Food & Cooking Questions and Discussion Got a cooking question or something you want to discuss about food and cooking? This is the forum for you. Talk about anything related to food & cooking.


Reply
 
Thread Tools
  #1  
Old 05-14-2008, 12:27 AM
azredhead Offline
Registered User
Culinary Experience: Cook At Home
 
Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 2
Default Quiche Pastry Fiasco

Hi, I'm azredhead. I've spent hours today trying to make pastry for two Quiche's for a party tomarrow. I'm using the same recipe I've used a thousand times. It has been a nightmare! The pastry won't hold together. I can't pick it up to put in quiche pan. I've thrown away dough several times. Finally I realized it's the new formula 0 trans fat Crisco!! I don't know what to do. Does anyone have a suggestion?
Reply With Quote


  #2  
Old 05-14-2008, 08:30 AM
Mezzaluna's Avatar
Mezzaluna Offline
ChefTalk Moderator
Culinary Experience: Cook At Home
 
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Wisconsin USA
Posts: 8,613
Smile

Hello and welcome to Chef Talk.

I'm going to move your pastry question to a better forum but I hope you'll return to the Welcome Forum and introduce yourself.

Regards,
Mezzlauna
__________________
Moderator, Welcome Forum
***It is better to ask forgiveness than beg permission.***
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 05-14-2008, 09:52 AM
boar_d_laze's Avatar
boar_d_laze Offline
Registered User
Culinary Experience: Other
 
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Monroiva, CA
Posts: 1,811
Blog Entries: 3
Default

If your dough isn't holding together, it's too dry and too short. One solution [snicker] is to add more water, work it more, and hope a longer rest compensates for the toughness both changes add.

If you're not a vegetarian, quit using Crisco and switch to something else. Many supers sell an extra cheap brand that includes animal drippings. This will work better than the new Crisco. It's also a natural segue for the best solution.

Lard. There's a been a big move back to lard in the pro and advanced amateur worlds. Of course, some of us trogs never left. It simply works better. Your crusts will be light, flaky, and "melt in your mouth." Much better than they ever were with Crisco.

Biscuits to die for. Better for frying, too -- much less oily.

Whatever health benefits come from Crisco or other veg shortenings are slight. Lard is also "Zero-Transfat." Lard has a very high good cholestrol/bad cholestrol ratio (HDL/LDL), used in crust it doesn't substantially add to the dietary fat in a dish (you're worried about fat with quiche?), nor increase the calorie count. If you're squeamish, you'll get over it the first time anyone compliments your crust which will come the first time. If they're squeamish, don't tell them.

You don't have to use wonderful, special, extra-fresh, gourmet leaf lard either. Just get regular, plain-jane lard. If you live in an area with any Hispanic markets, they have it. If all the labels are in Spanish, it's called "manteca." Write it down on a piece of paper and take it with you. Asians use it by the ton, too. If you live in the west, look for Farmer John lard -- comes in a 5 lb white plastic bucket with a red top. Good stuff.

Hope this helps,
BDL
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Apple's super-hype i-Phone launch turns into fiasco MikeLM The Late Night Cafe (non-food/cooking discussion) 4 07-12-2008 12:03 PM
Quiche Pastry Shell Oddjob Professional Pastry Chefs Forum 6 04-10-2007 06:49 PM
What goes with Quiche analogkid Food & Cooking Questions and Discussion 4 04-01-2006 09:31 PM
quiche isaac Food & Cooking Questions and Discussion 12 03-23-2002 08:53 PM
Crustless Quiche Sara R Recipes 7 09-21-1999 07:11 PM