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The Upper Crust of Pie Appreciation

April 30th, 2010
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loginPieTopThe American Pie Council® (APC) is the only organization dedicated to preserving America’s pie heritage and promoting America’s love affair with pies. Designed to raise awareness, enjoyment and consumption of pies, the APC offers Amateur, Professional and Commercial Memberships that enable lovers of pie to sink their teeth into sweet annual events like the National Pie Championships®, the Great American Pie Festival® and more; ongoing contests that reap recipes of the month, awards and increased sales; and provide filling reading material like Pie Times! Every tidbit about APC offers morsels of information that’s good to the last crumb. Join today, it’s a piece of pie!

Your bigger  piece of the pie

The National Pie Championships® is four days of getting your fill of pie and seeking the best tasting pies in the country-where amateur pie makers, professional bakers/chefs and commercial pie companies from around the country and Canada have been competing since 1995.

While the Great American Pie Festival is the cherry on top of NPC, competitors and spectators can enjoy two days of pie in the sky and off the pie charts of fun! It’s easy for everyone to find their favorite piece of the action-from pie-eating contests, vendor exhibits and baking demonstrations to games, live entertainment and “fill-anthropic” bake sales to benefit good causes like food banks and children’s programs.

Membership fills the world with pie charts & graphs

As a member of the APC, you will have access to all information that we have available for the pie baking industry like tips, tricks and recipes. Plus, receive the quarterly newsletter, Pie Times. Not to mention smile sweetly on National Pie Day. In addition, the APC will help you research any information that we do not have immediately available-no matter how you slice it, joining is a sweet deal!

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Pastry ,

Iced Tea

April 30th, 2010
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Iced teaTea ice

Milk 1000g
Cream 200g
Sugar  250g
Trimoline 30g
Yolks 160g
Stabiliser 4g
Earl grey tea 40g

Cook a crème anglaise at 85ºC. Add the trimoline and the 4 g of stabiliser, then leave the Earl Grey tea to infuse. Strain and reserve cold.

Lemon water ice

Lemon pulp 330g
Sugar 330g
Water 660g
Glucose  30g
Orange juice 6g

Make a syrup with water, sugar and glucose. Add the fruit purées and boil again. Strain and reserve cold.

Hazelnut biscuit

Whites 300g
Sugar 100g
Whole hazelnuts 180g
Icing sugar 180g
Roasted hazelnuts 115g

Whip the whites and stiffen with sugar. Make a TPT with the hazelnuts and the icing sugar then sieve. Mix gently using a spatula. Bake at 175ºC/180ºC in a ventilated oven.

Finishing touches

Turn out the frozen bombes. Reserve in the freezer. Make a mixture with icing paste, milk and roasted hazelnuts (10% mixture). Dip the bombes in the hot icing paste.

Assembly

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Ice cream recipes

Exotic little flower

April 30th, 2010
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Exotic little flowerRecipe for approximately 54 pieces.

Fondant
Butter 100g
Icing sugar 80g
Almond  powder 100g
Eggs 100g
Starch 10g
Cream 30g

Soften de butter. Add the sugar, almond powder, starch, eggs and the warm cream. Pour into a mould and bake at 160ºC.

Mango coulis

Frozen mango purée 250g
Passion fruit juice 50g
Inverted sugar 50g
Pectin NH 8g
Caster sugar 50g

Heat the purées and inverted sugar to 40º. Add the pectin and caster sugar mixture and bring to the boil. Mould immediately and freeze.

Finishing touches

Stick the fondant on a pastille of dark chocolate, stick the 2nd pastille on the fondant and position little flower of coulis.

Ingredients for this recipe

Butter 100g
Cream 30g
Eggs 100g
Icing sugar 80g
Caster sugar 50g
Inverted sugar 50g
Poudre almond 100g
Starch 10g
Pectin NH 8g
Frozen mango purée 250g
Frozen passion fruit purée 50g

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Pastry recipes

Packology 2010

April 30th, 2010
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packology-LogoThe first edition of PACKOLOGY, the Italian manufacturers’oackaging trade show, wich will be a held from the 8th to the 11th of June 2010 in Itali, where Ferré & Consulting Group will be present.

The expo, limited to trade members, will be held every three years and is the result of a partnership between the Italian Packaging Machinery Manufacturers Association (UCIMA) and Rimini Fiera Spa.

PACKOLOGY will feature the industrial production of a system that in Italy puts a great accent on export; from its first edition, the show offers an appointment able to highlight technological and innovative excellence.

It is an event greatly wanted by the UCIMA, which represents almost all Italy´s world-leading Italian manufacturers, along with Rimini Fiera, owner of prestigious expo brands in the technology for the ceramic and brick inustries and in the woodworking machines sector. On one hand, therefore the leading trade association and on the other the third most important Italian expo centre.

PACKOLOGY will show: packaging machines, processing machines, packaging material, labelling, coding and marking technology, accessories and components, technology regarding logistics, trade press and publications. Trade members interested in process and packaging technologies running across all industrial sectors: food, beverage, chemical, cosmetic, pharmaceutical, health care products and consumer goods (no food), will be involved.

Close attention will be focussed on internationality among exhibitors and visitors, another distinctive element that will be featured at this first edition, to expand companies´ business horizons on foreign markets too. Tailor-made meetings between exhibitors and foreign buyers will be organized.

The expo showcase will also be complemented by a qualified program of conferences and workshops that will ensure all trade members in-depth discussions, updates and networking on the most topical issues, organized in collaboration with universities, institutes, magazines and experts from this sector.

The show will be held in the west wing of Rimini expo centre, eight halls with a gross area of 60,000 m2.

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Events

Putting the goods into baked goods

April 30th, 2010
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salWhat are the latest strategies being used to reduce and replace salt and fats in the bakery sector?

Bakery products have been impacted by the drive to reduce salt and saturated fat content in food. It is not as simple as finding an alternative to replace the taste of salt or the flavour of the fat – these ingredients have functional properties that are fundamental to the structure and texture of the products.

Salt reduction is largely being led by the UK’s Food Standards Agency (FSA), which in 2003 advised adults to consume no more than 6g a day. Food manufacturers have risen to the challenge, and average salt levels in bread have already been reduced by a third. However, a new target has now been set for 2012 – down to 1.0g per 100g of bread from the current 1.1g, which poses a further challenge.

In most products, the main function of salt is in taste. In bread, it is a little more complicated, as salt is crucial to yeast activity. If salt levels are reduced, the product’s properties are affected, says Maurits Burgering, business development manager at TNO Quality of Life. “The stickiness of the dough is influenced by salt content,” he says. “This affects processability. It also has an impact on microbiology. It is possible to make bread without any salt, but the question is whether this is a product you would want to put on the market! We are looking at the extent to which salt can be reduced without compromising these issues, and if it goes down too far, what are the first problems you encounter in processability?”

Limited alternatives

Saturated fats are still in the firing line

Saturated fats are still in the firing line

TNO has also worked on bread with layers containing more and less salt, where the sensory contrast helps tackle taste issues As bread differs from one country to another, the best solution to reducing salt will vary, and they are developing a toolbox of solutions, Burgering says. “The flour is also different, and a toolbox would help meet the needs of every regional specialty,” he says.

However, as far as bread is concerned, alternatives to salt are limited, according to Stan Cauvain, director and vice-president of R&D activities at the BakeTran consultancy. “Potassium chloride is the obvious choice, but the problem is its bitterness,” he says. “In the past, when sodium chloride levels were high, you could tolerate higher KCl levels, but when you have less NaCl, you are more likely to pick up the bitter overtones.”

Several companies now offer new crystalline forms of salt containing KCl designed to have less impact on flavour perception, he says, but uptake remains limited in the bakery sector. “It’s certainly more expensive, and of course there’s always the interesting question about the legality of using it in bread in the UK, as there is a debate over whether it is on the prescribed list of ingredients.”

Functionality and processing

Other substitutes focus on addressing flavour issues. “Some companies claim the answer to low-salt bread is

Fat contributes hugely to eating quality

Fat contributes hugely to eating quality

introducing flavours from ferments, brews, and nature identical flavours, but it’s important to separate the impact salt has on flavour, from its the impact on functionality,” Cauvain explains. “Salt cannot be removed without introducing other changes to processing or

even, perhaps, the quality of the bread that is produced. A lot has been learnt, but there remains no 1:1 replacement for salt. And if we are to continue to produce bread as we currently know and understand it, there is no real alternative.”

In cakes, biscuits and pastry, fat replacement is more of an issue than salt, as fat – particularly saturated fat – makes a huge contribution to the eating quality of a cake.

There has been a real drive in recent years to reduce the ‘bad’ fats in the diet, although there is now some doubt about whether saturated fat is really that bad for the heart. A recent meta-analysis of 21 studies in nearly 350,000 patients showed no significant evidence that dietary saturated fat is associated in an increased risk of either heart disease or stroke. Burgering believes, however, that fat reduction will remain an issue in bakery products. “It is possible to replace saturated fat with unsaturated, but this has to be done very carefully,” he says.

The problem is that, all too often, fat reduced cake or pastry is about as pleasant to eat as cardboard. “Fat has an impact on the lubrication effect in the mouth, and hence the eating quality,” says Cauvain.

“But the huge contribution that fat makes to the formation of the structure is often overlooked. This is also a tremendous contributor to the eating quality.”

Thus the structure of the ‘cardboard’ cake is less fragile, and less likely to break down in the mouth, an attribute that Cauvain says is as much down to the type of fat used as the level of it. “There has been a move to remove trans fats and reduce saturated fats, but the big problem is that these are the fats that contribute most to the structure-forming properties.

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