| Hilbert |
Hello,
I love baking, do a lot of it, mostly mostly from epicurious.com.
I baked our wedding cake recently, which came out awesome- a lemon
respberry pound cake.
I never had baking education, and now would like to learn a bit more
about techniques, combining tastes etc.. For example why do I need to
freeze the flower when preparing a pie crust? Why does chocolate and
wasabi taste good together?
Could youplease suggest some in-depth baking/cooking books?
Thanks,
Hilbert
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| AuntMo1998@aol.com |
I would suggest the book "How Baking Works: Exploring the Fundamentals
of Baking Science" by Paula Figoni.
DESCRIPTION :
Accessible coverage of the science of baking
Underlying the artistic considerations involved in baking is science,
and no other text offers as in-depth coverage of the "whys" of baking
as "How Baking Works. By helping bakers and pastry chefs better
understand the major ingredient groups and reactions ingredients
undergo during basic baking techniques, this insightful book is an
essential key to mastering skills, effectively adapting to todays
quickly evolving trends, and understanding a wide array of ingredients
from different cultures.
In a clear, easy-to-understand format, "How Baking Works explains how
sweeteners, fats, leavening agents, and other ingredients work, as well
as how to apply scientific knowledge to answer such questions as: By
doubling the sugar in a pound cake, how does that affect the
appearance, flavor, and texture of the end product? Each chapter
concludes with helpful review exercises and lab experiments, making
this book an engaging learning tool.
Complete with dozens of informative illustrations, "How Baking Works is
a versatile instructional book for students in culinary and baking
programs and professional bakers and pastry chefs.
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| mom_of_laddie@yahoo.com |
A baking book that I purchased recently is "The King Arthur Flour
Baker's Companion" I like this book a lot. Bobbi Jo
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| . |
On Thu, 17 Nov 2005, Hilbert wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I love baking, do a lot of it, mostly mostly from epicurious.com.
> I baked our wedding cake recently, which came out awesome- a lemon
> respberry pound cake.
>
> I never had baking education, and now would like to learn a bit more
> about techniques, combining tastes etc.. For example why do I need to
> freeze the flower when preparing a pie crust? Why does chocolate and
> wasabi taste good together?
>
> Could youplease suggest some in-depth baking/cooking books?
Do you have any cooking schools near you? I live in a large city with many
culinary institutes. I go to them and see what textbooks they require and
recommend for classes. These tend to be good because they don't teach you
how to make X, they teach why a recipe is successful in making X and how
you can alter the recipe. It sounds like you are looking for WHY things
are the way they are rather than just the HOW do bake things.
If you are looking for specific answers, go to www.google.ca and search
the them.
--
Send e-mail to: darrell dot grainger at utoronto dot ca
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| TammyM |
On 18 Nov 2005 17:40:31 -0800, mom_of_laddie@yahoo.com wrote:
>A baking book that I purchased recently is "The King Arthur Flour
>Baker's Companion" I like this book a lot. Bobbi Jo
I'll second this nomination. I also like the books of Rose Levy
Beranbaum -- I have her Cake Bible, Pie and Pastry Bible and Bread
Bible. All are very good.
TammyM, unrecovering cookbookaholic :-)
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| Wendy |
the King Arthur Cookie Companion is also very good. WEndy
----- Original Message -----
From: "TammyM" <me@privacy.net>
Newsgroups: rec.food.baking
To: <rec.food.baking@mail.otherwhen.com>
Sent: Wednesday, November 23, 2005 11:32 AM
Subject: Re: Baking books
> On 18 Nov 2005 17:40:31 -0800, mom_of_laddie@yahoo.com wrote:
>
> >A baking book that I purchased recently is "The King Arthur Flour
> >Baker's Companion" I like this book a lot. Bobbi Jo
>
> I'll second this nomination. I also like the books of Rose Levy
> Beranbaum -- I have her Cake Bible, Pie and Pastry Bible and Bread
> Bible. All are very good.
>
> TammyM, unrecovering cookbookaholic :-)
> _______________________________________________
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> http://www.otherwhen.com/mailman/li...rec.food.baking
>
> To unsubscribe send a mail to rec.food.baking-leave@mail.otherwhen.com and
then reply to the confirmation request.
>
>
> --
> No virus found in this incoming message.
> Checked by AVG Free Edition.
> Version: 7.1.362 / Virus Database: 267.13.5/178 - Release Date: 11/22/2005
>
>
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| TammyM |
On Wed, 23 Nov 2005 11:57:02 -0500, "Wendy" <ladeliwb@sympatico.ca>
wrote:
>the King Arthur Cookie Companion is also very good. WEndy
Yep, I have that one too :-)
TammyM
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "TammyM" <me@privacy.net>
>Newsgroups: rec.food.baking
>To: <rec.food.baking@mail.otherwhen.com>
>Sent: Wednesday, November 23, 2005 11:32 AM
>Subject: Re: Baking books
>
>
>> On 18 Nov 2005 17:40:31 -0800, mom_of_laddie@yahoo.com wrote:
>>
>> >A baking book that I purchased recently is "The King Arthur Flour
>> >Baker's Companion" I like this book a lot. Bobbi Jo
>>
>> I'll second this nomination. I also like the books of Rose Levy
>> Beranbaum -- I have her Cake Bible, Pie and Pastry Bible and Bread
>> Bible. All are very good.
>>
>> TammyM, unrecovering cookbookaholic :-)
>> _______________________________________________
>> Rec.food.baking mailing list
>> Rec.food.baking@mail.otherwhen.com
>> http://www.otherwhen.com/mailman/li...rec.food.baking
>>
>> To unsubscribe send a mail to rec.food.baking-leave@mail.otherwhen.com and
>then reply to the confirmation request.
>>
>>
>> --
>> No virus found in this incoming message.
>> Checked by AVG Free Edition.
>> Version: 7.1.362 / Virus Database: 267.13.5/178 - Release Date: 11/22/2005
>>
>>
>
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| betsy |
Hilbert wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I love baking, do a lot of it, mostly mostly from epicurious.com.
> I baked our wedding cake recently, which came out awesome- a lemon
> respberry pound cake.
>
> I never had baking education, and now would like to learn a bit more
> about techniques, combining tastes etc.. For example why do I need to
> freeze the flower when preparing a pie crust? Why does chocolate and
> wasabi taste good together?
>
> Could youplease suggest some in-depth baking/cooking books?
>
> Thanks,
> Hilbert
I suggest a book by Shirley Corriher, though I forget the exact title
at the moment. Very good, scientific but not gobbledy-gook, and has
sample recipes to illustrate principles discussed. And of course,
don't forget Harold McGee, the bible of them all.
betsy
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