Monday, November 28, 2011

Palmer Pizzelle Maker - Made in USA

!±8± Palmer Pizzelle Maker - Made in USA


Rate : | Price : | Post Date : Nov 28, 2011 07:03:39
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Made in USA This very popular iron is designed to make delicious crispy high ribbed 2 pizelles in half the time required by hand irons. Makes 2 thin 5" cookies, 120v 800w, UL listed, Cast aluminum plates, Chrome and cast aluminum body, 10 year manufacturer's warranty (Palmer stipulates that you contact them directly for warranty repairs.) FREE cone roller included!

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Friday, November 25, 2011

10 Basic Steps to Making Great Cookies

!±8± 10 Basic Steps to Making Great Cookies

Everyone likes cookies; kids, parents, grandparents, friends, and the list could go on. There is just nothing much better than warm cookies right out of the oven to kids of all ages. Baking cookies is a great way to get the kids involved in the kitchen even at an early age. Even the little ones are so impressed by cookies "they made themselves" even though they may have only stirred the dough, added an ingredient, or sprinkled on some colored sugar decorations. And homemade cookies are perfect for everything from welcome to the neighbor hood gifts, teacher gifts, holiday gifts, office treats, to just simply something to hand to daddy and say, "Look what I made for you".

Today we have some very good cookie dough in the dairy counters of our grocery stores to buckets of dough sold as fund raisers. But baking your own good cookies is still something special. Baking cookies with the kids is not only fun but it teaches them how to measure, a math skill they don't even realize they are learning. It is also a lesson in organization as ingredients are gathered before the baking begins, a lesson in working with others even if it is just the two of you, and a lesson in cleaning up as the kitchen has to be cleaned afterwards. Even if children aren't involved, becoming proficient with a certain cookie recipe gives one a sense of self and confidence as others come to expect and even request your "special" cookie.

Following are a few tips to help you bake great cookies from scratch, as the old-timers used to say:

Use good ingredients. It is impossible to produce a first-rate product with second-rate ingredients. For example, use butter instead of margarine. So many of today's margarine products contain a large amount of water. This will not produce a good cookie. Forget about counting fat and calories when baking cookies. Concentrate on a good product and don't over indulge on the finished product!

Use good utensils. For example, invest in a couple of good baking sheets. Good baking sheets will help you turn out a better cookie.

Use standard measuring cups and do measure the ingredients. Baking is not the place to "throw in a little of this or that". Use glass liquid measuring cups for measuring liquids. You will be able to see the lines easily and the ingredients won't slosh over the sides. Use nested measuring cups to measure dry ingredients. Dry ingredients should be measured to the rim of the cup. And use the right size. Don't measure what appears to be a half cup in a one cup measure. Get out the one-half cup measure. It is no more trouble to wash one extra cup!

Use standard measuring spoons. Do not grab a "teaspoon" from your silverware drawer to measure an ingredient. Get out a measuring spoon and do it right. The teaspoon that came with your silverware set will not measure an accurate teaspoon for a recipe. And as with the cups, use the right size. Do not guess at a half teaspoon in a one teaspoon size.

Use the proper baking sheets or pans. Shiny metal absorbs less heat than the dark metal. Dark metal may cause your cookies to over brown on the bottom, so the shiny metal is best if you want to produce a delicately browned cookie. When baking bar cookies, it is especially important to use the proper sized pan that is called for in the recipe. If you are on a limited budget and can only afford one or two quality pans, go for the cake or bar pans. They can be turned upside down and used as cookie sheets.

Other important utensils. To make your baking easier and more efficient, helping you to turn out a better finished product, there are some other utensils you should have on hand. If your budget is limited, buy the utensils you will use most often (for other uses as well) and add the remainder gradually. (Hint: When family and friends ask what you want as a gift for holidays or birthdays mention good quality items you still would like to have.) Some of these items are: a good set of wooden spoons for creaming butters and sugars together, slotted spoons for efficient blending of ingredients that need to be mixed by hand, a good set of rubber or silicone scrapers or spatulas, sharp knives, a good set of cookie cutters, a set of heavy mixing bowls with rounded bottoms, large glass pitcher-style mixing bowl, quality wire cooling racks, and a good rolling pin and pastry cloth for use when making cut-out cookies.

Read the recipe carefully before beginning the mixing process. You don't want to get started and realize you are out of a needed ingredient. This will also let you know the particular basic method of mixing this recipe so you can have the proper utensils laid out.

Preheat the oven. Before you place the cookies in the oven, the oven should be at the proper temperature.

Watch your baking time carefully to avoid over-baked or underbaked cookies. Always check your cookies at the minimum baking time given in the recipe, then you can bake them longer if needed, checking often. An overbaked cookie is just not a good cookie.

Never substitute ingredients unless the recipe gives directions for doing so or you are well acquainted with the recipe and know exactly what you are doing.

Following these guidelines will help you to produce a great finished cookie product. And most of all, have fun doing so!


10 Basic Steps to Making Great Cookies

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Monday, November 21, 2011

Villaware Pizzelle Maker

!±8± Villaware Pizzelle Maker

When people ask me what my favorite Italian dessert is, I tell them that hands down, I love pizzelle. This Italian pastry has kept me satisfied every since the first time I had it at a friends house many years ago. After my friend and I lost contact, I still wanted to eat pizzelle but I had a hard time finding a pizzelle maker that was reliable and that could replicate the tastes of old Italy. That was until I found a Villaware pizzelle maker that could make these delicious pastries in the same style and taste as the ones that people have at Italian weddings.

A Villaware pizzelle maker comes in many different makes and models. You can chose between the four and the two pizzelle griddle, based on your choice of whether you want two large ones for you and another person or four smaller ones if you are cooking for an impatient family. Either way, the Villaware pizzelle makers can cook a pizzelle in less than thirty seconds making the cooking of them fun and fast. A Villaware pizzelle maker also comes with a traditional fiori pattern and you are guaranteed to get the thinnest and most delicious pizzelles you'll ever be able to find on this side of the pond.

A Villaware pizzelle maker also comes with a non stick cooking surface for not only easy cooking, but also easy cleaning. The polished metal grills won't stick meaning that you no longer have to settle for broken or less than par pizzelles. The large handles on the Villaware pizzelle maker are made to protect your hands from burning or other injury. The large hinges also provide for easy opening and closing for people who pour more batter than needed. Whenever you cook a pizzelle you will need the right ingredients. Flour, eggs, sugar, butter, vegetable oil, and flavoring are all needed ingredients for cooking your pizzelle. After your pizzelle is done cooking, you can sprinkle confectioner sugar on it to add to the delicious taste of it.

As you can plainly see, a Villaware pizzelle maker is the only option when you want to cook the best and most delicious pizzelles for you and your loved ones. They taste just like the real thing. You'll feel like you are at an Italian coffee shop sipping your cup of coffee or tea and eating this delicious pastry.


Villaware Pizzelle Maker

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Sunday, November 20, 2011

Pizzelle Recipe - What Are The Materials Needed For Making Pizzelle?

!±8± Pizzelle Recipe - What Are The Materials Needed For Making Pizzelle?

Pizzelle are a beautiful, thin Italian cookie featuring grid or floral imprints. Sometimes, they are rolled into cylinders to use for cannoli or are dusted with powdered sugar. Because of their beauty and elegance, a lot of people do not know how easy and simple a pizzelle recipe really is.

When making these cookies, they are more time consuming to make than they are difficult. The cookies are baked on a hot iron with patterned grids. The dough is spooned out onto the grids, then the cookies bake, creating the thin, patterned cookie. Pizzelle makers usually only make from one to four cookies at a time, and come in different sizes.

However, the ingredients and materials themselves are pretty basic. In fact, most of them are likely found within your common baking ingredients already. These are the ingredients that are usually found in a pizzelle recipe and used in the baking process.

Basic Cookie Ingredients
The ingredients commonly used in a lot of cookie recipes include flour, butter, sugar, vanilla extract, eggs, salt, and baking powder. Pizzelle are very much the same. If you are just making a basic vanilla cookie, you may even need only these ingredients. But to change the flavor quickly, change out the vanilla for another extract, such as banana or peppermint.

Flavoring Oil
More concentrated and needed in smaller quantities than extracts, these are also used to give the pizzelle recipe a flavor. Anise, with its licorice taste, is often favored in this recipe. If you prefer something different, though, there are many other ones to choose. Orange and cinnamon are two more that work well. Flavoring oils are available in candy making departments at stores or online.

An Electric Mixer
Because the recipe makes a thick dough, it is best to use an electric mixer rather than mixing the ingredients by hand.

A Pizzelle Maker
True, a pizzelle iron is not a very multifunctional appliance. It's mainly used to make pizzelle and a couple of other waffle-style cookies. But if you make the cookies more than once every year, then it is worth buying an electric one. A pizzelle maker heats the cookies between two sets of grids. It has anywhere from one to four grid sets in the maker. You can find them online and in stores.

Powdered Sugar In A Sifter
Dust the cookies lightly with sifted powdered sugar after they cool. While it is not necessary, it makes the presentation prettier.


Pizzelle Recipe - What Are The Materials Needed For Making Pizzelle?

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