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On Thu, 20 Sep 2007 12:19:51 -0600, Graphic Queen
wrote: I also do not like a dense cheesecake but like the fluffier kind. I rarely make any recipe as it is posted. A recipe to me is nothing more than a base anyway. By "any recipe", do you mean any cheese cake recipe or most recipes? If it's most recipe, then why bother reading rfc? -- History is a vast early warning system Norman Cousins |
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sf wrote in message ... On Thu, 20 Sep 2007 12:19:51 -0600, Graphic Queen wrote: I also do not like a dense cheesecake but like the fluffier kind. I rarely make any recipe as it is posted. A recipe to me is nothing more than a base anyway. By "any recipe", do you mean any cheese cake recipe or most recipes? If it's most recipe, then why bother reading rfc? -- To get ideas? I rarely if ever follow any recipe to the letter. |
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sf wrote in :
On Thu, 20 Sep 2007 21:12:05 +1200, Miche wrote: In article , Graphic Queen wrote: On Wed, 19 Sep 2007 06:23:48 GMT, "Jen" wrote: "Graphic Queen" wrote in message .. . Why in the world would they use gelatin anyway? Cheesecake needs no gelatin if it is made right and baked. You need gelatine in an 'unbaked' cheesecake. I've got heaps of unbaked cheesecake recipes and they all use gelatine, it's very common here. Baked cheesecakes are a different thing altogether. Jen OK. I have never made a cheesecake that was no bake at all. It looks good but I think I will make it by baking it and without the gelatin. Then it will be a completely different product. Why not try it the way the recipe has it first? You never know, you might even like it. Mom used to prefer the gelatin type over baked. Maybe it's because she didn't enjoy baking. Come to think of it, she made it in the summertime.... so it was probably a kitchen heat thing (no air conditioning, hot and humid climate). the no bake style of cheesecake doesn't crack like the bake style is prone to. Plus the not having to wrap in foil the springform pan and placing in a water bath removes much intimidation. -- The house of the burning beet-Alan It'll be a sunny day in August, when the Moon will shine that night- Elbonian Folklore |
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On Sat, 22 Sep 2007 08:19:22 -0600, Graphic Queen
wrote: On Sat, 22 Sep 2007 00:42:01 -0400, "cybercat" wrote: sf wrote in message ... On Thu, 20 Sep 2007 12:19:51 -0600, Graphic Queen wrote: I also do not like a dense cheesecake but like the fluffier kind. I rarely make any recipe as it is posted. A recipe to me is nothing more than a base anyway. By "any recipe", do you mean any cheese cake recipe or most recipes? If it's most recipe, then why bother reading rfc? -- To get ideas? I rarely if ever follow any recipe to the letter. I don't understand why anyone would be perturbed by those of us who don't follow a recipe to the tee. That's not what you said though. -- History is a vast early warning system Norman Cousins |
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On Sat, 22 Sep 2007 08:19:22 -0600, Graphic Queen
wrote: On Fri, 21 Sep 2007 21:36:50 -0700, sf wrote: On Thu, 20 Sep 2007 12:19:51 -0600, Graphic Queen wrote: I also do not like a dense cheesecake but like the fluffier kind. I rarely make any recipe as it is posted. A recipe to me is nothing more than a base anyway. By "any recipe", do you mean any cheese cake recipe or most recipes? If it's most recipe, then why bother reading rfc? Most recipes, period. I read this to give me ideas of course. Why is it that you have a hard time understanding that? It is no big deal. I have been cooking most of my life and I rarely measure, except for baking certain things. Some of us are just able to do such things. When I give a recipe to someone I have to make the item a few times to make sure I have the amounts and items correct for them. Don't get your bowels in an uproar. It is just some of us cook and bake differently than others. No big deal. ;-) Dear GQ, *I* am not upset or even annoyed so don't go patting yourself on the back yet. -- History is a vast early warning system Norman Cousins |
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On Sat, 22 Sep 2007 11:51:50 GMT, hahabogus wrote:
Plus the not having to wrap in foil the springform pan and placing in a water bath removes much intimidation. FYI: I don't bother with water baths when I bake cheesecake and I don't have a problem with splitting. -- History is a vast early warning system Norman Cousins |
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On Sat, 22 Sep 2007 08:19:22 -0600, Graphic Queen
wrote: On Fri, 21 Sep 2007 21:36:50 -0700, sf wrote: On Thu, 20 Sep 2007 12:19:51 -0600, Graphic Queen wrote: I also do not like a dense cheesecake but like the fluffier kind. I rarely make any recipe as it is posted. A recipe to me is nothing more than a base anyway. By "any recipe", do you mean any cheese cake recipe or most recipes? If it's most recipe, then why bother reading rfc? Most recipes, period. I read this to give me ideas of course. Why is it that you have a hard time understanding that? It is no big deal. I have been cooking most of my life and I rarely measure, except for baking certain things. Some of us are just able to do such things. When I give a recipe to someone I have to make the item a few times to make sure I have the amounts and items correct for them. Don't get your bowels in an uproar. It is just some of us cook and bake differently than others. No big deal. ;-) it's just that some folks who don't 'follow recipes' seem to think of themselves as better cooks, like a jazz musician sneering at the horn section of a soul band. your pal, blake |
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"Jen" wrote in
: "Amarantha" wrote in message . 245.131... Graphic Queen wrote in : Because a no-bake cheesecake is not a real cheesecake. I have yet to taste a no-bake cheesecake that is worth anything at all. The term "no-bake" implies a faked, shortcut version of a baked item. No. Thy're just "different" desserts, that's all. I grew up with proper set cheesecakes; they are a dessert in their own right and to compare them with baked ones is like apples and oranges. Apples and oranges are both fruit, just different types. It's the same with the cheesecakes. My husband prefers un-baked, My mother prefers baked. I love both sorts. Ya, that's pretty much what I was saying. I didn't express it very well ![]() K |