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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc.

Mailing Baked Goodies



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 08-12-2003, 01:06 AM
Richard's ~JA~
Usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Mailing Baked Goodies

(Kat) pleas, in part:
I want to mail some festive baked goods to
people across the country. In the past I've
stuck to dense things like chocolate
decadence brownies and date bars. I want to
try some different things. Any suggestions?

I've never sent these breads anywhere, rather I have transported them to
work where the Marines beg for more. Their consistency and baking
container tells me they certainly should withstand mailing, though.

Crosse & Blackwell's Date Nut Bread
(Delicious sliced with cream cheese atop, keeps very well at room
temperature, and freezes just as well. See picky notes.)
About 1 lb. pitted, chopped dates
2 tsp. baking soda
2 Tbsp. butter
2 cups hot tap water
1 tsp. salt
2 large eggs
2 cups granulated sugar
4 cups all purpose flour
1 tsp. ground cinnamon
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 cup chopped walnuts
Preheat oven to 350F and grease well 8 (15 oz.) cans with tops removed.
Mix dates, baking soda, butter and water together in a large bowl; let
cool a bit. Add remaining ingredients. Fill cans halfway. Place on a
large baking sheet and bake for one hour; check with a wooden pick at 50
minutes because ovens vary so much. Leave in cans at least ten minutes
before "shaking" out. Finish cooling on racks.
PickyNotes: The original recipe does call for 8 cans, but when I make
it with the exact same ingredients, it only needs six cans. Last I was
determined to make these for my Marines already promised to, I learned
too late for a shopping trip that the dates I was sure I had were
nowhere to be found. Instead, I chopped up a small package of dried
apricots, then added in a small bag of cherry flavored "Cranaisens"
along with about half a bag of dark raisens. This mixture blended up
perfectly for using only four of the larger cans sliced peaches come in,
and it was equally as good as the original dates-only fruit mixture,
though it did bake up much darker. It keeps quite well counter-top for
over a week, and refrigerated it can be good for two. I've never
freezed it, but would not hesitate should I need to.

=A0=A0=A0Picky ~JA~

  #2 (permalink)  
Old 08-12-2003, 01:07 AM
Richard's ~JA~
Usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Mailing Baked Goodies

(Kat) pleas, in part:
I want to mail some festive baked goods to
people across the country. In the past I've
stuck to dense things like chocolate
decadence brownies and date bars. I want to
try some different things. Any suggestions?

I've never sent these breads anywhere, rather I have transported them to
work where the Marines beg for more. Their consistency and baking
container tells me they certainly should withstand mailing, though.

Crosse & Blackwell's Date Nut Bread
(Delicious sliced with cream cheese atop, keeps very well at room
temperature, and freezes just as well. See picky notes.)
About 1 lb. pitted, chopped dates
2 tsp. baking soda
2 Tbsp. butter
2 cups hot tap water
1 tsp. salt
2 large eggs
2 cups granulated sugar
4 cups all purpose flour
1 tsp. ground cinnamon
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 cup chopped walnuts
Preheat oven to 350F and grease well 8 (15 oz.) cans with tops removed.
Mix dates, baking soda, butter and water together in a large bowl; let
cool a bit. Add remaining ingredients. Fill cans halfway. Place on a
large baking sheet and bake for one hour; check with a wooden pick at 50
minutes because ovens vary so much. Leave in cans at least ten minutes
before "shaking" out. Finish cooling on racks.
PickyNotes: The original recipe does call for 8 cans, but when I make
it with the exact same ingredients, it only needs six cans. Last I was
determined to make these for my Marines already promised to, I learned
too late for a shopping trip that the dates I was sure I had were
nowhere to be found. Instead, I chopped up a small package of dried
apricots, then added in a small bag of cherry flavored "Cranaisens"
along with about half a bag of dark raisens. This mixture blended up
perfectly for using only four of the larger cans sliced peaches come in,
and it was equally as good as the original dates-only fruit mixture,
though it did bake up much darker. It keeps quite well counter-top for
over a week, and refrigerated it can be good for two. I've never
freezed it, but would not hesitate should I need to.

=A0=A0=A0Picky ~JA~

  #3 (permalink)  
Old 08-12-2003, 03:03 AM
zxcvbob
Usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Mailing Baked Goodies

Kat wrote:
I have been lurking in this group for a while, and now I have a question!
I want to mail some festive baked goods to people across the country. In the
past I've stuck to dense things like chocolate decadence brownies and date bars.
I want to try some different things. Any suggestions? Anything spiffy that
you've tried that's worked well?
The baklava thread is making my mouth water! It's something that not many
people make for themselves, so it'd make a nice little gift. Can Baklava mail
ok? How?
The only bar thing that I really want and don't have is a good recipe for
traditional German Lebkuchen. A few years ago i tried the lebkuchen in Joy of
Cooking and it turned out too dense and hard to chew. I liked the taste, but
nobody else could eat it. Any recipes?
Thanks much!
Kat



Biscotti and pfefferneuse (sp?) ship well.

Best regards,
Bob

  #4 (permalink)  
Old 08-12-2003, 12:56 PM
Frogleg
Usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Mailing Baked Goodies

On Sun, 07 Dec 2003 15:45:56 -0800, Kat wrote:

I have been lurking in this group for a while, and now I have a question!
I want to mail some festive baked goods to people across the country. In the
past I've stuck to dense things like chocolate decadence brownies and date bars.
I want to try some different things. Any suggestions? Anything spiffy that
you've tried that's worked well?
The baklava thread is making my mouth water! It's something that not many
people make for themselves, so it'd make a nice little gift. Can Baklava mail
ok? How?
The only bar thing that I really want and don't have is a good recipe for
traditional German Lebkuchen. A few years ago i tried the lebkuchen in Joy of
Cooking and it turned out too dense and hard to chew. I liked the taste, but
nobody else could eat it. Any recipes?


Springerle are festive and sturdy. And they're *supposed* to age a
bit. That layered Croation 'nut roll' bread someone was asking
(Povitica) about looked shipable (Hickory Farm sells 'em.)
 




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