Milk Street RecipesAsked Feb 29, 2024 by Becky W.
On the Parmesan and Herb Turkey Burgers, has anyone prepped and shaped the burgers and frozen for future cooking?
Answered by Lynn Clark
Hi Becky -
These should be fine to freeze. Just make sure to thaw completely in the refrigerator before cooking.
Best,
The Milk Street Cooking Team
Read More Milk Street RecipesAsked Feb 23, 2024 by Mary L.
I am in the process of making the Fennel-Rosemary Porchetta roast for Sunday dinner.
I have a smaller Boston butt than the one called for in the recipe and am wondering how long it should roast.
The recipe called for a 7-8lb roast but mine is just 5lbs. I was thinking maybe 5-6 hours??
Please advise.
Thanks
MaryEllen L
Answered by April Dodd
Hi Mary - thanks for reaching out! We apologize for the delay in responding to your question and hope that your Sunday dinner came out great. The cook time adjustment here will depend on whether your Boston Butt is small because it has been cut down to size (for example, cut in half cross-wise, also called "split"), or whether it is simply a smaller, but whole, cut of meat. In the former case, the cook time shouldn't need to be adjusted, as the diameter of the pork butt isn't changed. In the latter case, where you have an entire pork butt that happens to be on the small size, you can plan for 1.15 hours per pound of meat. So, you are right that a 5 pound pork butt would require between 5-6 hours in the oven.
We would love to hear how long you ended up roasting yours for and how it came out!
-April D.
Read More Milk Street RecipesAsked Feb 22, 2024 by jean L.
I'm making this right now and I don't know how much cocoa powder to use. the recipe calls for 42 grams (1/2 cup).
It's either 42 grams (1/3 cup) or 63 grams (1/2 cup). Which is it?
Answered by Lynn Clark
Hi Jean -
It's 42 grams. In our testing, 1 cup of cocoa weighed 85 grams. Therefore, 1/2 cup is technically 42.5 grams. We simply rounded down in this case. You can find the various weights from our testing on this chart.
Best,
The Milk Street Cooking Team
Read More Milk Street RecipesAsked Feb 19, 2024 by Carlos D.
can you share what specific pan was used in the video for the making of this recipe? If not, could you recommend a brand of pan that meets the size and heat specifications of the recipe? I’m having difficulty finding a pan that has the heat tolerances necessary for this recipe (500°). Thank you!
Answered by Lynn Clark
Hi Carlos -
We aren't sure the exact pan we used but it's an aluminum pan with a traditional finish (not nonstick). You can often find these at a baking supply or restaurant supply store. This one from Williams Sonoma would work too, despite it saying it can only go to 450 degrees. This warning is probably to prevent you from broiling in it, but we think it would be OK at 500 degrees.
Best,
The Milk Street Cooking Team
Read More Milk Street RecipesAsked Feb 18, 2024 by Carlos C.
Hi,
in season 5 episode 14 you showed a wonderful cheesecake that was magnificent. i went into the Milk Street website to get the recipe, and it is not there. There are other recipes for cheesecake but not the one shown on TV? How can I get the recipes on TV?
Answered by Lynn Clark
Hi Carlos -
Here is the recipe for Chèvre Cheesecake with Black Pepper Crust. In the future if you are looking for recipes that were featured on the TV show, you can go to the TV tab on the website and find the episode you are looking for. When you click on the episode it will show you the video for the episode, a description of the episode, and links to the recipes featured in the episode (you will find these on the left and right hand side of the page).
Best,
The Milk Street Cooking Team
Read More Milk Street RecipesAsked Feb 16, 2024 by Helen F.
In your recipe for Chocolate Biscotti with Pistachios, Almonds, and Dried Cherries, what kind of dried cherries do you use: sweet or tart?
Answered by Lynn Clark
Hi Helen -
All dried cherries are actually tart cherries so whatever cherries you find in the supermarket should work in the recipe.
Best,
The Milk Street Cooking Team
Read More Milk Street RecipesAsked Feb 14, 2024 by Susan G.
After living in my house for 10 years I just discovered that my oven has a Proof setting! If I use this to proof the dough for this focaccia recipe, will it change the required proofing time? I think the oven temperature on the Proof setting is between 90 and 100 degrees.
Answered by Lynn Clark
Hi Susan -
That seems pretty warm to us. A professional proofing box is usually between 80-90 degrees and yeast does its best work in that temperature range since it will proof at a slower rate. For most bread dough the proof setting on your oven will work (though you will need to shorten proofing times), but we wouldn't recommend it for this recipe.
One of the key qualities of this recipe/dough is the long, slow rise and fall and rise. We think this would happen too quickly with the temperature so high and would negatively affect the final focaccia. While a typical focaccia might rise for one to two hours, our dough rises for 5 1/2-6 hours, during which the dough rises, falls, then rises again, a process that leaves it looking and feeling blown out. This produces more gas than a shorter rise. Though some of that gas depletes over time—resulting in less dramatic oven spring when the focaccia first hits the hot oven—the remaining gas, combined with the steam and gluten structure, creates more and larger air pockets in the dough.
Hope that helps!
Best,
The Milk Street Cooking Team
Read More Milk Street RecipesAsked Feb 07, 2024 by Carol H.
In your email today you refer to a Beer Cheese sauce, with a link to the recipe. I would like to make this cheesy sauce, but without the beer. Can I substitute water?
Answered by Lynn Clark
Hi Carol -
We would probably recommend substituting milk for the beer in the recipe instead of water, since it would be more flavorful than plain water. That being said, we haven't tested it this way for this recipe. If you try it, let us know how it turns out!
Best,
The Milk Street Cooking Team
Read More Milk Street RecipesAsked Feb 06, 2024 by Rita Y.
I don't see any recipes using tilapia. Won't you please do an article and recipes about this economical fish? Farming practices and regulations have improved greatly since this fish was first introduced.
Answered by Lynn Clark
Hi Rita -
We will pass this along to the editorial team! In the meantime, one tip for everyone is to make sure to do some research on where your tilapia comes from and how it is raised. Fish farms are regulated by the countries in which they operate. For example, China is a major source of tilapia, but in the past China's tilapia farms have not been held to standards required by the US. As a result, the best thing to do is to seek out fish from farms with third-party environmental or aquaculture certifications. A certification from the Aquaculture Stewardship Council (ASC) is one of the best ways to regulate the quality of your tilapia.
Best,
The Milk Street Team
Read More Milk Street RecipesAsked Feb 01, 2024 by Colleen B.
Can this delicious recipe be made into muffins and if so what's the optimum baking time?
We've made the bread and love it but we eat waaaaaay too fast!!!! Muffins might slow us down a bit.
Thank you!
Colleen Bergin
colleenquilts@gmail.com
Answered by Lynn Clark
Hi Colleen -
We haven't tried this as muffins, but we know some other folks have done it in a mini loaf pan and baked for 20-25 minutes so we would recommend probably only 10-15 minutes for muffins.
Best,
The Milk Street Cooking Team
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