Monday, January 28, 2008
After years of struggling to perfectly poach an egg (something I still only succeed in intermittently) I discovered I could get much of what I liked about them from soft-boiled eggs, with a zero percent failure rate to boot. My technique is just like that of my hard-boiled eggs, except I drop the boiling time down to 6 minutes. This assures a solid white and soft yolk, and the pinnacle of deliciousness spread over buttered toast and topped with a pinch of salt.
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Sunday, January 27, 2008

I can’t believe I haven’t told you yet about this Key Lime Cheesecake; I have some nerve, don’t I? And I suppose I could get into its texture (dreamy), flavor (bright and promising), topping (thin strips of mango tossed in lime juice) but it wouldn’t be honest of me, as I really only made these for one reason last weekend. Take a look at this bottle; could there be a more enticing Wish You Were Here sign? I take one look at it and just want to yell: I’m coming for you!

Alas, it is still quite January outside in New York, this might be the only piece of Key West we’re getting for several months. But not unlike what I was thinking when I made those lemon bars or that anything-but-clementine clafoutis this month, I hoped that a focus on bright, sunny citrus fruits would take some of the drudgery out of mid-winter. Did it work? Perhaps not, but it was delicious nonetheless.
Continued after the jump »
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Sunday, January 27, 2008
There are about as many techniques for hard-boiling eggs as there are eggs out there, but I use the method my mother showed me: submerge a large egg in enough cold water to cover it and bring the water to a boil over medium-high heat. Once it begins to boil, set the timer for 10 minutes. Plunge the egg into cold water to get it to stop cooking; plus, cold eggs are much easier to peel.
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Saturday, January 26, 2008
Now that we’re all caught up on Folding 101, here’s an alternative technique that caught my eye. In Christopher Kimball’s Dessert Bible, he tries several different folding techniques and tools and compared the resulting cake rises and decided that the standard spatula was best. But then, on a whim, he put everything together in his KitchenAid bowl with the whisk attachment and ran it for 10 seconds on the lowest setting and Bingo! This made the tallest cake. Let us know if you try it out!
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Friday, January 25, 2008
Whether you’re making a chiffon cake or light, airy pancakes, folding, or mixing ingredients with two weights together (usually a batter and beaten egg whites or whipped cream) without deflating the lighter one, is the Technique to Know. The easiest way? Using a large rubber spatula, lift batter from the bottom of the bowl and pull it over the top, turning the bowl and repeating this until no foam remains visible.
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