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Mark Vogel received his doctorate in clinical
psychology from Yeshiva University and his culinary arts degree from the
Institute of Culinary Education, both in New York City. Although he still
practices psychology, his deepest passion remains cooking at an
Italian/Mediterranean restaurant in NJ and writing about food and wine. His
column "Food For Thought" is published in a number of NJ and Philadelphia
newspapers and food related websites.
Mark R. Vogel
Epicure1@optonline.net
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FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Mark R. Vogel
Epicure1@optonline.net
What’s the Difference?
What’s the difference between superfine, powdered and
granulated sugar?
Superfine sugar is granulated sugar that has been finely ground. It dissolves
more easily and is preferred for sweetening cold liquids and meringues.
Powdered, or confectioners’ sugar is granulated sugar ground to a powder and
dissolves even faster. It is used for candies, icings and topping desserts.
What’s the difference between a yam and a sweet potato?
Sweet potatoes are not potatoes but a root belonging to the morning-glory
family. They are indigenous to Peru and Ecuador. Yams, although similar, are a
tuber from the Dioscoreaceae family and originated in Africa. The confusion
began many years ago when Louisiana farmers wished to differentiate their sweet
potatoes from others by calling them Louisiana yams.
What’s the difference between cake, all purpose and bread flour?
Protein. Cake flour is 7.5 to 8.5% protein, all purpose ranges from 9.5 to 12%
and bread flour is 11.5 to 12.5 %. When you mix flour and water, proteins in the
flour called glutenin and gliadin combine with the water to create gluten.
Gluten imparts the dough with structure and traps the gas bubbles given off by
the yeast or chemical leaveners. Thus, it allows the dough to rise without
deflating. The higher the protein content, the more gluten produced, and the
firmer the dough. Some baked goods require a softer texture such as cake, and
some a firmer one, like pizza. Therefore, the product you are creating will
determine which flour to use.
What’s the difference between baking soda and baking powder?
Baking soda and baking powder are chemical leaveners. A leavener is a rising
agent; a substance that enables dough to rise by expelling carbon dioxide gas.
Yeast, (a living microorganism) produces carbon dioxide as a byproduct of its
consumption of sugar. Baking soda, being alkaline, expels carbon dioxide when
combined with an acid. For example, buttermilk, which is acidic, is combined
with baking soda in biscuit recipes. Baking powder is baking soda that already
contains an acid, (usually cream of tartar), and only requires liquid to become
activated. Double acting baking powder emits carbon dioxide when the liquid in
the batter is first added and then again when the product is heated during
cooking. Self rising flour by the way, is flour to which baking powder has been
added.
What’s the difference between table salt, kosher salt and sea salt?
Table salt is a fine grained salt to which chemicals are added to keep it free
flowing. Kosher salt is a coarse grain, additive free salt. Kosher salt tastes
cleaner and chefs like it because the coarser texture allows it to be held and
controlled easier by the fingers. Sea salt is made from evaporated sea water.
Sea salts contain various minerals and the types and amounts of them vary
depending on where the salt originated. These mineral combinations impart each
sea salt with distinctive taste properties. Many people feel sea salts taste
best.
What’s the difference between cooking wine and regular wine?
Cooking wine is extremely low quality wine that has been imbibed with excessive
salt and other unnecessary flavoring agents. It tastes gross. It can’t hold a
candle to table wine. Never use it. End of story.
What’s the difference between white and brown rice? What about short, medium and
long grain rice? And what’s the deal with wild rice?
White rice has had its hull, (the outer covering), and bran removed. Brown rice
has only had its hull removed. Rice has two main starches: amylose and
amylopectin. Long grain rice is highest in amylose. Medium grain rice has more
amylopectin than long grain rice and short grain rice even more than medium
grain. These starches react differently when cooked. Long grain rice is best for
fluffy pilafs, medium grain rice for rice pudding and risotto, and short grain
rice, the most sticky, is best for sushi. Wild rice is not a rice at all; it’s a
grass.
What’s the difference between light olive oil, olive oil, and extra virgin olive
oil?
When the olives are first pressed to extract the oil, the initial pressing
produces the richest tasting oil, a.k.a., extra virgin olive oil. Extra virgin
is best for salad dressings and drizzling on food just before service. Regular
olive oil has been refined and filtered. It is not as intensely flavored. Light
olive oil is NOT lower in calories. All olive oils have the same caloric
content. Light olive oil has been refined and filtered even further. It has the
least amount of taste but because of the additional refining, it has a higher
smoke point. Use it in recipes where you desire the health benefits of olives
oil’s monosaturated fat but not the olive flavor, such as certain baked goods.
What’s the difference between semisweet and bittersweet chocolate?
Sugar content. To begin there’s unsweetened or baking chocolate to which no
sugar has been added. Then, going up the ladder of sweetness, is bittersweet,
semisweet and sweet chocolate. These will also vary on their chocolate content
as well. Milk chocolate is sweetened chocolate to which dry milk has been added.
And just for the record, white chocolate is not chocolate but the natural
vegetable fat found in the cocoa bean. Sugar, milk solids, and vanilla are added
to flavor and sweeten it. |
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