Professional Tips for Incredible Baking-Part Deux

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Hello Friends! I posted my original post “Professional Tips for Professional Baking” a few weeks ago and the response has been…whew. But “whew” in a great way! Y’all are baking nerds like me AND I DIG IT.

So I’m back with Part Deux! Because There are literally so many tips and I could never really run out of them.

Let’s go!

Sit Down and Read the Recipe. The WHOLE THING.

Recipe Skimmers, hear me out:

When you just skim the first part of a recipe before diving in fully, you are setting yourself up for failure.

When you look at the recipe picture and start taking out boxes and cans of ingredients before reading anything else, you’re setting yourself up for failure.

Unless the goal is to be frazzled and frustrated while you bake. (That should never, ever be the goal by the way)

Want to be calm in the kitchen? Have fun with your bake?

Take ten minutes before you start and read that entire recipe from start to finish. Grab a cup of coffee, tea, orange juice, or even a mimosa (this is a judgment-free zone) and sit down with just the recipe. Don’t take out an ingredient or a single piece of equipment. You have a date with a piece of paper first.

Why?

Because reading the whole recipe will let you know if there are any tricky steps that you have to account for. It will let you know if you have all of the ingredients (or if a trip to the store is imminent). It will let you know if you were supposed to start this recipe a day ahead (like my Carrot Cake Pound Cake or my Snickerdoodle Cookie recipes).

Reading the whole recipe sets you up to have a good, calm bake. You want that!

Time is an Ingredient

I’ve said recently that “time is an ingredient”. This is something that my mother taught me when she was teaching me to cook. And it’s as profound today as it was back then.

You see, you cannot rush the baking process. The time that it takes to cream butter and sugar is just…the time it takes. The baking process won’t get any faster if you compulsively open the oven door or pump up the temperature while your cookies are in the oven (indeed, those are two very good ways to ruin something).

To become an incredible baker, you have to start thinking about time as an ingredient of its own. Time can make or break a recipe. An abundance of time can help you work through a tricky recipe. Too little time will stress you to the end of your wits, even for simple things like my Southern Rice Pudding.

That’s why you won’t ever catch me on a baking competition show. I’d be without one of my favorite ingredients: time.

Focus on the Small Stuff-Techniques Will Make or Break You

Hi! Broken Record Shani here.

A great recipe means nothing if it’s not coupled with incredible techniques. The true secret to great baking is to practice the techniques. And to do so repetitively.

Technique is a kind of language, Friends. If you don’t use it, you’ll lose it. You must practice in order to develop proficiency. And then keep practicing.

Once you know how and why to practice a certain technique a certain way, you’ll revert to muscle memory every time you have to do it.

A perfect example is in creaming butter and sugar.

Creaming butter and sugar is such a fundamental part of baking; it’s the process whereby you force air into your your batter or dough. You cream butter and sugar to help create lighter baked goods.

It’s not just for show, and it’s not a technique to just gloss over. But it took me a full year to take this simple technique seriously.

Now I obsess about it. It’s crucial to me to have perfectly creamed butter and sugar every time, else I risk having cakes and cookies that don’t reach their full potential.

We’re all about reaching full potential over here. Because who wants dense cake?

Don’t Substitute Unless You Know Baking Science

Friends, I field questions all the time about baking substitutions.

Here is my answer.

Please don’t substitute ingredients unless you understand how those ingredients impact your recipe. Baking science is real and it will really jack you up if you’re not careful.

Because sugar does more than make things sweet. Eggs, liquid, and even flour are multi-tools that have the ability to make or break a recipe.

Also, to properly substitute one ingredient, you usually have to change other ingredients to get the intended result from the recipe. So, that “one” ingredient you’re trying to swap could end up requiring changes to five other ingredients. #TheMoreYouKnow

If you know baking science, and how ingredients work together in a recipe, then this is not as much of a concern. When you sit down to read the recipe from start to finish (*ahem*, step one), you’ll be able to identify what you want to swap and what else needs to change in order for the recipe to be successful.

Because if you don’t?

::insert deflating balloon GIF here::

Want to proceed with more confidence when you swap ingredients? Check out Baking 101! In that series, you’ll learn how to swap ingredients successfully to make the cakes of your dreams!

Friends, I’m growing to love this series! Let me know if you’d like a Part Trois!

❤️

Southern Rice Pudding

In 2023, the theme of Black History Month is Black Resistance.  Eat the Culture is recognizing the remarkable and underrated resistance of our ancestors in bringing culinary traditions across the Atlantic to shape the vibrance of Black cuisine that we know and love today. They physically and mentally carried African foodways across the deadly Middle Passage to pass down through generations. This year’s Eat the Culture Black History Month Virtual Potluck traces popular dishes of the Diaspora from their West African roots to North America and beyond.  You can grab the full list of recipes from this year’s collaboration on the  Eat the Culture website.

Friends, I am THRILLED to announce that I’ve been selected to participate in the Eat the Culture 2023 Black History Month Potluck event! And, as part of the event, I got to create a Southern Rice Pudding that absolutely knocked my socks off.

It is the most luscious, decadent, creamy rice pudding that I’ve ever eaten. Topped with my now-famous brandied cherries, this is rice pudding to the nth degree, Honey.

Let’s talk about it. Because it’s perfectly sweet (without being too sweet), it’s incredibly creamy (thanks to my rice choice and two finishing ingredients), and it’s literally so easy to make.

The most expensive ingredient is actually…time.

“Time is an Ingredient”

One thing that I am so grateful to my mother taught me about our family’s cooking legacy, is that time is an ingredient.

She counseled me to not cook when I was rushed. She taught me how to properly braise, and roast, and baste, and watch. That rushing to make something won’t ever make it better. That conveniences like a microwave (which we got when I was in high school and which she refused to use) would lead to the downfall of “good food”.

There are a few recipes on my site that use time as a real ingredient (for example, my Blueberry Cardamom Sauce). Time is necessary to help flavors develop, to soften textures, to get to the objective. You cannot cheat time. And Friend, a microwave is NOT IT.

This was a central premise of my education. Both as a cook and as a baker later on. But it started with her mother. And her mother’s mother. And generations long before them and thousands of miles away.

About Southern Rice Pudding

One of the reasons I was so thrilled to participate in this event, was because we had the opportunity to look at dishes across the African diaspora, and how those dishes have changed over the years and miles.

It is so grounding to think of a dish that you’ve consumed all of your life, and think about how your family and ancestors ate that dish thousands of miles away and hundreds of years ago. And how they continue to consume that dish to this day.

This Southern Rice Pudding is one such dish. What we know as “rice pudding” is based on a West African dish called Thiakry. The preparation is much the same, except that the original dish uses millet instead of rice.

Making this recipe was such a full-circle moment for me. You see, my parents were born and raised in the South (LUCKY!), but I was born and raised in the Midwestern United States. That meant that my parents had the Herculean task of teaching me everything that there was to know about Southern cuisine. And that task included helping me understand how the cuisine that we were eating in the 1980s was derived from African cultures.

My parents were up to the task and they approached it zealously. ????

Southern Rice Pudding Ingredients

Arborio Rice: Yes. Arborio. Not Jasmine. Not Basmati. Arborio. The starches in arborio rice make this rice pudding impossibly creamy. I tested this rice pudding almost two dozen times, Friends. You want arborio rice.

Whole Milk: Whole milk adds to the luxuriousness of this particular rice pudding. It helps make the egg custard just….delicious.

Eggs: In this recipe, as with many recipes, eggs are a multi-tool. The fatty yolk adds…you guessed it…luxuriousness, while the protein-rich egg whites help the custard (and ultimately the pudding) thicken.

Kosher Salt: Salt is very important in any dessert; it balances the sugar and keeps the dessert from becoming cloyingly sweet. If using table salt for this recipe, cut the amount in half.

Granulated Sugar: The granulated sugar in this dessert adds sweetness! But we don’t want it too sweet, so we have some balancing ingredients. Too much granulated sugar will make this dessert cloyingly sweet, and nobody wants that.

Pure Vanilla Extract: Pure vanilla extract gives this rice pudding a warmth that cannot be beat. We add vanilla extract after cooking so that we don’t lose the potency of the vanilla extract.

Greek Yogurt: One of the absolute stars of the show. Thiakry is traditionally known for being not overly sweet, and even a little bit tangy. I absolutely wanted that element in this rice pudding, and I found that Greek yogurt added the tang without adding too much additional fat (because, with whole milk, butter, and eggs, we don’t need much more fat). It was just perfect.

Butter: Butter goes in at the end with the Greek yogurt. Friend, there is no way to describe how creamy that 1-2 punch at the end gives to this rice pudding. It must be tried to be believed.

Toppings: Traditionally, rice pudding can be topped with coconut, raisins, cinnamon, nutmeg, or really any spice that complements this tangy, sweet dessert. I chose to pair it with one of my favorite toppers of all time: my brandied cherries. Because OMG WHY NOT.

To Make this Southern Rice Pudding

This Southern Rice Pudding is actually quite simple to make! You need some time to make it, but once it’s complete, it’s so worth it.

Start by adding the whole milk, granulated sugar, eggs, and salt to a 2.5-quart saucepan. Use a balloon whisk and whisk to combine them. Keep in mind that the mixture will NOT completely combine at this point because of the egg yolks:

Next, put on a stove over medium-low heat. Whisk occasionally for the next 30-45 minutes. The mixture will gradually transform, and the egg yolks will just…disappear.

You are ready to move on when the custard looks like the last picture. There should be absolutely no egg yolk visible in the custard, and it should be slightly thicker than it was when you started. Don’t skimp on this step!

Next, add your cooked arborio rice. Friend, I tried this recipe with just about every type of rice that’s commercially available on the market. Please trust me and use arborio. And please trust me when I say that uncooked rice is not your friend in this recipe.

Oh. And please rinse your rice before cooking.

Anyway…

Add the rice and continue cooking on medium-low heat until the pudding has a creamy, loose texture. Like this!

Once you get to this point, add your greek yogurt, pure vanilla extract and butter and allow them to melt into the rice pudding before stirring.

That’s it! You’re done! You’ve made the most amazing rice pudding of your life!

Top with raisins, coconut, cinnamon, or my amazing brandied cherries for a delicious treat.

You can serve warm or cold, but I prefer to chill this amazing dessert for about 2-3 hours before eating.

Important Tools Used in this Rice Pudding

Below, you’ll find some tools that I used for this rice pudding. These are the tools that I use all the time in my own kitchen.

**I get paid a small commission if you purchase directly from these links, but they are truly amazing products that you’ll find in my kitchen.**

2.5-Quart Saucepan

Balloon Whisk

Wooden Spoon

Heat-Proof Bowl

I am so grateful for the opportunity to participate in Eat the Culture’s Black History Month potluck event! Any time I get to spend time thinking about my Mommy in the kitchen, it’s a good thing.

I hope you LOVE this recipe!

Professional Tips for Incredible Baking

Hello, Friend! Happy New Year! I’m here today to share a bit of a secret with you. And that secret is: if you want to be an amazing baker by September, you want to start working on your baking skills now.

You heard me right. There’s no magic that separates the professionals from the home bakers. There are a few techniques that they’ve mastered by practicing.

Read on for four of the tips that professionals use!

Bake All Year

The best way to become an incredible baker is to practice. Consistently. Just like with any other skill, if you don’t do it regularly, you get rusty! And while everyone will choke down that dry Thanksgiving cake from a rusty baker, nobody really wants that dry Thanksgiving cake from a rusty baker.

The Champagne Pound Cake-Cover image

The biggest difference between a rookie and a professional isn’t some magical skill or a “baking gene”. It’s practice.

Yup. Practice. If you practice the hard things in January and February, you’ll be more confident and consistent than ever by September.

Pick 1-2 Baking Gurus and Stick With Them!

The advent of the internet has brought an EXPLOSION of baking content. And that’s good and bad.

Because every baking guru has their own philosophies and taste levels, and everything they create is tailored to those taste levels.

Even me. ????

While there are many universal truths in the baking world, there are also many subjective factors that recipe developers/baking mentors use. If you’re following a dozen baking mentors, you’re bound to end up confused when their philosophies differ. And your own baking will suffer.

One perfect example is the age-old question: “how many grams are in a cup of all-purpose flour?” According to King Arthur Baking’s ingredient weight chart, one cup of all-purpose flour weighs 120 grams. Another resource (Omnivores Cookbook) measures one cup of all-purpose flour as high as 150 grams! That is an immense difference that would lead to two very different cakes!

What do I consider to be a cup of flour? I thought you’d never ask! ??

http://www.ashleighbingphotography.com/

For my taste, I consider one cup of all-purpose flour to be 128 grams. I came to that number after years of experimentation. 128 grams gets me to the texture that I’m looking for. It suits my taste.

This is but one example of the ways that recipe developers differ. If you’re trying to learn how to become a better baker by following a dozen bakers online, I strongly recommend that you choose 1-2 mentors whose taste levels are similar to yours. Make them your home base! Even better, jump into baking textbooks! That’s where I got my real start with baking and I don’t regret it at all!

Check Your Leavening (And Use the Right One!)

I get it. Leavening (baking powder, baking soda, yeast) is usually one of the smallest measurements in a recipe. Because of this, it’s very easy to overlook its importance to the recipe.

Not to be dramatic, but YOUR LEAVENING COULD SINK YOUR RECIPE. Put the soup spoon down. It’s not the right tool for this job.

Okay. That was dramatic. But it was also very true. Those tiny amounts of these ingredients could make a huge difference when it comes to the success or failure of your recipe.

You always, always, always need to check your leavening before you bake. This is especially true if it’s been a while since you used it.

Also, you always, always, always need to use the correct leavening for your recipe. The names might sound similar, but they work in vastly different ways.

Not sure how to check your leavening? Check here for baking powder and baking soda, and click here for yeast!

Metric Measurement > Imperial Measurement

This is my hill, Friend. This is it.

I started my foray into baking, thinking that Imperial measurement (using measuring cups for measurement) “was the way my Mommy baked, so it will be the way I bake.”

Friend, Imperial measurement isn’t for everyone. And it’s consistent for NO ONE.

There are people who can turn out consistently delicious cakes and cookies and breads with Imperial measurement. They are unicorns. I am no unicorn, so I’m firmly on the Metric measurement train.

Like, I bought an annual pass on that train. And I renew it every year. Got my own seat on that train with my own butt print in it. I will never, ever leave that train.

I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again…if you want to improve your consistency and confidence in ONE BAKING SESSION, use a digital kitchen scale and metric measurement. Because, in baking, the ability to recreate a recipe in a consistently delicious manner is THE FLEX. It’s the only flex.

Bonus: Join Me for Baking 101!

Friends, I am serious about getting you to your baking goals this year. So, I’ve created a 21-part Baking 101 Series for you! When you’re ready to improve your baking and reach new heights, these classes will be here to help you reach your goals. ❤️ I can’t wait to bake with you, and see all of your amazing improvements!

Seven Quick Tips for Holiday Baking

Hello My Friends! Holiday Baking is here! This is our Super Bowl and I’m here for it!

Listen. I know you don’t have a ton of time today. So I’m putting together a quick and dirty holiday guide for you to be your MOST successful with your holiday baking! Let’s get to it!

1. Test New Recipes

Friend, I know that some of my recipes are a bit…involved. With that said, I would never recommend making a new recipe and taking it to a holiday or family gathering without making it first.

From start to finish. And TESTING IT. Because Friend, the stigma of “Brenda brought that disastrous Jell-O mold last Christmas” will never leave you.

2. Use a Digital Kitchen Scale and Metric Measurement for Baking

Friend, a $9.00 digital kitchen scale will change your baking for the better. It will improve your consistency, and in turn your confidence!

Using metric measurement is key to professional results. For more on this, take a look at this article!

3. Properly Cream Butter and Sugar, Friends!

Perfecting this one step will immediately improve the quality of your baked goods; properly creamed butter and sugar give lightness to your baked goods that you simply cannot achieve with any other technique. You can learn how to do it here!

4. Temperature Matters!

There are two thermometers that will get you to baking greatness: an oven thermometer and an instant-read thermometer.

The oven thermometer will tell you the actual temperature of your oven. Because 350°F on the oven dial and an actual 350°F can be two very different things. My top oven? It’s cold by a whopping TWENTY FIVE DEGREES. #rude

An instant-read thermometer is one of the most valuable tools in your baking arsenal for cakes. Again, it’s the consistency factor. But there’s also the fact that if you properly bake a cake to the correct internal temperature, you will never ever have to worry about dry cake ever again.

NBD.

5. Test Your Yeast First. Always.

Friend, I understand the love of a quick yeast recipe. I get it. The temptation to dump all of your ingredients into a stand mixer and watch them work is great. I GET IT.

But you should always test your yeast before baking to make sure it is alive. Because there are few things more sad than pulling the cover off of a bread dough and seeing…nothing.

Like no rise at all. And there’s no recovering from that. It’s a whole do-over.

Want to know more? Check out this post about yeast!

6. More on Leavening…Make Sure You Use the Right One!

If a recipe calls for baking soda…please use it! Subbing baking powder for baking soda (or vice versa) can completely upset the apple cart when it comes to a recipe.

Leavening impacts taste, caramelization, texture…and much more. There’s a lot of power in that supercharged ingredient!

If you don’t have what you need, a trip to the store is in order. (sorry)

Want to learn more about leavening? Check out this post!

7. Check out the BwB Home Baking Academy!

Friends, the best way to improve your baking knowledge is to study and practice! For me, I found that finding a “baking mentor” (a textbook) and sticking with that reference helped me make great strides.

On that note, I have great news for you! The BwB Home Baking Academy is an amazing resource for you, where you can learn how to improve your baking skills in one place, from one instructor (me!) and have fun in the process!

Check out our classes to see what we have to offer!

http://www.ashleighbingphotography.com/

I love y’all. This has been a truly amazing year, and you have been a huge part of that! Thank you for supporting Begin with Butter, and for being a part of this incredible community. ??

(Some of) My Holiday Brunch Favorites!

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I’m saying it here, Friends: I’m embracing the pot luck holiday brunch!

Because Friends, we are not carrying the tradition of one person doing it all into the holidays this year. We can distribute the labor and make it great, and everyone can enjoy themselves.

This advice is for me too. ???? Because I am usually the one doing all of it on Christmas morning, afternoon and evening. And I’m doing away with that this year.

So, this year, everyone can bring a dish to pass for holiday brunch. Here are some of the recipes that I’m considering for my special contribution!

And no, I will not be featuring butter boards at my holiday brunch. Those…are not for me.

Special Occasion Cinnamon Roll

This is the one. My absolute favorite cinnamon roll of all time. It begins with an amazing sponge, which adds a beautiful texture and flavor to this cinny that cannot be beat. This is the first thing that I’ll be bringing to brunch over the holidays.

My Classic Sandwich Bread

If there’s a cold cut tray at the brunch, then I’m pre-slicing my Classic Sandwich Bread and serving it up. This bread is so soft and fluffy and so much better than anything store-bought.

Shoot. Whether it’s cold cuts or leftover turkey, beef tenderloin, or ham, this is the bread that I’m bringing to the brunch. It comes together quickly and makes a big impact on the table.

Red Wine Black Forest Pound Cake

This Red Wine Black Forest Pound Cake was the final cake of the Twelve Days of Pound Cake 2022, and for good reason. It’s so special and so delicious that it deserves to be on all of your holiday tables this year.

Snickerdoodle Pound Cake

This Snickerdoodle Pound Cake is the cake that put Begin with Butter on the map. To this day, it is the #1 recipe on my whole site, and it’s perfectly spicy and decadent for the holidays. This is a statement cake.

THE BwB Snickerdoodle Cookie

We are serious snickerdoodle connoisseurs around here. ???? Whether it’s the cake or the cookies, anything snickerdoodle is gone in sixty seconds flat. And THE BwB Snickerdoodle Cookie is the rule.

Goat Cheese Skillet Focaccia

This is one of my favorite things to eat all year, Friends. But there is something just so special about seeing this amazing Goat Cheese Skillet Focaccia on a holiday table.

Gingerbread Pound Cake

It’s not the holidays without a gingerbread something on the table. And this Gingerbread Pound Cake creates the ultimate sense of anticipation…as soon as you open the box, people will be clamoring for a slice!

Limoncello Layer Cake

This Limoncello Layer Cake is such a humble brag. It’s the cake you put on the holiday brunch table when you’re making a play for the center spot on the dessert table. IYKYK.

Perfect Sunday Dinner Rolls

These Perfect Sunday Dinner Rolls are the bread that’s most requested by the young and the seasoned in my home.

I am among the seasoned. And I still love this bread. This is the one that’s just nostalgic enough to remind me of all of the amazing dinner rolls of my youth. My mother was magic with bread.

Blueberry Cardamom Sauce

This Blueberry Cardamom Sauce instantly improves anything it touches. It works equally well with frozen blueberries and fresh blueberries, so you’ll want to have some of this on hand for those brunch pancakes and waffles.

Y’all, I’m just getting started with my holiday brunch menu, but I wanted to share some of the frontrunners! I hope you all get some good ideas from this mini round-up!

Happy Holidays, Baking Besties! Let me know in the comments, below, which of the BwB recipes you’ll be serving this holiday season!

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