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Baking (rec.food.baking) For bakers, would-be bakers, and fans and consumers of breads, pastries, cakes, pies, cookies, crackers, bagels, and other items commonly found in a bakery. Includes all methods of preparation, both conventional and not. |
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Howdy!!! Wondering if anybody has produced successfully almond paste at home
and has a good recipe. I do own a Kenwood Major stand mixer and a food processor, greek almonds are fantastic and cheap, but I have a premonition it could be somehow tricky. In Greece we have french almond paste at delis but a more careful look at the label gave me the creeps(too many chemicals).To make it worse it's cloyingly sweet. Thnx to all of you. It's a wonderful forum!!! |
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![]() "Stelios Iko" > wrote in message ... > Howdy!!! Wondering if anybody has produced successfully almond paste at home > and has a good recipe. I do own a Kenwood Major stand mixer and a food > processor, greek almonds are fantastic and cheap, but I have a premonition > it could be somehow tricky. In Greece we have french almond paste at delis > but a more careful look at the label gave me the creeps(too many > chemicals).To make it worse it's cloyingly sweet. > > Thnx to all of you. It's a wonderful forum!!! > Almond paste is usually very sweet. The recipe I use every xmas is as follows: 200g icing sugar 200g caster sugar (or you could use icing sugar for a smoother paste) 400g ground almonds 1 egg, lightly beaten 2.5ml/1/2tsp almond or vanilla essence (Optional - I leave them out) Lemon juice Sift the sugars into a bowl and add the rest of the ingredients with enough lemon juice to make a firm but manageable dough. Knead until smooth. If your eggs are very large, you may have to add extra almonds and/or sugar - it's not critical. I usually buy ground almonds for this but I have blanched and skinned whole almonds before putting them through a meat grinder. I suppose you could use the food processor to grind them. HTH Graham |
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![]() "Stelios Iko" > wrote in message ... > Howdy!!! Wondering if anybody has produced successfully almond paste at home > and has a good recipe. I do own a Kenwood Major stand mixer and a food > processor, greek almonds are fantastic and cheap, but I have a premonition > it could be somehow tricky. In Greece we have french almond paste at delis > but a more careful look at the label gave me the creeps(too many > chemicals).To make it worse it's cloyingly sweet. > > Thnx to all of you. It's a wonderful forum!!! > Almond paste is usually very sweet. The recipe I use every xmas is as follows: 200g icing sugar 200g caster sugar (or you could use icing sugar for a smoother paste) 400g ground almonds 1 egg, lightly beaten 2.5ml/1/2tsp almond or vanilla essence (Optional - I leave them out) Lemon juice Sift the sugars into a bowl and add the rest of the ingredients with enough lemon juice to make a firm but manageable dough. Knead until smooth. If your eggs are very large, you may have to add extra almonds and/or sugar - it's not critical. I usually buy ground almonds for this but I have blanched and skinned whole almonds before putting them through a meat grinder. I suppose you could use the food processor to grind them. HTH Graham |
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![]() "graham" > > Howdy!!! Wondering if anybody has produced successfully almond paste at > home > > and has a good recipe. in italy we use a particular kind of almond, the *mandorla amara*. You can obtain a simil flavour with apricot's nuts, knowed in Italy as "armelline". Hello. :-) -- http://www.gennarino.org http://www.gennarino.org/forum/ Meglio muri' sazio 'ca campa' a dijuno icq 325215944 |
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![]() "graham" > > Howdy!!! Wondering if anybody has produced successfully almond paste at > home > > and has a good recipe. in italy we use a particular kind of almond, the *mandorla amara*. You can obtain a simil flavour with apricot's nuts, knowed in Italy as "armelline". Hello. :-) -- http://www.gennarino.org http://www.gennarino.org/forum/ Meglio muri' sazio 'ca campa' a dijuno icq 325215944 |
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![]() "gennarino" > wrote in message ... > > "graham" > > > > Howdy!!! Wondering if anybody has produced successfully almond paste at > > home > > > and has a good recipe. > > in italy we use a particular kind of almond, the *mandorla amara*. > You can obtain a simil flavour with apricot's nuts, knowed in Italy as > "armelline". They have to be treated to remove the prussic acid. Apricot nuts are exported by Australia for treatment before turning them into artificial almond paste/marzipan. Graham |
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![]() "gennarino" > wrote in message ... > > "graham" > > > > Howdy!!! Wondering if anybody has produced successfully almond paste at > > home > > > and has a good recipe. > > in italy we use a particular kind of almond, the *mandorla amara*. > You can obtain a simil flavour with apricot's nuts, knowed in Italy as > "armelline". They have to be treated to remove the prussic acid. Apricot nuts are exported by Australia for treatment before turning them into artificial almond paste/marzipan. Graham |
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