sundevilpeg wrote:There is a "spoiler" function in the drop-down menu labeled "other BBcodes." Anyone posting information like the foregoing (meaning, time-sensitive information regarding current episodes of this or any other show) should probably consider using it, as that's what it's there for.
Cathy2 wrote:sundevilpeg wrote:There is a "spoiler" function in the drop-down menu labeled "other BBcodes." Anyone posting information like the foregoing (meaning, time-sensitive information regarding current episodes of this or any other show) should probably consider using it, as that's what it's there for.
SDP,
You always do have the light touch ...
A few weeks ago, I actively looked for the spoiler code and could not find it. Thanks for highlighting where it is and it now has been implemented.
Thank you!
Regards,
Brits were outraged, and more than 180,000 people signed a petition to save the site. Following the outcry, the network has now clarified what will happen to its robust recipe archive: "We are glad that so many people care so much about all our content. But just to be clear, we have never said we'd delete all the recipes and nor will we," a BBC spokesperson said. "We currently have two websites and we'll move to one. The recipes you love will still be available and we'll migrate as much of the content as possible to the BBC Good Food website. So you'll still be able to carry on baking and cooking with the BBC."
'Great British Baking Show' launches new season July 1 on PBS
‘The Great British Bake Off’ Changes the Way the British Bake
Dave148 wrote:‘The Great British Bake Off’ Changes the Way the British Bake
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/19/dinin ... tcore-ipad
In the six years it has been on the air, “The Great British Bake Off” has fundamentally changed the way the British regard baking, dessert-eating and even their own culture of sweets. The “Bake Off Effect,” as it is known, has manifested in a resurgence in home baking, a noticeable increase in the quality of baked goods sold all over the country, and a growing number of people pursuing careers as professional pastry chefs.
3. American granulated sugar is somewhere between caster sugar and UK granulated sugar in the size of the grains. Superfine sugar means something similar to caster sugar and confectioners sugar refers to icing sugar.
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5. All-purpose flour is slightly higher in protein than British plain flour, but most of the time you can substitute without any problems. If the recipe is particularly delicate, you can reproduce a similar protein content by using half plain flour and half strong white flour. Cake flour in the US is very low in protein, and usually bleached, a process which is outlawed in Europe. This makes it very hard to reproduce the superfine sponge used for American layer cakes.
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7. Molasses is a dark syrup, much like black treacle, but usually more liquid. I will usually substitute about two-thirds black treacle and one-third golden syrup if molasses is called for.
8. Kosher salt is not Jewish salt – it simply means a flaky salt, used for koshering meat. Kosher salt is widely available in the US, and isn’t as expensive as sea salt here. It is best approximated with a fine sea salt, or with about half the volume of fine-grained table salt.
As a generic term, Flour can mean a fine, dry powder ground from some form of vegetable matter, but unless a recipe says otherwise, what is meant is Wheat Flour -- specifically, White Wheat Flour. Some Flours are used to provide body -- such as Wheat or Rye Flour -- because they contain a lot of fibre; others, which contain far less fibre, are used more as a starch for thickening -- such as Water Chestnut Flour.
European Flours are graded differently from North American and UK flours.
Can you get a higher-fat cream to use in the recipe? Yes, with a little effort on your part. The first step is to prepare a homemade version of crème frâiche. Combine 2 tablespoons of buttermilk or sour cream with 2 cups of heavy cream. Heat the mixture to body temperature in a pan, and then let the mixture sit in a non-reactive container (stainless-steel, glass, or ceramic) in a warm place for 24 hours or so, until it thickens.
Step 2 is to line a strainer with a triple thickness of cheesecloth or a wet napkin, fill it with the crème frâiche, and suspend that over a container in the refrigerator. The whey will drain out of the cream, leaving it with a higher fat content. By the time about a quarter of a cup of whey drains from your 2 cups of crème frâiche, you will have a fat content around 48% to 50%. It will taste a little more acidic than fresh cream, and you will have to judge for yourself whether that might negatively affect the flavor of your cake.