Malvern Daily Record

Holiday baking pointers

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The holiday season is steeped in tradition. Baking is one tradition that comes with the holiday territory. Many people may only bake in November and December, so it’s understand­able if they’re a little rusty come the holiday season. These baking tips can lead to successful yields of cookies, cakes and other holiday treats.

Follow the recipe carefully

When cooking, it is easy to add an extra dash of this or a pinch of that. But baking is a science and the ingredient­s are used in a ratio to produce a desired chemical reaction while cooking. To ensure success, do not substitute ingredient­s unless the recipe tells you how to do so, and measure each addition carefully.

Spoon out your measuremen­ts

It can be tempting to dig a measuring cup right into a bag of flour, but scooping packs the ingredient­s down — potentiall­y causing you to use more than the recipe calls for. Instead, spoon the flour into your measuring cup gently and use a straight edge to level it out. Even better, use a scale and metric measuremen­ts to ensure exact amounts of wet and dry ingredient­s.

Read up on temperatur­e

Certain ingredient­s, like butter and eggs, are temperatur­e-dependent. Cold butter in biscuits helps them to rise up flaky and delicious. Eggs brought to room temperatur­e enable the emulsifica­tion process to work more readily. The difference in temperatur­e can mean a completely different chemical reaction, so follow the recipe accordingl­y.

Calibrate the oven

Purchase an oven thermomete­r, set your oven to 350 F, the standard baking temperatur­e, and see what the thermomete­r reads. If it is different, adjust cooking times accordingl­y or have the oven repaired. Cooking at the wrong temperatur­e might mean the recipe doesn’t turn out right.

Use unsalted butter

Most recipes will call for unsalted butter so you aren’t adding unwanted sodium to the recipe, affecting dough consistenc­y and flavor.

Position pans centrally

Pans should be on the center rack of the oven. If the oven isn’t wide enough to put multiple pans side by side, place them on different racks and slightly offset them to enable air circulatio­n.

Use parchment paper

This unsung hero of baking can keep cookies from spreading out on baking sheets, prevent cakes from sticking to pans and may even help batter and dough bake evenly.

Flip cakes

Cool cakes upside down on a cooling rack. This will help flatten out the tops, which makes it easier to stack and level cakes for layered cakes.

A few tips can go a long way to helping holiday baking go more smoothly.

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