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A Springform Pan Worth Springing For

Kaisesr Springform Pan

Photo: Courtesy of Williams-Sonoma

How many times has this happened to you? You’ve gathered all the ingredients you need to bake—in my case, I was testing Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez’s recipe for Gourmet Live’s Thanksgiving apple crostata (insanely delicious, by the way)—when you suddenly realize you don’t have the right-sized pan. The springform pan stashed deep in my cupboard turned out to be a 10-inch, not the 9-inch I needed for the recipe. Arrgghhh!

The closest cookware store to my apartment—where I now test recipes in a real-life kitchen—is Williams-Sonoma, about a 15-minute walk away. I love any excuse to wander around Williams-Sonoma, but bargain is not a word I associate with the place.

The sales clerk shows me the only 9-inch springform she has. This Kaiser LaFormer Plus pan (above) looks nothing like the light-colored and stained metal springform sides and bottoms that once filled a huge drawer in the old Gourmet magazine test kitchen. This new one is heavy, for starters, because it’s commercial grade steel coated with two layers of a non-stick ceramic surface. Heavy is a good thing with springforms, because the flimsy ones bend out of shape easily. And the locking mechanism on the side is serious. No baked good is messing with that lock!

The bottom is different, too. It’s wider, with an extra lip on the outside that makes the pan leak-proof. The Gourmet kitchen staff had a regular problem with butter leaking out of the old springform pans and onto the oven bottoms, causing smoke and a general mess. Continue reading

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Beer Bites

Cheddar Beer Soup

Photo: Romulo Yanes

We all know that beer tastes great with food, but how about in food? As it turns out, ales and lagers are great in a wide variety of preparations, from braising and baking to roasting and stewing.

What’s your favorite thing to cook with beer?

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Gingerbread Ice Cream Sandwiches for Gingerbread Day!

Gingerbread Ice Cream Sandwich

Photo: Kemp Minifie

Why or how June 5th came to be National Gingerbread Day, no one seems to know, but it feels like an odd time, doesn’t it? A still-warm slice of gingerbread cake with whipped cream is my fantasy after an apple-picking foray in the fall, or on a chilly winter evening. But June 5th?  By then I’m dreaming about ice cream.  And ice cream gets me thinking about ice cream sandwiches, and suddenly, it hits me: Gingerbread ice cream sandwiches! I’m buzzed with the idea.

The commercial ice cream sandwiches of my youth were made with what looked like super-thin cakey chocolate biscuits. These days, so many high-end ones are made with crisp cookies, and when frozen, they’re too stiff to bite into. But frozen cake? That’s another story…that works.

Gingerbread is a super-easy, one-bowl cake that you can just whisk together—no need for an electric mixer—if you use melted butter or oil.   To make gingerbread ice cream sandwiches: Continue reading

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Celebrate Macaroon Day with Homemade French Macarons

Macarons

Photo: Gourmet/Romulo A. Yanes

May 31st is National Macaroon Day, and we can’t imagine a better way to celebrate than by making—and eating—some macaroons! Although a big ol’ chewy coconut macaroon is something we would never turn down, we are hopelessly in love with the French-style macaron, a delicate poof of finely ground almonds, sugar, and whipped egg whites that is most commonly sold as a miniature sandwich, held together with a decadent filling, such as chocolate ganache or a buttercream frosting. Paris has been ablaze with brightly colored macarons in neon-intense shades of pink, yellow, and green for several years, and the trend has finally jumped the pond to urban centers in the United States.

Because macarons are so gorgeous, you’d think they’re difficult to make, but if you can whip egg whites and handle a pastry bag, you’re bound for success. To make the process as simple as possible, we used a few drops of supermarket food coloring in place of special-order powdered colors, and skipped buttercream fillings altogether in favor of jams and easy-peasy chocolate ganache.

The easiest ones to start off with are the espresso-blackberry, or the grapefruit macarons, because they both use jam fillings, but don’t let that stop you from indulging in chocolate earl grey tea macarons or coconut passion-fruit macarons. Use these recipes as a springboard for your own creations.

By the way, your gluten-free and wheat-free friends will love you because these macarons fit right into their regimens. And while we’re on the subject of free in terms of foods, check out Gourmet Live’s latest: The Free Issue!

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Weekly Roundup: Tarts

A beautiful thing happens when flour is cut with fat: the pastry is born, and with it, a variable array of appetizers, entrees, and desserts. The tart, marked by its crisp, crimped edges, is often reinterpreted. Fold the crust free of form and it becomes a galette, or build it top to bottom for an upside-down tarte tatin. Each remains a buttery vessel for showcasing fresh fruits, savory vegetables, or rich cheeses. Crumbs will fall.

  • Yummy Supper’s Spinach Galette with Wild Mushrooms amplifies the earthiness of fresh mushrooms and peppery spinach with a heaping cup of salty Parmesan (pictured above).
  • Cook Republic’s Sour Cream Tart tops a thick layer of creamy, tangy ricotta and sour cream with roasted eggplant, sweet potato, and Spanish onion for a savory twist on the custard-filled pastry.
  • Willow Bird Baking’s Sweet Potato and Chorizo Hand Tarts combines smoky sausage, cumin-scented black beans, and sweet potatoes in a savory, adult-friendly take on Pop Tarts.
  • With a little mustard and a lot of butter, Delicious Shot pulls off a unique crust that can stand up to the richness of her Onion and Goat Cheese Tart.
  • An Edible Mosaic’s Belgian Endive Tarte Tatin finds this bitter-turned-caramelized chicory playing a game of hide and seek under a blanket of puff pastry.
  • Feasting at Home grabs the poppy seeds and ditches the cookie-cutter tart shell for a Rustic Strawberry Galette with Seeded Rye Crust brimming with ripe, red berries and a bit of balsamic vinegar.
  • Drizzle and Dip’s Salted Caramel and Chocolate Tart oozes gooey caramel sauce beneath a thick layer of honey-scented chocolate ganache.
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Weekly Roundup: Gluten-Free Fare

Almond Sweet Potato Biscuits with Mushroom Gravy

If you plan on nixing gluten from your next meal or your diet in general, come time to cook, you may feel as though your hands are caught in a wheat-free bind. However, sacrificing gluten doesn’t mean sacrificing your favorite dishes. Take advantage of the creative gluten-free possibilities that stem from culinary constraint and whip up something refreshingly different!
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The Bliss of Baking

Chocolate Babka

Photo: Romulo Yanes

Nothing gives you that warm, homey, and comforting feeling like the smell of freshly baked . . . well . . . everything! Cinnamon buns, birthday cake, cornbread, peanut butter cookies, banana bread, lemon poppy muffins, chocolate babka, apple pie, and biscuits are just a few of our favorites. But we want you to tell us:

What is your favorite thing to bake?

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Image of the Day: Homemade Chocolate Glazed Donuts

Chocolate Glazed Donuts

Everyday Occasions brings the bakeshop into the home with Chocolate Glazed Donuts, however, the goal is not professional perfection. Misshapen dough dripping with a heavy-handed laddle of chocolate sauce yields only the most delicious results: a batch of donut merrymaking.

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Whoops! More About Homemade Buttermilk

Buttermilk cake photo

Photo: Kemp Minifie

Remember that cake I was going to make with my homemade butter and buttermilk? It was a flop. And I know why.

I was so excited by the homemade buttermilk I made last week that I brought it in for my colleagues to sample. We all marveled at its sweet, buttery flavor. Tangy? Not a bit. I stupidly ignored that fact.

But commercial buttermilk sold in supermarkets has an unmistakable tang. That’s because it’s cultured, whether it’s the cultured skim milk product most of us buy, or Kate’s Real Buttermilk. The tang is the lactic acid that’s been formed by the breakdown of the milk sugar, lactose. It’s that acid that interacts with the baking soda to create the bubbles that make a cake rise.

My sweet homemade buttermilk was really more like regular milk. If I wanted to produce a decent cake, I needed to add some acid. Continue reading

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Make Your Own Butter and Buttermilk

Real Butter and Buttermilk

Photo: Kemp Minifie

As if I haven’t extolled the virtues of authentic buttermilk enough in my article “Crazy For Kate’s Real Buttermilk” in this week’s issue of Gourmet Live, let me add another one: At less than 1 percent milk fat, it’s lower in fat than some of the commercial brands of “buttermilk” that are actually cultured skim milk!

Not only is Kate’s a delicious product to drink—it’s cultured to give it a delicious tang—it also makes baked goods so tender, you’d swear they had gobs more butter in them. I know, because I’ve tested a standard yellow cake recipe with the cultured skim milk product, whole milk yogurt, and sour cream, and none of those cakes could match the texture and flavor of the one I made with the bona fide buttermilk.

But if I’m frustrated I can’t get Kate’s Buttermilk where I live in New York City, I’m sure many of you are, too. So this morning, I made my own butter and buttermilk according to a recipe on Epicurious.com. Call me a food geek, but it was so thrilling! Within less than ten minutes—I made mine in two batches—I had a total of 1¼ pounds of glorious, fresh butter, and 3 cups of genuine buttermilk. Both the butter and buttermilk are going into a 20th birthday cake this weekend for my younger daughter, and I know it will be the best chocolate cake I ever made!

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The Easiest Holiday Cookie Ever

Chocolate Peppermint Cookie Bark

Photo: Chris Gentile

Holiday cookie baking is meant to be enjoyable and creative, not a chore. But it can turn into one if you are pressed for time. Rest assured you have an easy way out: I call it cookie bark.

Like most great ideas, it was born from frustration. I was helping out food stylist Paul Grimes on the photo shoot for Gourmet Live’s feature, One Smart Cookie, and had some dough leftover from the Chocolate Peppermint Stars. I wasn’t about to throw it away. Continue reading

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Last-Minute Halloween Cupcakes

Ghost Cupcakes

Photo: Kemp Minifie

Need a quick showstopper dessert for your Halloween party tonight? These ghost cupcakes will do the trick, and they’re a cinch to make. Bake your favorite cake batter in 1/2-cup muffin pans lined with fluted paper cups. I used the Double Chocolate Layer Cake recipe from the restaurant Engine Co. No. 28 in Los Angeles, but grab a cake mix if you’re short of time—I’m no saint when it comes to homemade everything.

The frosting is the fastest marshmallowy meringue I know: Dump 1 large egg white—or the equivalent in reconstituted powdered whites—1/3 cup each confectioners’ sugar and light corn syrup, 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract, and a pinch of salt in a deep bowl and beat it with an electric mixer on high speed until thick, stiff, and white, 3 to 5 minutes. Amazing, right? Continue reading

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Recycling Your Jack-o-Lantern Into Pumpkin Purée

Pumpkin Purée

Photo: Kemp Minifie

With East Coast pumpkin patches wiped out by Hurricane Irene, carving your jack-o-lantern is a pricier project this fall. When you shell out a small fortune for this Halloween ritual, you can’t afford to let it rot after trick-or-treating is over. Recycle it into pumpkin purée for bread, muffins, pie, or my buddy Kelly Senyei’s Pumpkin Turkey Chili.

Bakers will tell you that the pumpkins grown for carving aren’t as tasty as the sugar and cheese pumpkins preferred for pie. But hey, your jack-o’-lantern, after the melted wax is scraped out and the soot washed off, is still an edible squash and shouldn’t be wasted.

Continue reading
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New Momofuku Milk Bar Cookbook

Momofuku Milk Bar Cookbook

Photo: Gabriele Stabile

Christina Tosi’s debut cookbook—Momofuku Milk Bar, named for Tosi’s four New York City bakeries—hits stores today. Known for a signature recipe named Crack Pie and a way with sweets that’s frequently dubbed “addictive,” the pastry chef is unleashing her temptations nationwide with this Clarkson Potter release and a both-coasts book tour with “suitcases full of cookies” in tow, Tosi told Gourmet Live.

“I think the Chocolate Chip Cake is the best, knock-your-socks-off recipe, and it’s the one I’m currently snacking on,” said Tosi last week.  It’s also got a straight-up ingredients list (not that freeze-dried corn powder isn’t a revelation, Kemp Minifie discovered), as does Tosi’s Cornflake Crunch, “a great snack and a great gateway for cookie and pie recipes, too.”  If you caught Susan Chumsky’s profile of Tosi in Gourmet Live‘s Rising Stars issue last month, along with a preview recipe for Crack Pie (“one taste and you’re mainlining it”), consider yourself forewarned.

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Bakers’ Elixir: Real Buttermilk

Kate's Buttermilk

Photo: Rod Williams

Eureka! I’ve found the magic elixir for impossibly tender cakes. It’s real honest-to-goodness buttermilk, and the only place I’ve found it is in New England, made by the same family in Old Orchard, Maine, who make Kate’s Butter.

I can just hear all you bakers out there yawning and saying, that’s nothing new, we’ve known about buttermilk for years. The truth is, the commercial buttermilk you’ve been buying in the supermarket isn’t buttermilk. It’s cultured milk—usually skim milk—and often thickeners are added to give it extra body.

Continue reading
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Secret Flavor Booster: Freeze-Dried Corn

Freeze-Dried Corn

Photo: Kemp Minifie

After reading this week’s Gourmet Live article about Momofuku Milk Bar’s Christina Tosi, I was amazed to discover freeze-dried corn, ground to a powder in the blender, is the secret ingredient that gives her Crack Pie its unique flavor. Once you know, you kick yourself for not having been able to instantly identify that familiar burst of sunny sweetness you get with your first bite from a hot buttered ear of corn. It’s a brilliant way to max out everything we love about corn in the first place. Leave it to the wonderfully-quirky mind of pastry-chef Christina Tosi to look at a bag of freeze-dried corn— marketed these days as a crunchy, low-fat snack—and think, what would happen if I ground this up and added it to cookies, pie fillings, or ice cream? Tosi doesn’t stop at freeze-dried corn: Freeze-dried fruit, such as cherries and blueberries, are also ground and added to her signature “crumbs” which act like little flavor bombs. Think Pop Rocks minus the fizz. Thanks to Tosi I’ll never look at freeze-dried corn or raspberries, or pineapple the same way again. The possibilities are endless!

When shopping, opt for freeze-dried over dehydrated. The freeze-drying process removes more moisture than dehydration. Tosi warns you in the beginning of her soon to be released cookbook, Momofuko Milk Bar, to keep it dry. If moisture gets to it, she says, “It will make you very sad.”

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Kemp’s Kitchen: For the Love of Lard

Old Fashioned Sugar Cookies

Photo: Kemp MInifie, via iPhone

It’s no secret that lard—rendered fresh pork fat—makes the best pie crust. And not only does it result in tender and impossibly flaky pastry, it also makes the most supple and easy-to-roll out dough ever (hence why Pillsbury uses it in its refrigerated pie crusts).

But lard also makes a fantastic sugar cookie. I revisited a super-easy recipe that appeared in Gourmet magazine in April, 1993. This time though, instead of using the processed lard available at the supermarket, I used freshly rendered leaf lard—from the fat surrounding the kidneys—from locally raised pigs, a product you can now readily find at farmers’ markets. Not only is it available in New York City, but I was just in northern New Hampshire and found it at two different stands at the local farmers’ market.

I beg to differ, however, with the headnote to the recipe, which calls attention to the sandy nature of using lard. When I tried my hand at these cookies I discovered that the lard made a delightfully crisp cookie with the just the right amount of interior chewiness to keep it from shattering (no sandy texture in sight!). And, rest assured, there’s no hint of pig in the flavor; that’s something you want in your ribs, but not in your cookies.

Continue reading
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Kemp’s Kitchen: How to Properly Measure Flour

After years of answering reader calls about recipes, one thing is certain: How you measure flour is the single biggest booby trap to your success in baking.

For all-purpose flour, the instructions on the bag—fine print of course—direct you to spoon the flour into a dry measure cup (flat top) and sweep off the excess with a straight edge. If you drag your cup measure through the bag to scoop up the flour, you’re actually packing more into it than what’s intended for the recipe. The result is a baked good that’s bound to be heavy and dense.

You’d expect cake flour to be measured the same way, right? Wrong! Read the package instructions and you’ll see that manufacturers recommend sifting cake flour before measuring it.

Continue reading
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Great Grandma

The full-length feature version of Great Grandma by Emily Fiffer appears in the current issue of Gourmet Live. Download the free Gourmet Live app for this story and more.

Photo by Emily Fiffer

Elaine Rose Fiffer is a hardy 86—but you wouldn’t know it. Vivacious, outspoken, and as curious as if she were born yesterday, she’s a marvel of a matriarch. She’s got encyclopedic knowledge, despite not owning a computer, has more friends than I do, and notoriously serves meals that consist of a minimum of 15 side dishes. “What can I say?” she’ll say, smiling, “We’re pickers.” When you grow up around a lady of this stature, you’d better know how lucky you are. I do. Which is why I stealthily schemed a project that required spending hours in her presence.

Gourmet Live guest columnist Emily Fiffer shares her journey in the kitchen with her bubbe, 86-year-old Elaine Rose Fiffer. From tracking down recipe boxes to baking up words of wisdom, enjoy one woman’s journey to preserve her family’s legacy through food.

For the full story and more, download the free Gourmet Live app.


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Scarlett Bakes!

The full-length feature version of Scarlett Bakes! by Adam Sachs appears in the current issue of Gourmet Live. Download the free Gourmet Live app for this story and more.

Photo by Getty Images

Gourmet Live guest columnist Adam Sachs caught up with Hollywood star Scarlett Johansson to talk tea cakes, banana cream pie, bagels and more.
…Scarlett likes to cook and eat, and recently she’d been contemplating learning to make her own bagels because you can’t get a decent bagel in LA. And then we were talking about the little carrot cakes that she pulled from the oven just before leaving to meet me here at this greasy spoon coffee and pie shop in Los Feliz. And now we’d sort of shifted from the contemplative pleasures of baking for friends to gory medical TV shows. She’s a fan. Impact on her appetite? Negligible. “My sister’s the same way,” she says. “We’re watching these trauma shows and shoveling in a big lamb shank while someone is having their goiter removed.” To be honest, I’m not sure how we got to goiter removal. And to continue being honest: it hardly mattered. Talking with Scarlett Johannson, you do not think, I want answers. You think: Let’s keep talking.
Download the free Gourmet Live app for the full story plus recipes for teatime treats and our favorite herbal blends.
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