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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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I recently asked for a recipe for Baked Beans and got some good ones as
well as a recipe for Boston Brown Bread that I can't wait to try. (Thanks, KIB). Traditional recipes call for it to be cooked in leftover vegetable or coffee cans but since it would take me a while to empty the large cans required for a batch, I wonder if anyone knows of a source for reusable pans for this purpose? Thanks again. |
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You could open and empty a coffee can, put the coffee in a plastic
container with lid. Then wash the can, etc.etc. Better than going out and buying something new? Just an idea. Cheers. Nancree |
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I thought of that, but I'd probably make the recipe twice a month, and
I don't want a lot of coffee sitting in plastic bags getting stale. (Four cans of coffee will probably last the better part of a year for me) . Thanks anyway |
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![]() PickyJaz wrote: > Nancree's suggestion is spot on, and I've made these breads many times. > I'm a containers hoarder for the giving foods to others rather than > expecting them to remember to whom a (hopefully) empty dish could > belong and have to return it. The used to be called "one pound coffee > cans" are perfect for the baking of such breads, but just about any can > size works quite well. A few years back my daughter asked for > mini-loaf pans for Christmas, so I made various non-yeast breads in > soup cans for her as well. I then wrapped each loaf in clear wrap to > place the loaves into the mini-pan sections to cello-wrap all real > pretty as a bigger gift. Works for me! > > Picky ------ What a clever idea, Picky. I'm going to save a few soup cans, now. Nancree |
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It sounds like I can use foil bread pans.
Yes? |
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![]() > wrote in message oups.com... >I thought of that, but I'd probably make the recipe twice a month, and > I don't want a lot of coffee sitting in plastic bags getting stale. > (Four cans of coffee will probably last the better part of a year for > me) . > Thanks anyway Put the coffee in ziplock bags and freeze it. I do this all the time with whole beans. harriet & critters |
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In article .com>,
" > wrote: > I thought of that, but I'd probably make the recipe twice a month, and > I don't want a lot of coffee sitting in plastic bags getting stale. > (Four cans of coffee will probably last the better part of a year for > me) . > Thanks anyway Canned, ground coffee is stale already, so there won't be much of a difference. |
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