View Single Post
Old 02-06-2008, 02:07 PM   #1 (permalink)
Food Network Fan
Suzie (Site owner)
 
Food Network Fan's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: West Virginia
Posts: 11,377
Recipes: 14
Blog Entries: 4
Rep Power: 10
Food Network Fan will become famous soon enough
Send a message via Yahoo to Food Network Fan
Ask food network, February 6

Ask food network, February 6

By Staff Reports
Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Why is it important to bring certain ingredients like eggs and butter to room temperature before baking? Some recipes call for that and others don't. How does it make a difference? - Amanda Love, Galivants Ferry, S.C.
Depending on what you're trying to make, the temperature of your ingredients can play a huge part. For pie crusts, you want your butter to be cold, since cold butter makes the flakiest crusts - but if you're making a cake, you want your butter to be at room temperature, since room-temperature butter makes the most-tender cakes. Similarly, eggs will whip up highest if they're at room temperature.
If you don't have time to wait for your butter or eggs to come to room temperature, there are fixes. Submerging whole eggs in hot water for five to 10 minutes should do the trick, as should judicious use of the microwave for your butter. For perfect pie-crust butter, try putting it in the freezer for 10 to 15 minutes and then use a cheese grater to grate it into your flour so it spends as little time as possible in contact with your fingers.
MORE HERE
__________________
Suzie Click here to visit Suzie's table.
Food Network Fan is offline   Reply With Quote