Saturday, May 22, 2010

PSA

There should be a post about foraging in North Georgia here, but it's not done yet. In the meantime, I'd like to make a humble suggestion to all recipe writers and publishers:
Stop writing recipes with volume measures for dry ingredients. Please. I've been making cookies weekly for work, and measuring cups and spoons are the single-biggest mess-maker in the whole process. Powdery ingredients like flour and cocoa spill easily, come in containers that can't accommodate measuring cups for scooping, and inevitably stick to said cups. Pouring ingredients like sugar is easier, but aiming to hit a small measuring cup is more of a challenge than a large mixing bowl on a scale, and sugar on the floor or counter is no fun. Converting from volume back to weight (how any recipe used by a professional kitchen/bakeshop measures ingredients) is imprecise. Scales are cheap. People learn. Measuring by volume inevitably looks like one of those "you're doing it wrong" infomercial segment, and I'm a professional.
Also: There are two types of cocoa powder, natural and dutched. One is acid, the other is alkaline, and they are used accordingly in recipes to maintain a certain acid/alkaline balance. Mix them up without making the proper pH adjustments, and your cake won't rise, or your brownies will taste funny. So could someone at Hershey's please explain to me the market for their new "premium" cocoa powder, "a select blend of natural and dutched cocoas?" No ratio given, some poor amateur baker, enthusiastic girlfriend--if I'm being sexist, the first man to email me about the cupcakes he made for his lady friend prior to this date wins a beer, courtesy of me--or excited child will grab this, see "dutched" go home, use it...and assume that baking is simply too hard, that it requires some deft, magic touch, special incantations, perhaps a conferring of the power from a high priest. Nope. Hershey's just wants you to buy more mixes.
Also: This is bullshit.Now to craft that into a well-thought-out, profanity-free letter to my councilperson.

2 comments:

DV said...

Seems like the volume/mass problem could be solved in software. One need only input the recipe to use a stored conversion table that knows the relationship between mass and volume per ingredient. It wouldn't be hard to write a conversion utility once the data was generated...

As for the farmers' markets thing - unmitigated bullshit. Insanity.

Anonymous said...

Good Article