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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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![]() Here's one formula I found - but it's for substituting semisweet for baking chocolate: 5 ounces of semisweet chocolate are equal to 3 oz. baking chocolate + 4 tablespoons sugar OR 9 tablespoons cocoa + 3 tablespoons Crisco + 4 tablespoons sugar. However, I thought I'd take advantage of the post-Easter sales. (While avoiding, of course, anything that only says "chocolate flavored"!) The only things available are milk chocolate bunnies and kisses - not semisweet anythings. And here are other suggestions, most of which are not as helpful as what's above: http://whatscookingamerica.net/Choco...utionChart.htm Does anyone know (besides chopping it up and using it for chocolate chip cookies) how to substitute milk chocolate for baking chocolate in, say, devil's food cake or chocolate baked pudding? Thanks. Lenona. |
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I don't know about Easter specifically, but Russell Stover usually has solid
"dark chocolate" for every season. N. |
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I don't know about Easter specifically, but Russell Stover usually has solid
"dark chocolate" for every season. N. |
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On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 8:39:00 PM UTC-5, wrote:
> Here's one formula I found - but it's for substituting semisweet for > baking chocolate: > > 5 ounces of semisweet chocolate are equal to > > 3 oz. baking chocolate + 4 tablespoons sugar > > OR > > 9 tablespoons cocoa + 3 tablespoons Crisco + 4 tablespoons sugar. > Anyone who keeps Crisco in the house would improve the gene pool by dying. > > Lenona. --Bryan |
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On Tue, 7 Apr 2015 19:31:26 -0700 (PDT), Bryan-TGWWW
> wrote: >On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 8:39:00 PM UTC-5, wrote: >> Here's one formula I found - but it's for substituting semisweet for >> baking chocolate: >> >> 5 ounces of semisweet chocolate are equal to >> >> 3 oz. baking chocolate + 4 tablespoons sugar >> >> OR >> >> 9 tablespoons cocoa + 3 tablespoons Crisco + 4 tablespoons sugar. >> >Anyone who keeps Crisco in the house would improve the gene pool by dying. > >> >> Lenona. > >--Bryan You truly are an evil human, Bryan. Get therapy, you need it badly. John Kuthe... --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. http://www.avast.com |
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![]() > wrote in message ... > > Here's one formula I found - but it's for substituting semisweet for > baking chocolate: > > 5 ounces of semisweet chocolate are equal to > > 3 oz. baking chocolate + 4 tablespoons sugar > > OR > > 9 tablespoons cocoa + 3 tablespoons Crisco + 4 tablespoons sugar. > > > However, I thought I'd take advantage of the post-Easter sales. (While > avoiding, of course, anything that only says "chocolate flavored"!) The > only things available are milk chocolate bunnies and kisses - not > semisweet anythings. > > And here are other suggestions, most of which are not as helpful as > what's above: > > http://whatscookingamerica.net/Choco...utionChart.htm > > Does anyone know (besides chopping it up and using it for chocolate chip > cookies) how to substitute milk chocolate for baking chocolate in, > say, devil's food cake or chocolate baked pudding? > > Thanks. > > > Lenona. You can't! Baking chocolate is unsweetened. You can chop up milk chocolate candy and add it to brownies or cookies though. I don't know what a chocolate baked pudding is. You can substitute cocoa for baking chocolate. I do that all the time. |
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![]() "Bryan-TGWWW" > wrote in message ... > On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 8:39:00 PM UTC-5, wrote: >> Here's one formula I found - but it's for substituting semisweet for >> baking chocolate: >> >> 5 ounces of semisweet chocolate are equal to >> >> 3 oz. baking chocolate + 4 tablespoons sugar >> >> OR >> >> 9 tablespoons cocoa + 3 tablespoons Crisco + 4 tablespoons sugar. >> > Anyone who keeps Crisco in the house would improve the gene pool by dying. Doesn't have to be Crisco. You can use butter, Spectrum shortening, coconut oil or any mild tasting oil. |
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On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 10:01:21 PM UTC-5, John Kuthe wrote:
> On Tue, 7 Apr 2015 19:31:26 -0700 (PDT), Bryan-TGWWW > > wrote: > > >On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 8:39:00 PM UTC-5, wrote: > >> Here's one formula I found - but it's for substituting semisweet for > >> baking chocolate: > >> > >> 5 ounces of semisweet chocolate are equal to > >> > >> 3 oz. baking chocolate + 4 tablespoons sugar > >> > >> OR > >> > >> 9 tablespoons cocoa + 3 tablespoons Crisco + 4 tablespoons sugar. > >> > >Anyone who keeps Crisco in the house would improve the gene pool by dying. > > > >> > >> Lenona. > > > >--Bryan > > You truly are an evil human, Bryan. Get therapy, you need it badly. There is no therapy for EVIL! Bwahaahaa! > > John Kuthe... > > --Bryan |
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On Wed, 8 Apr 2015 06:51:02 -0700 (PDT), Bryan-TGWWW
> wrote: >On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 10:01:21 PM UTC-5, John Kuthe wrote: >> On Tue, 7 Apr 2015 19:31:26 -0700 (PDT), Bryan-TGWWW >> > wrote: >> >> >On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 8:39:00 PM UTC-5, wrote: >> >> Here's one formula I found - but it's for substituting semisweet for >> >> baking chocolate: >> >> >> >> 5 ounces of semisweet chocolate are equal to >> >> >> >> 3 oz. baking chocolate + 4 tablespoons sugar >> >> >> >> OR >> >> >> >> 9 tablespoons cocoa + 3 tablespoons Crisco + 4 tablespoons sugar. >> >> >> >Anyone who keeps Crisco in the house would improve the gene pool by dying. >> > >> >> >> >> Lenona. >> > >> >--Bryan >> >> You truly are an evil human, Bryan. Get therapy, you need it badly. > >There is no therapy for EVIL! Bwahaahaa! >> --Bryan Denial. You have to get over that before anything for you can ever change. :-( John Kuthe... --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. http://www.avast.com |
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On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 11:44:19 PM UTC-4, Julie Bove wrote:
> <lenona> wrote in message > > Does anyone know (besides chopping it up and using it for chocolate chip > > cookies) how to substitute milk chocolate for baking chocolate in, > > say, devil's food cake or chocolate baked pudding? > > You can't! Baking chocolate is unsweetened. Quite right - I was very absent-minded when I typed that. What I meant was, how can you use milk chocolate in recipes that call for baking chocolate or semi-sweet - that is, how much sugar do you have to subtract from the recipe in each of the two cases? > I don't know what a > chocolate baked pudding is. Seriously? I would think you'd at least have HEARD of it... Here you are. https://www.google.com/search?biw=94....0.63CzDVG-Ylk Lenona. |
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![]() > wrote in message ... > On Tuesday, April 7, 2015 at 11:44:19 PM UTC-4, Julie Bove wrote: >> <lenona> wrote in message > >> > Does anyone know (besides chopping it up and using it for chocolate >> > chip >> > cookies) how to substitute milk chocolate for baking chocolate in, >> > say, devil's food cake or chocolate baked pudding? > >> >> You can't! Baking chocolate is unsweetened. > > Quite right - I was very absent-minded when I typed that. What I meant > was, how can you use milk chocolate in recipes that call for baking > chocolate or semi-sweet - that is, how much sugar do you have to subtract > from the recipe in each of the two cases? > >> I don't know what a >> chocolate baked pudding is. > > Seriously? I would think you'd at least have HEARD of it... > > Here you are. > > https://www.google.com/search?biw=94....0.63CzDVG-Ylk Oh! I made similar when I was a kid but it went by another name. I think it was called hot fudge brownies or something like that. |
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Well, I looked in the supermarket and in Wikipedia, for one - and it looks
as though on-sale chocolate bunnies are only useful if the recipe calls for milk chocolate. For one thing, Wikipedia implies that milk chocolate is often only 10% chocolate liquor. Also, while Baker's Chocolate is over $9 a pound (both unsweetened and semisweet!), generic chocolate candy bars can hover around $4 a pound - which is pretty much the same as on-sale bunnies. Plus, while generic chocolate chips are not the same as semisweet bars (in the former, the first ingredient is sugar, but that's the second ingredient in the latter), those cost distinctly less than $4 a pound. Lenona. |
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![]() > wrote in message ... > Well, I looked in the supermarket and in Wikipedia, for one - and it looks > as though on-sale chocolate bunnies are only useful if the recipe calls > for milk chocolate. For one thing, Wikipedia implies that milk chocolate > is often only 10% chocolate liquor. > > Also, while Baker's Chocolate is over $9 a pound (both unsweetened and > semisweet!), generic chocolate candy bars can hover around $4 a pound - > which is pretty much the same as on-sale bunnies. Plus, while generic > chocolate chips are not the same as semisweet bars (in the former, the > first ingredient is sugar, but that's the second ingredient in the > latter), those cost distinctly less than $4 a pound. You could always use them to make haystacks or clusters. |
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