Author Topic: The BellGab Bakeshop  (Read 108620 times)

The BellGab Bakeshop
« on: April 08, 2021, 07:32:41 AM »

Re: The BellGab Bakeshop
« Reply #1 on: April 13, 2021, 04:13:54 AM »

Re: The BellGab Bakeshop
« Reply #2 on: April 13, 2021, 05:01:15 AM »


Impressive. Kind of makes me want to go out and roll a few marzipan balls.


Re: The BellGab Bakeshop
« Reply #3 on: April 13, 2021, 05:29:40 AM »
Impressive. Kind of makes me want to go out and roll a few marzipan balls.

Thanks!  This is the first year we didn't have escaped disciples rolling on the floor -- in the past I have resorted to toothpicks.  A little of the same hot rum-and-apricot-jam mixture you brush on the sides as a glaze glues them right down.

Re: The BellGab Bakeshop
« Reply #4 on: April 13, 2021, 05:56:47 AM »
I know that it is not baking. But I'm embarrassed to admit that I did not write down your recipe for chicken pepperoni "stuff". And now it has disappeared... Any chance of a repeat. I know I need to slaughter 3 dozen chickens, stew a box of tomatoes, and buy some bulk pepperoni... But I don't recall the rest of the ingredients.

Re: The BellGab Bakeshop
« Reply #5 on: April 13, 2021, 06:38:03 AM »
I know that it is not baking. But I'm embarrassed to admit that I did not write down your recipe for chicken pepperoni "stuff". And now it has disappeared... Any chance of a repeat. I know I need to slaughter 3 dozen chickens, stew a box of tomatoes, and buy some bulk pepperoni... But I don't recall the rest of the ingredients.

Sure!

10 lbs chicken breast, diced
package of Italian sausage
package of pepperoni
two large cans of tomato paste
oregano, basil, thyme, salt (may not need if sausage is salty enough), pepper (chili and black) to taste, just keep adding until it smells like the pizza you like.
a glug of vinegar if you like it a little zippy, enhances the acidity of the pepperoni

My big sis adds cheese and olives, too, once I got her turned on to it, but when I am in my ascetic mood that seems impossibly decadent.

Re: The BellGab Bakeshop
« Reply #6 on: April 13, 2021, 06:52:28 AM »
Sure!

10 lbs chicken breast, diced
package of Italian sausage
package of pepperoni
two large cans of tomato paste
oregano, basil, thyme, salt (may not need if sausage is salty enough), pepper (chili and black) to taste, just keep adding until it smells like the pizza you like.
a glug of vinegar if you like it a little zippy, enhances the acidity of the pepperoni

My big sis adds cheese and olives, too, once I got her turned on to it, but when I am in my ascetic mood that seems impossibly decadent.

To each his own, but whenever I see this kind of potage, I want to add some mushrooms, peppers and jalapenos.

Re: The BellGab Bakeshop
« Reply #7 on: April 13, 2021, 07:00:47 AM »
To each his own, but whenever I see this kind of potage, I want to add some mushrooms, peppers and jalapenos.

YES peppers would be sublime!  I will try that next time, I have been craving them lately.  Really it is just your favorite pizza toppings with chicken as the base instead of a giant disk of carbohydrate.  Once I realized pizza was just garnished bread I regretted every slice I ever ate.

Re: The BellGab Bakeshop - Simnel Cake
« Reply #8 on: April 13, 2021, 07:08:52 AM »



Re: The BellGab Bakeshop
« Reply #9 on: April 14, 2021, 02:37:38 AM »
https://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/easter-simnel-cake

Here is the recipe that I used.  This year, I made a few modifications.  Most significantly, since whoozit pointed out that "marzipan" without rosewater is just almond paste (a definition that does not hold in Scandinavia) I included a generous glug of that substance in making the marzipan, which otherwise is simply halfalmond flour and half powdered sugar with almond extract held together with an egg.  This was an unexpected success, with the distinct taste of fresh roses (yes, you can eat them) occurring at surprising points in the cake, introduced not only in the topping but by the thick layer of marzipan filling in the middle.

I also used a very tall 6-inch springform pan which, despite appearing smaller, holds the entire recipe.  It took at least half an hour longer to bake and was still mushy in the middle as you can see; it could easily have gone another half hour without drying out too badly.

Though eaten fresh, with an eye toward incorporating some of the benefits of aging on a fruitcake I wrapped it in plastic and foil while still quite warm and allowed it to cool gradually for several hours, essentially steaming the hard outer crust into softness.  You see instructions for wrapping on old-fashioned cakes that are meant to age but, though you will hear things like how the flavors are mellowed or richened, the main purpose from what I have experienced is to allow the moisture levels in the cake to equalize so that the blackened parts on the outside become as soft as the middle and the whole is more pleasant to eat.  When you use pinches of spice there may be some benefit to aging as a means of amplifying their flavors but spices are so cheap now, I am not a fan of subtlety and dump the fresh-ground stuff by the handful.

I also chop the raisins (which is tedious but worth it) to create a more-uniform texture -- gross swollen whole raisins make a crumbly cake without any real benefit on on the fork, and there are currants anyway which are far more polite.

Re: The BellGab Bakeshop
« Reply #10 on: April 18, 2021, 06:17:32 AM »
https://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/easter-simnel-cake

Here is the recipe that I used.  This year, I made a few modifications.  Most significantly, since whoozit pointed out that "marzipan" without rosewater is just almond paste (a definition that does not hold in Scandinavia)

I'm very happy to share credit. But I am positive that you and I discussed rosewater as an addition. If Bellgab existed, I would spend half an hour combing my posts looking for our interaction on the subject.

Re: The BellGab Bakeshop
« Reply #11 on: April 18, 2021, 07:48:49 AM »
I'm very happy to share credit. But I am positive that you and I discussed rosewater as an addition. If Bellgab existed, I would spend half an hour combing my posts looking for our interaction on the subject.

We most certainly did!  And, on the subject of stollen, I cite your oma eagerly.  On an English cake, however, I am more likely to cite whoozit, who I associate with that benighted nation both for the way he jumped all over Shreddie's Tunis cake and for his appalling tendency to mistake his part for the whole, much like Shreddie with his absurd "cardigan", as though all of Europe was so taken with the ridiculous poltroon and popinjay of a lord by that name that, as a body, they elected to call what is effectively a near-universal piece of long underwear after the blunderer of Balaclava.

Also,I forgot the garlic powder in the pizza chicken recipe oh gawd I am so ashamed 😢

Re: The BellGab Bakeshop
« Reply #12 on: April 18, 2021, 08:07:37 AM »
We most certainly did!  And, on the subject of stollen, I cite your oma eagerly.  On an English cake, however, I am more likely to cite whoozit, who I associate with that benighted nation both for the way he jumped all over Shreddie's Tunis cake and for his appalling tendency to mistake his part for the whole, much like Shreddie with his absurd "cardigan", as though all of Europe was so taken with the ridiculous poltroon and popinjay of a lord by that name that, as a body, they elected to call what is effectively a near-universal piece of long underwear after the blunderer of Balaclava.

Also,I forgot the garlic powder in the pizza chicken recipe oh gawd I am so ashamed 😢

Really? You think a Balaclava is a pair of long johns?

Re: The BellGab Bakeshop
« Reply #13 on: April 18, 2021, 08:10:44 AM »
Really? You think a Balaclava is a pair of long johns?

No but your Cardigan is.

Re: The BellGab Bakeshop
« Reply #14 on: April 18, 2021, 08:15:03 AM »
Gawd do I have to teach you your own history, too?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Brudenell,_7th_Earl_of_Cardigan