Hi,
If summer was hot days intermittent with cool days, I would like it so much more.
Saturday night was cool, which allowed me to make a cold soup for Monday and Tuesday's hotter weather.
On Saturday's tour of the south side, I bought a small almost four-pound pork shoulder picnic with the skin on. I ended up
braising the pork in milk, because I had milk whose freshness date was June 4th. While it was nowhere near spoiled, it might be by the time we came closer to finishing it. Plus I could rework the leftovers a few ways, though I might just eat it as-is.
Maiale al Latte (Milk-Braised Pork) with mashed potatoes and corn I recently commented I had a collection of Solo fruit, almond and poppy seed tins. I acquire them, but almost never make anything.
Solo fruit, nut and seed fillings I threw in an outlier chestnut filling, too.
I needed to break the spell, so I made today a poppy seed cake straight from the back of the can. Just as I was about to put it into a bundt pan, my sister drops by, sees it is poppyseed and hopes it may be Lemon Poppyseed cake. If it were a mere exchange of vanilla to lemon extract, it might have happened. The recipe I checked for reference had 1/4 cup lemon juice. I decided to stick with what I started.
Solo Poppy Seed Cake Sometime ago, I had read of pan preparations where instead of butter and flour, they were using vegetable spray and sugar. I tried this today, then later read
best practices when using Bundt cake molds. Fortunately, I began on the right direction.
I also conferred for the
correct temperature range to declare a cake done: 205-210. If you go higher, then the cake releases moisture causing it to dry.
A slice of Poppy Cake This was removed from the oven at 206 degrees. I am glad I bought a Thermopen, though I now wish I had bought it earlier.
This cake tasted a bit like spice cake, though there were no spices beyond vanilla. The crunchy texture from the sugar on the exterior we really enjoyed.
Time marches on!
Regards,
Cathy2