.. and a diet that is other wise rich in good fats like nut oils, avocado, coconut, olive, fish, etc!
is this so?
is shortening irreplaceable?
i always liked butter lard or suet more anyway. but i wouldn't even know where to get suet in the states! online suppliers are of variety fit for avian consumption only! | 
03-13-2009, 08:26 PM
|  | ChefTalk Supporter Culinary Experience: Retired Chef | | Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Commonwealth of Virginia
Posts: 1,223
| | Shortening serves a purpose and in some cases is unable to be replaced well by anything. Like most things if you eat it by the tub it's bad but if you use it in moderation then it shouldn't pose any harm. It is what it is. | 
03-13-2009, 08:29 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Line Cook | | Join Date: Feb 2009
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| | Quote:
Originally Posted by oldschool1982 Shortening serves a purpose and in some cases is unable to be replaced well by anything. Like most things if you eat it by the tub it's bad but if you use it in moderation then it shouldn't pose any harm. It is what it is. | thanks
when is it irreplaceable? | 
03-13-2009, 08:32 PM
|  | ChefTalk Supporter Culinary Experience: Retired Chef | | Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Commonwealth of Virginia
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| | Quote:
Originally Posted by chalkdust thanks
when is it irreplaceable? | As I've learned from living 23 of the last 26 years south of the Mason Dixon line..............Biscuits, frying chicken and Pie crust. Although I do like to use a 50/50 mix of butter and shortening in my pie crust and a mixture of clarified butter, pork lard and rendered cured ham fat for my chickens. | 
03-13-2009, 08:35 PM
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Originally Posted by oldschool1982 As I've learned from living 23 of the last 26 years south of the Mason Dixon line..............Biscuits, frying chicken and Pie crust. Although I do like to use a 50/50 mix of butter and shortening in my pie crust and a mixture of clarified butter, pork lard and rendered cured ham fat for my chickens.  | hmmm
i am in florida and people frequently use mixtures of pork and chicken fat and butter for biscuits and gravies...
didnt know shortening was part of this food culture. your mixture for chicken sounds good.
so how bad for you is crisco anyway? | 
03-13-2009, 08:39 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Sous Chef | | Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 22
| | Good timing on this topic, I was just checking out a can of Crisco at the store today to see what the latest ingredients were!
I'm no pastry expert, but in general, I don't think that shortening is irreplaceable. All the other fats have been around much longer anyhow. It was just a great invention because it greatly extended the shelf-life on foods, therefore saving lots of money, increasing convenience, etc. And also, "partially hydrogenated oil" isnt just as bad as transfats, it actually IS transfats. Last I checked, the FDA allows products to state "transfat free" on their labeling as long as one serving has less than one gram of transfat in it. The key is to read the ingredients list. "Hardened fat" is the same. (I would recommend picking up any book on the topic, they are really good and informative, changed my whole approach to grocery shopping.)
I used to make a pie dough with half butter (for flavor) and half shortening (for flakiness) but then was taught by a pastry chef that I could use whole butter and that the key was just not to overwork the dough, thereby ensuring flakiness.
As far as substitutions, someone else will give a better answer I'm sure...
Last edited by amuse_bouche; 03-13-2009 at 08:42 PM.
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03-13-2009, 08:41 PM
|  | ChefTalk Supporter Culinary Experience: Retired Chef | | Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Commonwealth of Virginia
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| | Well???????
My Grandmother used it for just about everything and she lived to be 90. My Grandfather (her Husband)??? Also 90.
If you had to pin me to an answer.....I'd say 6 of one half dozen of another when it come to it's effects. But just like water, if you get too much it can kill you. Yeah the Crisco will get you sooner and probably with a lot less but ........ Hehehe
By the way.....for all practical purposes when you get South of Gainsville..... Florida, when compared to Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, South and North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Arkansas, Missouri, Texas Oklahoma and Parts of Kansas, is a Northern state or a part of another country when you get south enough. And I mean no disrespect to Floridians everywhere!!!
There are several shortening available and which I use that are 100% non hydrogenated products. Spectrum makes a very good product that I have on the shelf as we speak.
Last edited by oldschool1982; 03-13-2009 at 08:52 PM.
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03-13-2009, 08:42 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Line Cook | | Join Date: Feb 2009
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Originally Posted by amuse_bouche Good timing on this topic, I was just checking out a can of Crisco at the store today to see what the latest ingredients were!
I'm no pastry expert, but in general, I know that shortening isn't irreplaceable. All the other fats have been around much longer anyhow. It was just a great invention because it greatly extended the shelf-life on foods, therefore saving lots of money, increasing convenience, etc. And also, "partially hydrogenated oil" isnt just as bad as transfats, it actually IS transfats. Last I checked, the FDA allows products to state "transfat free" on their labeling as long as one serving has less than one gram of transfat in it. The key is to read the ingredients list. "Hardened fat" is the same. (I would recommend picking up any book on the topic, they are really good and informative, changed my whole approach to grocery shopping.)
I used to make a pie dough with half butter (for flavor) and half shortening (for flakiness) but then was taught by a pastry chef that I could use whole butter and that the key was just not to overwork the dough, thereby ensuring flakiness.
As far as substitutions, someone else will give a better answer I'm sure... |
i agree about pie dough, i think a full butter crust can be fantastic.. lard is a good mix in too.
i tihnk suet can replace shiortening in many savory pastery doughs too
im i9nterested in the chicken frying and the biscuits though
i wonder if coconut oil could be used as it is the hardest room temperature fat i know of next to crisco??? | 
03-13-2009, 09:13 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Former Chef | | Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Monroiva, CA
Posts: 3,169
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Originally Posted by chalkdust i have heard lately that although technically crisco doesnt have trans fat, the partially hydrogenated veggie oil is just about as bad. | Maybe, but probably not. But it doesn't work nearly as well for a number of things. Quote: |
according to my nutritionist friend you are better off using butter, lard or even suet in pastries, crusts, cookies, empanadas, patties, pastelles, pastelitos, puff pastry, pasties, pies, tarts, you get the idea.
| Most of the "nutritionists" I've heard are wildly wrong on a number of judgments -- for a number of reasons. Most nutritionists aren't the brightest bulb in the bushel when it comes to acquiring and evaluating scientific knowledge. That's why so few of them double as physicists -- or for that matter as biochemists, biologists, or anything else which would enable them to develop a sophisticated set of tools enabling analysis of new information. Worse, many (not all, by any means) work from a mix which includes plenty of misinformation, unfounded opinion and general superstition.
Don't get me wrong, I'm not offering myself as an expert. Can't argue with that; I only wish I followed your advice as well as I believe in it. Quote: |
[...] is shortening irreplaceable?
| If by shortening you mean hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated vegetable oils, no. Quote: |
i always liked butter lard or suet more anyway. but i wouldn't even know where to get suet in the states! online suppliers are of variety fit for avian consumption only!
| Hard to even find a butcher who knows what suet is -- not that it matters anyway since very few butchers get sides of beef anymore. You're certainly not going to get the fat from around the kidneys. The best you can do is develop a relationship with a butcher for fat trimmed from the rib and loin.
Lots o' luck,
BDL | 
03-13-2009, 09:49 PM
|  | ChefTalk Supporter Culinary Experience: Retired Chef | | Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Commonwealth of Virginia
Posts: 1,223
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Originally Posted by boar_d_laze Can't argue with that; I only wish I followed your advice as well as I believe in it.
BDL | Ain't that the truth! | 
03-14-2009, 09:04 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: At home cook | | Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: Rome, Italy
Posts: 1,143
| | Like so many of us growing up in the 50s, crisco was a fact of life, and many recipes i relied on contained it. I didn;t question it much in my 20s, but when i came here around age 25, there was no crisco. When i asked people if it existed they asked why use it instead of oil or butter, and i said, because it has no taste. They answered, so why would you use it? Which got me thinking. Yeah, why DO we use it?
I began to use butter for all baking and oil for all frying and cooking, and in fact, stuff tastes much better.
For the flakiness of pastry, i recently tried lard, and well, there is NO CONTEST - way better than any crisco pastry i ever had.
For buttercreams, of course, butter is way tastier, and i guess some would argue that it's not completely white,. And i say, so, is white any more appetizing than ivory or cream colored?
I distrust industrial products, and especially industrial products that are advertized as healthier than natural ones. Don';t get me wrong, there are plenty of natural poisons, just because it's natural it doesn;t mean it;s good for you, but at least highly processed ingredients contain substances that are so new we don;t really know much about them and esp their long-term effects.
And just try this if you want to find out if crisco is better than butter - just taste it!
Pure, tasteless grease. bla. | 
03-14-2009, 12:10 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Line Cook | | Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 275
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by siduri Like so many of us growing up in the 50s, crisco was a fact of life, and many recipes i relied on contained it. I didn;t question it much in my 20s, but when i came here around age 25, there was no crisco. When i asked people if it existed they asked why use it instead of oil or butter, and i said, because it has no taste. They answered, so why would you use it? Which got me thinking. Yeah, why DO we use it?
I began to use butter for all baking and oil for all frying and cooking, and in fact, stuff tastes much better.
For the flakiness of pastry, i recently tried lard, and well, there is NO CONTEST - way better than any crisco pastry i ever had.
For buttercreams, of course, butter is way tastier, and i guess some would argue that it's not completely white,. And i say, so, is white any more appetizing than ivory or cream colored?
I distrust industrial products, and especially industrial products that are advertized as healthier than natural ones. Don';t get me wrong, there are plenty of natural poisons, just because it's natural it doesn;t mean it;s good for you, but at least highly processed ingredients contain substances that are so new we don;t really know much about them and esp their long-term effects.
And just try this if you want to find out if crisco is better than butter - just taste it!
Pure, tasteless grease. bla. | im with you with everything except for the fried chicken
im wondering if that crisco isn eeded to really give it a super sharp crisp/crunch?
thats what i imagine the crisco is valued for in fried foods.
lard is great
suet is great
and a mixture of lard and butter is a great pie crust!
my mom lieks to make an oil pie crust.
it actually turns out very tender with less saturated fat than butter and lard. | 
03-14-2009, 12:54 PM
|  | ChefTalk Moderator Culinary Experience: Professional Pastry Chef | | Join Date: May 1999 Location: Outside Dallas, BABY!!!
Posts: 2,471
| | Shortening and High Ratio Shortening make high ratio cakes and baked goods possible.
On the small scale, yes, butter is going to work out well.
When you are mass producing, the HR shortening make it possible to create pastry with high amounts of liquid and sugar that keep them moist.
When working with all butter, keep it cool | 
03-14-2009, 01:03 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Line Cook | | Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 275
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Originally Posted by m brown Shortening and High Ratio Shortening make high ratio cakes and baked goods possible.
On the small scale, yes, butter is going to work out well.
When you are mass producing, the HR shortening make it possible to create pastry with high amounts of liquid and sugar that keep them moist.
When working with all butter, keep it cool  | that makes sense
what about coconut oil or palm oil?
these are also solid at room temperature but not processed like hte shortening.
is it too expensive/inefficient?
or is the shortening simply better taste wise? (never baked with coconut or palm oil, but i bet it could be done) | 
03-14-2009, 02:25 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Former Chef | | Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Monroiva, CA
Posts: 3,169
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Originally Posted by chalkdust im with you with everything except for the fried chicken
im wondering if that crisco isn eeded to really give it a super sharp crisp/crunch?
thats what i imagine the crisco is valued for in fried foods. | Good lard is better for fried food than vegetable shortening; especially the reformulated, "Zero Transfat!" shortenings. Inexpensive, mixed animal-vegetable shortenings can give lard a run for the money when it comes to texture, but they tend to bring some taste. Really good lard is as neutral as it gets. Suet brings too much taste. Quote: |
and a mixture of lard and butter is a great pie crust!
| Lard does flaky better than butter. If you want your pie crust to taste buttery, butter naturally works best. In my own tart and pie baking, if I want butter I usually put it in the filling rather than the crust. Quote: |
my mom lieks to make an oil pie crust.
| Oil makes a crumbly, rather than flaky pastry. Quote: |
it actually turns out very tender with less saturated fat than butter and lard.
| The loose way you're using the term "saturated" here is the same reason I went off on a rant about "nutritionists." The subject of dietary fats is complicated. Whether saturated, unsaturated, mono-saturates, mono-unsaturated, poly-unsaturated, etc., fats are "better" for you, usually depends less on their type or degree of saturation than on other factors. It seemed you implicitly acknowledged that with your lists of healthful fats (like avocado) which included saturates.
Really, the idea that a pie crust made with "less saturated fat" will, on that basis alone, be more healthful than another made with a full saturate (like lard) has been discredited for a few years -- although the way "nutrition" dogma changes, maybe "discredited" is the wrong word. Call it passe.
On a different subject, one of the primary reasons vegetable shortening is used over other products, especially butter, in commercial baking is the added stability and shelf life. Pastries, fillings and frostings made with vegetable shortening do not get rancid, and are more resistant to wilting, melting and running. My choice is to stay away from bakeries which choose ingredients for any other reasons than wholesomeness and taste.
BDL
Last edited by boar_d_laze; 03-14-2009 at 02:31 PM.
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