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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. |
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Hi,
Does anyone know a recipe for pfeffernusse that has the texture of gingerbread? I dont know how to describe what I mean really... kind of like dry, semi-stale white bread dinner rolls, but just a little more dense. Wow, that sounds bad! Anyhow, that kind of texture. I've tried a couple of recipes, but they all come out like cookies or biscuits, which is not what I want. There are a couple of brands of pfeffernusse that you can get in the supermarkets that have the texture I'm talking about, so maybe someone knows the brands. Fritz is the only one I can think of at the moment. Here's a picture of some... http://www.centrafinefoods.com.au/pu...118&path=1,118 |
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Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> SJC > wrote in > : > > >>Wayne Boatwright wrote: >> >>>sc > wrote in : >>> >>> >>> >>>>Hi, >>>> >>>>Does anyone know a recipe for pfeffernusse that has the texture of >>>>gingerbread? I dont know how to describe what I mean really... kind >>>>of like dry, semi-stale white bread dinner rolls, but just a little >>>>more dense. Wow, that sounds bad! Anyhow, that kind of texture. I've >>>>tried a couple of recipes, but they all come out like cookies or >>>>biscuits, which is not what I want. >>>> >>>>There are a couple of brands of pfeffernusse that you can get in the >>>>supermarkets that have the texture I'm talking about, so maybe >>>>someone knows the brands. Fritz is the only one I can think of at the >>>>moment. >>>> >>>>Here's a picture of some... >>>> >>>>http://www.centrafinefoods.com.au/pu...=HMPFEF&cat=11 >>>>8 &path=1,118 >>> >>> >>>I bake pfeffernusse every year around Thanksgiving in order to serve >>>them at Christmas. They are *not* what you want. >>> >>>I have bought the type you're talking about and, quite frankly, I >>>think apart from any thing else that they're stale and certainly not >>>very good. >>> >>>That said, however, if that's what you like then why not just buy >>>them. >>> >>>True pfeffernusse start out as very hard and very dense cookies which >>>may vary somewhat in flavor but not that much in texture. They need >>>to be stored for several weeks to allow them to "ripen" and "mellow", >>>both in texture and flavor. The result is still probably not what >>>you're looking for, but they do become much softer and the flavor >>>more complex. >>> >> >>Yup, that's what I said in the other post - I dont know what 'real' >>pfeffernusse are supposed to look like, or what they taste like, or >>what >> texture they should have... but those light ones are the ones I >> like! >>Maybe they shouldnt be called pfeffernusse... I dont really mind what >>they get called, I'd just like to know how to make them! >> >>The 'why not just buy them' idea seems a little strange to me, since >>this group is called rec.food.cooking. Why not just buy anything that >>gets cooked. > > Some things you like are not necessarily available for sale, especially > the way you might like them. Well, I doubt that that is the motivation for most of the posts in this and other cooking newsgroups. |
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Ed Grabau and Pam Jacoby wrote:
> "Wayne Boatwright" wrote > >>>Hi, >>> >>>Does anyone know a recipe for pfeffernusse that has the texture of >>>gingerbread? I dont know how to describe what I mean really... kind of >>>like dry, semi-stale white bread dinner rolls, but just a little more >>>dense. Wow, that sounds bad! Anyhow, that kind of texture. I've tried >>>a couple of recipes, but they all come out like cookies or biscuits, >>>which is not what I want. >>> >>>There are a couple of brands of pfeffernusse that you can get in the >>>supermarkets that have the texture I'm talking about, so maybe someone >>>knows the brands. Fritz is the only one I can think of at the moment. >>> >>>Here's a picture of some... >>> >>>http://www.centrafinefoods.com.au/pu...HMPFEF&cat=118 >>>&path=1,118 >> >>I bake pfeffernusse every year around Thanksgiving in order to serve them >>at Christmas. They are *not* what you want. >> >>I have bought the type you're talking about and, quite frankly, I think >>apart from any thing else that they're stale and certainly not very good. >> >>That said, however, if that's what you like then why not just buy them. >> >>True pfeffernusse start out as very hard and very dense cookies which may >>vary somewhat in flavor but not that much in texture. They need to be >>stored for several weeks to allow them to "ripen" and "mellow", both in >>texture and flavor. The result is still probably not what you're looking >>for, but they do become much softer and the flavor more complex. >> >>Wayne >> > > > Ah, the infamous cookies in those big glass jars at the back of my mother's > corner cupboard. > > Fresh, these things will break your teeth, your dentures, your jaw. One > can, however, dunk them in black coffee, good black coffee, to avoid > breakage. > > My mother kept them up to at least 2 years in those glass jars at the back > of the cupboard. One does not keep them in the refrigerator and, definitely > not the freezer. She made huge batches to make sure those jars were always > aging. > > You have to consider these as wine---they need to age. The longer they age, > the closer to the texture of which you speak. Personally, I like them at > about 1 year. > > I am not joking or being ridiculous here. I'm telling you the absolute > truth. I rarely post on RFC these days, but I have references!!! AND, I > have the jars!!! > > Pam > > Just do a test with labeled pint jars, and you'll see. > But they're not the texture I'm looking for... |
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