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baking

 
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Texascandee  

About Texascandee

I am a volunteer with Free Cakes For Kids and am looking for people that can donate either cash or supplies.  Supplies consist of specialty baking pans, ingredients, cake boxes, cake boards, food coloring or gels, etc.  Any help is appreciated since we do this for free, we have to do our own fund raising.  Thanks

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Anora Eldorath  

Quick Gluten-Free Peanut Butter Cookies

This recipe came in my montly Co-Op newspaper so I thought I'd share it. I just made them tonight and they are delicious!!

 Makes 12 Cookies (I got 18 but I made smaller cookies)

1 c. peanut butter

1 c. sugar

1 egg

1/2 tsp baking soda

1 tsp vanilla

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a medium bowl, combine all the ingredients and blend well.

Form dough into 1-inch balls. Place 1 1/2 to 2 inches apart on a greased cookie sheets. Flatten with your palm to 3/8 inch thick. Using a fork, press a crisscross pattern into each cookie.

Bake 6 minutes, turn pans, and bake 6 minutes more, or until lightly browned. Cool on wire rack.  (I found that you need to let the cookies rest a minute before moving them because they are very brittle until fully cooled).

 

reply to Anora Eldorath
Umami  

Banitza with Feta Cheese

banitza

This is a traditional Bulgarian pastry which uses hand-made filo dough and can be stuffed with all manner of things, both sweet and savory. I made it for New Year’s Eve and it was a smashing success, if I do say so myself. My uncle went so far as to say that it was better than my grandmother’s, an honor of which I would never suspect myself to be worthy. (My grandmother being the queen of banitza, and of cooking in general.)

The traditional filling for this pastry is made from feta cheese and eggs, some people add whole cumin seeds, I like to add a bit of black pepper instead. Buy your feta from a Mediterranean or other ethnic market if you can, otherwise you will likely get a substandard product for a high price. Feta should smell slightly briny and salty, but not like old socks. It is a ‘fresh’ cheese, like ricotta and cottage cheese and should have a similarly mild odor. Look for Bulgarian Sheep’s milk feta. (They have French and Greek varieties which are saltier and less rich tasting.) If you are not getting it pre-packaged, but cut to order, take a look at how it is stored, it should be completely covered in the brine, some places only cover it half way and you end up with a faint smell of socks, which isn’t good.

Banitza is made from a few basic ingredients, but the method can be tricky to master. The key is to be patient and make sure you leave yourself enough time to prepare this dish.

Special equipment:

  • go to your hardware store and buy a 1″ wood dowel

You will need (for the dough):

  • 1 kg. / 6.5 -7 cups of bread flour (I like King Arthur unbleached)
  • 1 tbsp. salt
  • 1 tbsp. sugar
  • 1 tsp. baking soda
  • 250 ml. / 1 cups sparkling lemonade
  • 1 packet active dry yeast
  • warm milk (to bloom the yeast)
  • 3 eggs, whisked together

For the filling:

  • 500 g. / 4-5 cups crumbled feta cheese
  • 4 eggs
  • 1 packet of butter (technically you could use olive oil, but don’t)

Sprinkle the yeast into the milk (If you stick your finger in the milk it feels should feel hot, but not enough to burn you.)

Sift together the flour, baking soda, salt and sugar (a mesh colander will do the trick for this, you don’t need a sieve.) Make the dough by combining the eggs, yeast, milk, and lemonade. I use my Kitchenaid, mixer, which is handy, because I’m not a very strong person, but my grandma has always done this by hand. The final dough should be smooth, elastic and not too soft, similar to pizza dough. If it looks like you need more flour or water, add it a tablespoon at a time.

Knead the dough: Place the ball of dough on an even surface, cradle it with your left hand from the bottom, then fold the dough over onto itself with your right hand and press the heel of your right hand into it. Turn the dough slightly and repeat. Do this about 40-50 times. If you hands start to stick sprinkle a bit more flour on.

Preheat the oven to about 450ºF / 235ºC

Place the dough in a glass or plastic bowl that is big enough to contain it as it expands, cover it with a damp tea towel and place it in a warm cozy place… like on top of a preheated oven, or on top of the dishwasher during the drying cycle. Let it sit until it doubles in size.

Mix together the crumbled cheese and the eggs for the filling, melt the butter in a little bowl and place both within easy reach.

Here is the tricky part. Separate the dough into balls roughly the size of a large orange (pull and twist), keep the balls you’re not using covered with the damp towel so they don’t develop a crust.

Roll the dough ball around a bit to make sure it’s fairly round. Then flatten it out slightly with your hands, and start rolling it out with the aforementioned wood dowel, which is really your rolling pin. The goal is to get the dough to be as thin as possible without tearing.

Once you have it flattened to about 3/4″ or so, start rolling the dough over onto itself using the rolling pin and gently start to apply pressure with the middle part of you fingers pushing the dough outward and down, spreading it out. Rotate the sheet of dough and roll it up from different directions to keep it relatively round.

Keep doing this until you have a sheet about 1/8″ thick, or thinner. Then drizzle a good bit of butter over the sheet, and spread the feta-egg mixture over the sheet, getting as close to the edges as you can and being careful not to tear it. Roll it up and place it into a buttered pan twisting it gently rolling it up into a spiral.

Repeat the above procedure until you run out of dough, arranging all the sheets into a continuing spiral. Once you’re done, pour the remaining butter over the top, smooth it over the whole banitza, and place it in the oven. Bake for about 35 minutes until it’s golden brown. Cover with a slightly damp towel, let it sit for 5 minutes then cut into pieces and serve hot.

This article was originally published at umamitv.com 

reply to Umami
carana  

What can I do and who can I turn to? Please direct me

Hi, this is somewhat awkard for  me but I don't know where to start. I am single mom with an 8 year old daughter. The situation that I have encountered is that I do not have enough funds to cover my rental obligations. I work as a small business owner from home. Due to slow phase and not receiving timely payments of receivables...my finances is out of whack. I recently asked a supplier for an extension of credit on a past due invoice. The situation that I have encountered is that sales were slow for January, February and March, which caused me to live off the remittance that should have been paid to the supplier. I am caught between putting the supplier on hold to pay my living accomodations this month of $644.00 and to keep things a float. My heart tells me to pay at least 1/2 but I am very fearful that the supplier will tell me to take a flying leap.

You know, I decided to apply for a bank loan or to get a small credit line but the bank declined me due to my credit score. I recently just got divorced . There is no spousal support from my ex and I am living off of the proceeds from my business. I have some hard decisions to make. I know that I can do good in my business with a little financial assistance to stay on course. But if I have to end my business today, I can say I did the best I could. I am a fighter but the tears are rolling down my cheeks as I write this. I could probably write a novel on my past experiences. You know being a past victim of domestic abuse for five years and living to write this is  a blessing for me.

I am not asking for a hand-out but possibly a barter of some sort.  Your consideration and thoughts are greatly appreciated.

 

 

 

reply to carana
carana  

carana

Who am I? I am very hard driven, motivated, go -getter, compassionate and understanding. My passion is computers, baking, research, reading, traveling and listening to a ecletic variety of music(jazz, country, r&b, contemporary, classical and opera) 

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