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#1
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| I am curious to know. I see most recipes asking for ground almonds in frangipane. I can see the advantage of using almond paste for speed but perhaps the flavour or texture might be different. I would like to know what you all think. For the sake of conversation using this recipe what would be changes? 1 cup sliced almonds 1/2 cup sugar 2 large eggs 1 stick unsalted butter, room temperature 1/2 teaspoon almond extract 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour Thanks
__________________ You Need Degas to Make De Van Gogh |
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#2
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| At the bakery I work at, they use almond paste instead of almond flour. Never tried it though. Everyone seems to like it. I can try to get the recipe for you if you'd like. |
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#3
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| Thanks LotusCakeStudio: Sure, I would like to see that recipe.
__________________ You Need Degas to Make De Van Gogh |
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#4
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| I've never done that Oli. I do use almond flour instead of grinding my own almonds (for their finer texture) and sub. equal weights of course. Then I always add almond emulsion to frangipane to 'kick' up the flavor. I think in theory it would work to sub. in the paste but I tend to think your texture would be compromised and be rather soft from the almond paste. You could certainly add a small amount of paste to your frangipane to intensfy the flavor but emulsion is cheaper. Sorry, not much of a help.
__________________ "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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#5
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| I have recipes for both types of frangipane. The one with almond paste makes a more fragrant and sweeter cake. The texture is more tender but heavier. Standard recipe for frangipane with almond paste: Almond paste 100 % Butter 50 % sugar none or 25 % eggs 50 % flour 25 % |
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#6
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| My main recipe uses almond paste. It's very moist and flexible, with a nice marzipan flavor. |
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#7
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| Oli, We blend our butter and almond paste together. We use a harder flour for the bottoms of our small tarts and puff stuff(strudel,tarts etc) and a softer flour when we use it for tortes, ya know pear almond,tart cherry, anything in sugar paste, its a little lighter. The paste tends to make the almond flavor more permeatingly sweet, so we usually cut it with something acidic. I can shoot you a recipe mon. pretty basic. I do use the almond flour recipe for a special order item, a winter pear almond torte, I poach the pears in a sweet and sour(balsamic vinegar Mexican rock brown sugar, spices) puff shell..., dried apricot and brie spread on the bottom... mix... and the pears. The paste is to sweet for this. I know, sounds terrible, but its really not that bad. I like both ways depending on the use. |
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