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Malcom \Mal\ Reynolds 01-07-2012 04:49 AM

jello and milk
 
it's not that I'm likely to try this, but what would be the result if you made
jello with milk instead of water? I'm imagining something similar to sherbert

Brooklyn1 01-07-2012 02:04 PM

jello and milk
 
"Malcom \"Mal\" Reynolds" wrote:
>
>what would be the result if you made jello with milk instead of water?


Suck this!

jmcquown[_2_] 01-07-2012 02:40 PM

jello and milk
 

"Malcom "Mal" Reynolds" > wrote in message
...
> it's not that I'm likely to try this, but what would be the result if you
> made
> jello with milk instead of water? I'm imagining something similar to
> sherbert



First of all, it's "sherbet", not "sherbert". Secondly, I don't see how
Jell-O +milk could equate to sherbet. The texture would be all wrong. Have
you ever seen those weird Jell-O creations some people make for Halloween?
You can buy special molds for them. Jell-O "brains", etc. I believe those
are made with milk. They look appropriately disgusting :)

Jill



Brooklyn1 01-07-2012 07:41 PM

jello and milk
 
On Sun, 1 Jul 2012 09:40:17 -0400, "jmcquown" >
wrote:

>
>"Malcom "Mal" Reynolds" > wrote in message
...
>> it's not that I'm likely to try this, but what would be the result if you
>> made
>> jello with milk instead of water? I'm imagining something similar to
>> sherbert

>
>
>First of all, it's "sherbet", not "sherbert". Secondly, I don't see how
>Jell-O +milk could equate to sherbet. The texture would be all wrong. Have
>you ever seen those weird Jell-O creations some people make for Halloween?
>You can buy special molds for them. Jell-O "brains", etc. I believe those
>are made with milk. They look appropriately disgusting :)
>
>Jill


I like jello cubes drizzled with evap.

Kajikit[_2_] 01-07-2012 09:22 PM

jello and milk
 
On Sat, 30 Jun 2012 20:49:32 -0700, "Malcom \"Mal\" Reynolds"
> wrote:

>it's not that I'm likely to try this, but what would be the result if you made
>jello with milk instead of water? I'm imagining something similar to sherbert


If you make it with evaporated milk and whip it up you get jello
fluff, which is DELICIOUS!

Jim Elbrecht 01-07-2012 10:12 PM

jello and milk
 
On Sun, 01 Jul 2012 16:22:37 -0400, Kajikit >
wrote:

>On Sat, 30 Jun 2012 20:49:32 -0700, "Malcom \"Mal\" Reynolds"
> wrote:
>
>>it's not that I'm likely to try this, but what would be the result if you made
>>jello with milk instead of water? I'm imagining something similar to sherbert

>
>If you make it with evaporated milk and whip it up you get jello
>fluff, which is DELICIOUS!


Never did that, but I love evaporated milk poured over jello.

I also love the Bavarian Cream that mom used to make using milk/cream
in jello- Kind of like this-
http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/m...ipe/index.html

Mom's used red jello and she floated fruit in it-
Jim

Cheryl[_3_] 02-07-2012 01:36 AM

jello and milk
 
On 7/1/2012 5:12 PM, Jim Elbrecht wrote:

> On Sun, 01 Jul 2012 16:22:37 -0400, >
> wrote:
>
>> On Sat, 30 Jun 2012 20:49:32 -0700, "Malcom \"Mal\" Reynolds"
>> > wrote:
>>
>>> it's not that I'm likely to try this, but what would be the result if you made
>>> jello with milk instead of water? I'm imagining something similar to sherbert

>>
>> If you make it with evaporated milk and whip it up you get jello
>> fluff, which is DELICIOUS!

>
> Never did that, but I love evaporated milk poured over jello.
>
> I also love the Bavarian Cream that mom used to make using milk/cream
> in jello- Kind of like this-
> http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/m...ipe/index.html
>
> Mom's used red jello and she floated fruit in it-
> Jim


Jim, that sounded so interesting that I had to check out the recipe.
Nice! Definitely different from cream rather than water in flavored
jello. This looks great.

I had to click on a link to a carrot ice cream cake and get a load of
the number of egg yolks for a cake with 6-8 servings! 30 egg yolks in
the ice cream. Whoa. I wonder if that's normal for a custard type ice
cream? Looks good though. I'm sort of out of eggs at the moment so no
custard for me.

http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/f...ipe/index.html



Jim Elbrecht 02-07-2012 01:37 PM

jello and milk
 
Cheryl > wrote:

-snip-
>
>I had to click on a link to a carrot ice cream cake and get a load of
>the number of egg yolks for a cake with 6-8 servings! 30 egg yolks in
>the ice cream. Whoa. I wonder if that's normal for a custard type ice
>cream?


No! the richest custard ice creams that I've seen use 5-6 yolks in
a quart or 2. And don't want to eat with anyone that can eat
1/8th of that cake for dessert.<g>

>Looks good though. I'm sort of out of eggs at the moment so no
>custard for me.
>
>http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/f...ipe/index.html
>


The reviews are a real help. 2 reviews; 5 star no comment- 3 star-
didn't follow the recipe at all- used store-bought ice cream.

Looking at the 30 yolk recipe, there are some problems. one of the
ingredients is "Cream Cheese" - no amount.
"1 litre of milk
17-18 ounces of cream"

I'm not a big cake eater-- but the idea of this one looks good. If
I was going to make it, though, I'd have to talk to the writer before
I put that much money and effort into it.

Jim

Janet 03-07-2012 02:28 AM

jello and milk
 
In article >, atlas-
lid says...
>
> it's not that I'm likely to try this, but what would be the result if you made
> jello with milk instead of water? I'm imagining something similar to sherbert


My mother used to make "milk jelly" for us when we were kids; use a very
small amount of boiling water to dissolve the jelly/jello cubes then make
up to the usual volume using a can of evaporated milk, mix and leave to
set.
It's delicious and a good way to get milk into kids who don't like
drinking it fresh.

Janet


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