Virgin baking woes ...
 

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[Closed] Virgin baking woes - whisk v. paddle

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I'm going round for a meal to my SIL tomorrow, she's going to a lot of effort and somehow I've ended up agreeing to make desert - I liked the idea of a New York cheesecake but I don't have a paddle mixer only a whisk - but apparantley a whisk is no good as it adds too much air to the mixture.

Anyone got experience of this, can I just use a wooden spoon instead or alternatively recommend me another desert to make? This is my first time baking


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 10:48 am
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can I just use a wooden spoon instead

yeah


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 10:51 am
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Go to that Tesco, buy that sweet shortcrust Jus-Rol pastry, buy those cooking apples, cook them and make an apple pie. Buy some custard, either in a tin, carton or powder, make, serve.

Bish Bosh.


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 10:52 am
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OK, hooooooold it there...

I would go for a recipe that doesn't require "baking" then.

Cheesecake...yep, for sure. But go for a cold "set" cheesecake. Lemon & lime is always good as it's refreshing and palate cleansing after savoury food. The most complicated thing you have to do is melt some butter and crush some biscuits into it. (Hint: crush ginger snaps as a base rather than digestive, and go easy on the butter)


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 10:52 am
 sas
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Just make a normal cake? I made this carrot cake last week and it came out OK: http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/4425/carrot-cake
I missed out the pineapple and cinnamon because I didn't have any.
Or for something simpler make a fruit crumble.


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 10:54 am
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Cheesecake...yep, for sure. But go for a cold "set" cheesecake. Lemon & lime is always good as it's refreshing and palate cleansing after savoury food. The most complicated thing you have to do is melt some butter and crush some biscuits into it. (Hint: crush ginger snaps as a base rather than digestive, and go easy on the butter)

ooohhhhh yyess.
i go with digestive/ginger snap mix and chuck some dark chocolate in as well, something bitter like Lidl's plantation chocolate
[url= http://uktv.co.uk/food/recipe/aid/513437 ]try this one[/url] but with marscapone for the cream cheese and creme fraiche (or ricotta) for the cream


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 11:22 am
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My 70s cheesecake recipe uses mascarpone, philadelphia, condensed milk and lemon jelly. Base is crushed digestives+butter. (Though I'm intrigued by the ginger snap element, next time maybe.)


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 11:29 am
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lime mascarpone cheesecake is easy

crush up some ginger biscuits and mix them with melted butter for the base

mix a few tubs of mascarpone with lime juice and zest and caster sugar to taste (I don't put in any sugar but it probably won't be sweet enough for some)

put it in the fridge and shave some dark chocolate on top before you serve it

edit, beaten to it


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 11:30 am
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My 70s cheesecake recipe uses mascarpone, philadelphia, condensed milk and lemon jelly. Base is crushed digestives+butter.

Nom!!!!!!!!!!

I'm intrigued by the ginger snap element

Honestly, try it...goes really well with the lemon/lime. I'm sure I just picked it up from a recipe somewhere myself.


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 11:32 am
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We have a winner - lemon and lime coldset cheesecake with ginger snap base!

A photo will be prided of the results at somepoint tomorrow

cheers guys


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:01 pm
 emsz
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Oh right.

Cheesecake is one of those "funny" ones either you go for baking or chilled. Baked potentially nicer BUT they are supposed to be fluffy, so you should be whisking the egg whites to fold into your cream cheese egg yolk and sugar mix, beating it with a wooden spoon isn't going to work, it'll be dense and prolly collapse. Hand whisk?

Ginger biscuits are for children, you need ammeretti biscuits in your base with vanilla extract in your butter

Edit: if this is for tomorrow, you need to make it tonight, ok?


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:04 pm
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[i]Virgin baking woes - whisk v. paddle[/i]

does the recipe start;

Step 1) Find a Virgin

😉

igmc.


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:15 pm
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Emsz - I've got an electric hand whisk but with a standard attachment, not one of those fancy paddles I've seen

Tonight! I was thinking the morning.........this is gonna be a disaster

Out of intersest, one receoipee I read said add the eggs and one yoke - is it usual to add say 3 egg whites and just one yoke?


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:24 pm
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mix a few tubs of mascarpone with lime juice and zest and caster sugar to taste (I don't put in any sugar but it probably won't be sweet enough for some)

Sounds good, never any problems with it setting?


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:24 pm
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Late entry, Nigella did a cheesecake with Nutella this week. No bake and some nutella in the base too along with chopped nuts.

It looked really good.


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:27 pm
 emsz
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That will do, your trying to get air in the mixture, yep the whites and yokes is normal yokes will make it thicker and heavier.

Make it tonight, needs to set and the flavour to develop.


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:30 pm
 cp
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mmmmmmmmm, good call. a lime cheesecake with ginger biscuit base is being made this weekend 🙂


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:31 pm
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Sandwich - that was my inspiration orginaly but then started getting more and more extaravgant - well as much as you can with a cheescake, hence ending up thinking about a new york baked thing

Think its time to reign it in and concentrate on the lemona and lime nobake cheesecake (Emsz, I neded to start off simple here:))

Well I'm off to the shops shortly to get my ingedients:)

Again, thanks all and I'll let you know the results


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:35 pm
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The baked cheesecakes are pretty foolproof, too - the Nigella Domestic Goddess book has a great one to make.

Online here:
http://www.food.com/recipe/nigella-lawson-new-york-cheesecake-305015


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:37 pm
 emsz
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Chilled cheesecakes are much more straightforward and pretty foolproof tbh your SIL will be dead impressed. If your making a lemon/lime one still try to make it tonight, otherwise it won't taste right,

Good luck!!


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:45 pm
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Yes, second emsz's advice. Make it this evening. And don't scrimp on the gelatine...better have it "over" set than under.

I also like mogrim's lemon jelly idea too.

Good luck and knock 'em dead at dinner tomorrow. 8)


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:47 pm
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I don't have a paddle mixer only a whisk

Don't worry about that. Use your whisk on a lower setting, there's no need to beat the life out of it.

Tip 1: mix in the egg yolks one at a time to avoid splitting the mixture

Tip 2: if you're going for the baked style, add the meringued egg whites after everything else is mixed and fold them in by hand to keep the air in.

knock 'em dead at dinner tomorrow

not literally I hope 🙂


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:48 pm
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not literally I hope

😳

Unfortunate choice of words there.


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 12:51 pm
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Tip 2: if you're going for the baked style, add the meringued egg whites after everything else is mixed and fold them in by hand to keep the air in.

Must be said I don't bother, and it tastes fine. It would be probably be nicer this way, but separating+whisking the eggs is not 100% necessary if you're not that confident in the kitchen.


 
Posted : 05/10/2012 1:58 pm
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Well I did it but went down the ultra easy Nigella route - decided not to add any complication - the SIL was suitably impressed!

STEP 1: Drop 75g of unsalted butter on floor
[IMG] [/IMG]
Step 2: Mix 75g butter, 300g crushed digestive buscuits, 1 tablespoon of Nutella
[IMG] [/IMG]
STEP 3: Firmly flatten into removable based tin and put i fridge
[IMG] [/IMG]
STEP 4: Mix 400g Nutella, 500g of Philadelphia, 60g icing sugar
[IMG] [/IMG]
STEP 5: Place mixture and spread even over buscuit base and put in fridge for 24hrs.
[IMG] [/IMG]
STEP 6: Eat
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 08/10/2012 1:15 pm

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