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Honey Blog Usgab
09 June 2007, 12:51
The Power Of Honey. Cooking.
- Reduce the liquid in a recipe by 1/4 cup for each cup of honey you use.
- Replace sugar with honey: Simply substitute honey, cup for cup, in place of sugar. As a rule reduce the liquid by a quarter cup for every cup of honey used. In baked goods add 1/2 teaspoon of baking soda for every cup of honey used and bake at a temperature 25 degrees lower than instructions call for. In cookie recipes using eggs and no additional liquid, increase the flour by 2 tablespoons per cup of honey, or enough flour to give the desired consistency. Chill before shaping and baking.
- For every cup of honey used in a recipe, increase the baking soda by 1/2 teaspoon.
- Reduce the oven temperature by 25º F to prevent over browning.
- Use honey when brewing beer for a great tasting, light beer.
- When baking cookies and scones, use honey to help reduce crumbling.
- For easy measuring, coat the measuring utensil with vegetable oil or nonstick cooking spray before you measure the honey.
- To freeze sliced or crushed fruits for the winter, use one part strained honey to 4 or 5 parts fruit. For whole fruits, add one cup of water to every 2 cups of honey. Use just enough of the diluted honey to cover the fruit.
- Add honey to fresh fruit or fruit salads. Honey's acidic nature prevents fruit from turning brown. Use light-flavored honey so it doesn't mask the fruit flavor.
- Make your own honey butter spread. Beat together 1/2 cup margarine or butter and 1/3 cup of honey until smooth (about 3 or 4 minutes) and you have honey butter spread. Beelicious!To glaze meat, such as ham or turkey, turn the oven temperature to 225º F and baste with honey every 10 to 15 minutes during the last hour of baking.
- Add honey, one teaspoon at a time, to foods that are too spicy or too salty, such as chili. Honey will tame down the spices while enhancing the flavor; and you won't notice the sweetness.
- Preserve fruit with honey ( http://www.honey.com/recipes/canning/pfruit.html ).
- Pickle and preserve vegetables with honey ( http://www.honey.com/recipes/canning/pveggie.html ).
- Honey contains a wide array of vitamins, such as vitamin B6, thiamin, niacin, riboflavin and pantothenic acid.
- Use honey as a topping on ice cream, pureed fruit or on meat.
- For a sweet, shiny glaze on your desert, mix honey with melted butter and drizzle over angel food cake or pound cake.
- Need a topping for cupcakes or a carrot cake? Soften an 8 oz. package of cream cheese and mix with 1/4 cup of honey and a pinch of salt. Cream until smooth.
- Brush honey on warm baked goods for a sweet shiny glaze.
- Combine equal parts Dijon-style mustard and honey. Spread on sandwiches, use as a dip for vegetables and pretzels, or brush on grilled meat and sausages.
- Drizzle honey over pancakes or cornbread.
- Sweeten your barbecue sauce by adding 2 tbsp honey into prepared sauce. Add more to suit your taste.
- Granulation does not affect the taste or purity of honey. Honey never spoils. It may be used granulated or restored to a liquid. To re-liquefy honey place the open glass or can container (never plastic) in a pan of hot water until all crystals melt.
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