Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have heard of and recently found recipes to bake cake in a jar (canning
jar) I had no experience with this, and I am wondering just how does one eat the cake? Do you eat it right out of the jar or what? Thanks for any info. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "strawberry_shortcake" > wrote in message ... >I have heard of and recently found recipes to bake cake in a jar (canning > jar) I had no experience with this, and I am wondering just how does one > eat the cake? Do you eat it right out of the jar or what? > Thanks for any info. The USDA does not recommend keeping this for very long. You might want to put all kinda dry ingredients in a jar for them to bake up - brownies might be better. Below is from our rec.food.preserving FAQ: Edrena A.2.9 Canning Cake and Quick Breads - Don't Do It! Canned breads and cakes are not recommended for home cooks or canning; choose cake or bread recipes that you can freeze. Many cake and quick bread recipes contain very little or no acid and thus have the potential for supporting the growth of hazardous bacteria, such as Clostridium botulinum, if they are present inside the closed jar. C. botulinum causes an often fatal food borne illness, called botulism. Given that many of these bread and cake recipes have been shown to be low in acid, the major barriers to prevent microbial growth are limited to: (1) the dryness of the product and (2) the lack of oxygen inside the closed jar (because of vacuum seals). Recipe variations such as the addition of fruit, zucchini, liquids, etc. all contribute to available water for microorganisms to use. In addition, lack of oxygen alone does not prevent the growth of all harmful bacteria. The vacuum seals do not remove all oxygen, so some would still be available to the bacteria which do need it. Source: Cooperative Extension Service, The University Of Georgia College of Family and Consumer Sciences and the College of Aquiculture and Environmental Sciences Cooperating http://www.uga.edu/nchfp/publication...can_breads.pdf |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "strawberry_shortcake" > wrote in message ... >I have heard of and recently found recipes to bake cake in a jar (canning > jar) I had no experience with this, and I am wondering just how does one > eat the cake? Do you eat it right out of the jar or what? > Thanks for any info. > One question: would you enjoy a gift like this? |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "cybercat" > wrote in message ... > > "strawberry_shortcake" > wrote in message > ... >>I have heard of and recently found recipes to bake cake in a jar (canning >> jar) I had no experience with this, and I am wondering just how does one >> eat the cake? Do you eat it right out of the jar or what? >> Thanks for any info. >> > > One question: would you enjoy a gift like this? > I did this one year for all my friends that camp and friend that don't bake. They thought they were wonderful. I made brownies, gingerbread and a maraschino cherry cake. The kids and I tested them at home. I used wide mouth jars. I took a long enough knife and cut the cake in quarters. Then pulled each quarter out and we ate them. Delicious. Lynne |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"strawberry_shortcake" > wrote in message
... >I have heard of and recently found recipes to bake cake in a jar (canning > jar) I had no experience with this, and I am wondering just how does one > eat the cake? Do you eat it right out of the jar or what? > Thanks for any info. > You don't eat it. You smile and politely accept the jar from the person offering it. When you get home, you carve out the cake, throw it away, and use the jar for other purposes. |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mar 27, 4:37 pm, "strawberry_shortcake" > wrote:
> I have heard of and recently found recipes to bake cake in a jar (canning > jar) I had no experience with this, and I am wondering just how does one > eat the cake? Do you eat it right out of the jar or what? > Thanks for any info. I would be afraid of baking in a jar. I know they can stand high temps, but with the expansion of the batter...I just think that's a scary idea |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]() -"merryb" > wrote in message oups.com... > On Mar 27, 4:37 pm, "strawberry_shortcake" > wrote: >> I have heard of and recently found recipes to bake cake in a jar (canning >> jar) I had no experience with this, and I am wondering just how does one >> eat the cake? Do you eat it right out of the jar or what? >> Thanks for any info. > > I would be afraid of baking in a jar. I know they can stand high > temps, but with the expansion of the batter...I just think that's a > scary idea > I had always assumed and still think that the jars are just for holding the ingredients. Individuals who mix it up in the jar and bake it are just really taking it too far. It is like mixing up your brownies in the box and baking them. Least that is my opinion and you won't sway me on that.. -- Laura -Sautéed poo is still poo! Come join us at The Dirty Old Ladies and The Dirty Old Men! Be the adult your mother was afraid you would be!! http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TheDirtyOldLadies/ |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Question about those "Atlas" jars | Preserving | |||
Question on canning jars | Preserving | |||
Baked cheese cake with dried blackberries | General Cooking | |||
Ground meat cake (was Strawberry Basket Cake Question) | General Cooking | |||
Newbie question Ball jars with wire bails | Preserving |