Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Baking, Cooking, Cooling, and Chilling with Alex 😎: Exhausting Frosting

Who doesn't love honey? Who doesn't love frosting? I'm not sure but they won't be too excited with a blog about how I made honey frosting. As my natural cookbook tells, "this light, sweet, fluffy frosting is enough for a two-layer cake including the center, the sides, and the top" (Pinkwater 216) so I'm hyped to see how much we'll end up with. I choose honey frosting because out of this cookbook, it seemed to be the most appetizing thing. To get things started, you need:

2 egg whites
¼ tsp. salt
1 cup warm honey
½ tsp. almond extract
(you can substitute ½ tsp. of lemon extract or vanilla extract for the almond extract)


Material wise, you'll need:

1 small saucepan
1 medium-sized mixing bowl
egg beater or electric mixer
measuring cup
measuring spoons
1 table knife and one spoon for spreading on frosting

There's not too many steps to make frosting in general. To start off, you have to warm up that honey over the stove on very low for about a minute. After that, remove it from the stove and set it to the side (Pinkwater 217).
Enthralling activity

The next thing you'll want to do is get those egg whites into the mixing bowl with the salt and you'll want to beat that with the egg beater or electric mixer until stiff but not dry (Pinkwater 217).

Tasty

The third step is to gradually add honey and the extract (I substituted in vanilla extract instead) to the egg whites while beating constantly (Pinkwater 217).

(Imagine me beating the eggs vigorously while multitasking in the honey)

The last step, probably the best part, is to beat the mix until the frosting holds its shape which is about 2½ minutes with the electric mixer or 4 minutes with the egg beater (Pinkwater 217).

My arms are ruined

My final result, similar to frosting, tasted quite terrible. The smell of it as well just didn't seem right either. So in my last step, I told that frosting to chill 😎

"That's straight embarrassing" -My older sister/photographer, Haelee

In summary, despite my attempts to make the best natural honey frosting, I feel I learned a little. Life is very alike with cooking. Like for instance, I substituted vanilla extract instead of almond extract and stuff like that is done all the time in baking and cooking. Transferring that to the real world, some actions or solutions can be interchangeable, some better and some worse for the situation. I also learned that the end result of somethings can go sour and that's perfectly okay. While I've yet to see what my mistake was when making my honey frosting, I press on and hope for better things in my next project. In the meantime, stay hot and buttery in preparation for my next project, Peanut Butter Cake! Signing off, your guy, your host, Alex.

As to what I should do after the cake:
What sounds more appetizing to you: banana-orange thick juice or orange milk drink? Why? 

Pinkwater, Jill. The Natural Snack Cookbook: 151 Good Things to Eat. New York: Four Winds,  
    1975. Print.




4 comments:

  1. I feel like orange milk drink sounds wayyy better. I mean... thick juice? That really sounds gross if I imagine it. What would you choose Alex?

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    Replies
    1. Tough question! Personally, both of them sound great. I don't really like bananas but the combination with orange just seems bomb. Then there's orange milk juice which just sounds like a tasty orange cream. So I guess I'd have to agree with you on the orange milk drink sounding better.

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  2. Banana- Orange thick juice sounds like a smoothie... and I like smoothies. Most likely the reason why the frosting was a failure was because you didn't used an electronic mixer which would have made it way easier. Are you planning to put honey frosting on that Peanut Butter Cake?

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    Replies
    1. An electric mixer probably would've helped. And to answer your question, no, probably not. If the peanut butter cake is truly lacking, I might whip up some new frosting and smoother that cake in, hopefully, better frosting.

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