Selasa, 29 Juli 2014

[O869.Ebook] Download PDF A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr

Download PDF A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr

Are you truly a follower of this A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr If that's so, why do not you take this book currently? Be the initial person that such as and also lead this publication A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr, so you can get the factor and also messages from this publication. Don't bother to be confused where to get it. As the other, we discuss the connect to check out and download the soft file ebook A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr So, you could not bring the published book A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr all over.

A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr

A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr



A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr

Download PDF A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr

When you are hurried of job due date and have no concept to get inspiration, A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr publication is one of your remedies to take. Reserve A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr will provide you the appropriate resource and also thing to get motivations. It is not just regarding the works for politic company, administration, economics, as well as various other. Some purchased tasks to make some fiction your jobs additionally need inspirations to get rid of the task. As exactly what you need, this A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr will possibly be your option.

By checking out A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr, you can recognize the knowledge and also things even more, not just about what you receive from individuals to people. Schedule A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr will be more trusted. As this A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr, it will really give you the great idea to be effective. It is not just for you to be success in particular life; you can be effective in everything. The success can be started by knowing the standard knowledge as well as do activities.

From the combo of understanding and also activities, someone could boost their skill and also capacity. It will lead them to live and also function better. This is why, the pupils, workers, and even companies ought to have reading habit for publications. Any kind of book A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr will provide particular expertise to take all advantages. This is just what this A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr tells you. It will include even more understanding of you to life and also function better. A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr, Try it and show it.

Based on some encounters of lots of people, it remains in truth that reading this A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr could help them making much better option as well as provide even more encounter. If you want to be among them, let's acquisition this book A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr by downloading guide on web link download in this site. You can obtain the soft documents of this publication A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr to download as well as put aside in your offered digital devices. Just what are you awaiting? Allow get this book A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr on-line as well as review them in whenever and any kind of area you will certainly read. It will not encumber you to bring heavy publication A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes From A New York Baking Legend For Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, And More, By George Gr within your bag.

A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr

This follow-up to the author's James Beard award-winning Secrets of a Jewish Bakeris a charming collection of European-style bakery classics, such as coffee cake and strudel.

George Greenstein had a gift for teaching home bakers to think, work, and bake like the pros with his evocative and tactile descriptions of baking. In A Jewish Baker’s Pastry Secrets, he crafts master dough recipes for Jewish holiday baking and European classics, creating a comprehensive set of building blocks for both beginners and baking enthusiasts. Greenstein’s expert guidance for making doughs like bundt, babka, strudel, gugelhopf, stollen, pressburger, puff pastry, and Danish create a jumping-off point for more than 200 variations of classic pastries, including napoleons, coffee cakes, and sweet buns. The book also offers an in-depth guide to ingredients and equipment, including both professional and home ovens, as well as basic recipes for fillings, icings, and glazes. With Greenstein’s steady guidance and familiar voice, home bakers and professionals alike will be encouraged to turn out flawless pastry creations for any occasion.

  • Sales Rank: #324453 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-08-18
  • Released on: 2015-08-18
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 10.29" h x .80" w x 8.37" l, 1.25 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 208 pages

Review
“Lucky for us, A Jewish Baker’s Pastry Secrets are no longer secret. The recipes and techniques are classic and crisply instructional; the stories and comments are touching and softly personal. Any doubt that food is indeed love will be dispelled at the first turn of the cover.”
—Mollie Katzen, author of The Moosewood Cookbook

It is sad that George Greenstein is no longer with us, but if there is any way in which an
inspired baker should be remembered it is through making available some of his best work. This book and his Secrets of a Jewish Baker form an invaluable repository of a deeply admired baking tradition—personal, authentic, and totally usable.”
—Nach Waxman, founding partner of Kitchen Arts & Letters

“I am thrilled that George’s second book, A Jewish Baker’s Pastry Secrets, is filled with the sweet pastries and cakes that didn’t make it into the first book. George finished it before he died, and the headnotes bring back his kind voice and good humor, while his always meticulously detailed directions and revelatory ‘secrets’ ensure baking success.”
—Arthur Schwartz, journalist, radio personality, and cookbook author

"There's a lot to love about this book, but one of the best parts is the attitude towards pastries and breads; they are meant to be shared, and making them is both a joy and an art."
—Lisa Spangenberg, Huffington Post and Sleeping Hedgehog

About the Author
George Greenstein was a third-generation professional baker who owned and ran a Jewish bakery,  The Cheesecake King, on Long Island for twenty years. There he baked his favorites, like Jewish rye, cheese, and cinnamon raisin breads—much to the delight of his wife, children, and grandchildren. He passed away in 2012. This is his second book.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Introduction
Elaine and Julia Greenstein, daughters of George Greenstein

Our early childhood memories are of our parents spending more time in the bakery than they did at home. After school and on weekends, we often played in the back of the bakery, drawing pictures, reading books, folding and assembling cake boxes, or running small errands. In fact, before we were even tolerated at the bakery, we folded cake boxes while parked in front of the TV set at home!

When we were tall enough to look over the counter, we started waiting on customers and helping with various jobs in the production areas. We were most often assigned jobs forming dough into pastries such as crumb buns and rugelach. We longed to get our hands on the icing and finishing equipment or to mix the batters, but the answer was always, “no.” Sometimes we felt like elves in a production line: standing on milk crates, assembling one tray after another of pastries from enormous batches of dough.

Even though we could eat anything we wanted in the bakery, as young girls we had a secret pleasure. We collected the glass bottles left by the workers in the bakery and returned them for their deposit to the deli next door. Instead of taking the cash, we traded it for a factory-produced, plastic-wrapped, squishy chocolate cupcake or pink coconut mound. We always made sure to eat the evidence before returning to our parents in the bakery. The brothers who ran the deli must have had many a chuckle after the baker’s daughters left the deli.

It was not until college and graduate school, well away from our childhood bakery responsibilities, that we started to appreciate the bakery treats and welcomed the care packages sent from home. Our circle of friends really appreciated them, too! One of us, Julia, remembers her PhD advisor claiming that she added the benefits of these care packages to her recommendation letters. Who knows how much of her career was based on the contents of the packages?

Once we moved away from home, we began to become bakers in our own right, finally allowed to take on mixing and decorating duties outside of the bakery. Our dad showed great joy and pride seeing our results. When dividing jobs for our annual Thanksgiving family meal, there was always a negotiation because everyone wanted to make the desserts. Even though our father was always ready with specific comments on the quality of the results, it did not stop the competitive baking, which has continued with the next generation of bakers in our family.

George began this book about 15 years ago, after Secrets of a Jewish Baker was published. He worked on it off and on, but for one reason or another, it never made it to publication. George passed away on July 20, 2012. The next day, our family gathered at our mother’s house. We all kept busy in our own ways to deal with our grief. Some of us cooked, while others started going through papers. When Paul, Julia’s husband, found this manuscript, we, Julia and Elaine, and his grandson, Isaac, made a pact to get the book published. The three of us are the ones who always plan the meals and get excited over food. (It is a good thing we each have our own kitchen. We all inherited being the boss from our dad.) Julia has an amazing ability to create spectacular dinners for large numbers of guests, and Elaine dallied with being a pastry chef. Isaac caught the bug early, astounding us all with his amazing bread and pastries.

Finishing our dad’s project has been a way to honor and mourn him. Sometimes as Elaine tested recipes, the image of him dressed in his white pants and apron, his big, floury hands gripping a huge rolling pin, rolling massive lumps of dough, kept her company in her kitchen. For Julia, going through the recipes and trying to see his vision brought back the hours Dad spent in his consistent search for the perfect baked goods, both at his own bakery and in our family travels. Isaac remembered standing on a high stool to see above the counter, watching his grandfather teach him how to roll rugelach, a family favorite. We hope this recipe, as well as the others in the book, bring as much joy and sweetness to your life as our dad did to ours.


Apricot Rugelach
The rugelach we made in the bakery does not fit in any of the chapters. But we love it so much we are including it. The last project our dad did every Sunday would be to roll out a huge sheet of the dough, and we would roll up each pastry. It seemed like it took forever to complete. Don’t worry—the recipe below does not make the amount we made in the bakery.

Rugelach Dough
12 ounces (340 grams) cream cheese,
at room temperature
2 cups (8.5 ounces / 241 grams) unbleached all-purpose flour
1 cup (8 ounces / 227 grams) cake flour
1 1⁄2 cups (12 ounces / 340 grams) unsalted butter, cut into 1⁄2-inch dice
1⁄3 cup (2.3 ounces / 65 grams) sugar
1⁄4 teaspoon baking powder
1⁄4 teaspoon kosher salt
2 eggs
1⁄2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

Apricot Filling
1 cup (10.5 ounces / 298 grams)
Apricot Butter (page 33)
1 1⁄2 cups (9 ounces / 255 grams) raisins, preferably golden
2 cups (8 ounces / 227 grams) walnuts, chopped, preferably toasted (page 31)
1 1⁄2 cups (5.4 ounces / 120 grams) cake crumbs (see page 42) or bread crumbs, preferably fresh
1 cup (7.2 ounces / 200 grams) Cinnamon Sugar (page 40), half reserved for topping
1⁄4 cup (2 ounces / 57 grams) unsalted butter, melted

Line a 12 by 18-inch sheet pan with parchment paper or greased waxed paper. Flour a second 12 x 18-inch baking pan.

To make the dough, in the mixing bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a flat paddle, combine the cream cheese, all-purpose and cake flours, butter, sugar, baking powder, salt, eggs, and vanilla. Pulse with the on/off switch until blended, making sure that the flour does not fly out of the bowl. Mix at low speed until the dough becomes smooth. It’s okay if small lumps of butter remain; they will be absorbed into the dough as it is rolled out.

Tip the dough out onto the floured baking pan and press out or roll until the dough is level and fills the entire pan. Cover with parchment paper or plastic wrap. Refrigerate for several hours or overnight, until well chilled. Rugelach are best rolled while partially chilled.
Cut the dough in half and work with one part at a time, keeping the other half refrigerated or frozen until ready to use. (This dough freezes well, tightly wrapped, for up to several months. It is best when thawed slowly in the refrigerator overnight.) Allow the dough to rest until soft enough to roll: fingertips pressed into the dough will leave an indentation.
 
Roll the dough out on a heavily floured surface into a 1⁄2-inch-thick rectangle measuring about 20 by 12 inches. Lift the dough and dust with additional flour underneath. This dough tends to stick to the surface when fully rolled out. Brush away any excess flour from the top.

Spread a generous layer of apricot butter over the entire dough, from edge to edge. Cover heavily with layers of half of the raisins, half of the walnuts, half of the cake crumbs, and half of the cinnamon sugar. Press down with your hands or roll lightly to make the filling adhere. Roll the pastry in both length and width until it is about 1⁄8-inch-thick measuring about 36 by 20 inches. The filling will be compressed right into the dough; it will be almost translucent.

Trim the edges with a 4-inch wheel or pizza cutter, or a sharp knife. Using a thumb or a ruler as a gauge, cut strips along the short side of the rectangle about 1 inch wide. This should yield 30 or more strips. Beginning at the bottom left, roll the strip until it is about 1 inch high, like a snail shell. Tear the pastry free and roll over a half turn so the seam is centered on the bottom. Repeat with the remainder of the first strip, lining up the finished rugelach on the work surface in rows, letting them touch each other. Scrape or brush any crumbs aside with a bench knife, or brush as you work. When you arrive at the end of a strip, attach it to the bottom of the next row by pressing a 1⁄2-inch edge onto the strip. Continue rolling as if it is all one piece.
 
Continue rolling until all of the dough has been used. Brush the tops with melted butter. Place in even rows, spaced a finger width apart, on the prepared baking sheet. Repeat with the remaining dough and filling ingredients. Brush the tops with butter. (At this point the rugelach can be frozen for use another time or refrigerated to be baked later or the following day. Frozen rugelach can be baked—directly from the freezer to oven—without thawing.)

Preheat the oven to 350°F/175°C with a rack in the center of the oven.

Bake for about 35 minutes, or until lightly and evenly browned. Carefully lift an edge to see if the bottoms have begun to brown.

Remove from the oven and immediately brush the tops with butter. Drizzle a thin line of cinnamon sugar down the length of the rows. Cool on the pan on a wire rack. Serve when completely cool. Rugelach keeps well tightly covered or wrapped at room temperature for about a week.They can be frozen for several months wrapped tightly in plastic.
Yield: About 3 pounds (about 75 pieces)

Most helpful customer reviews

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
Beyond Excited!!!
By R. Reinhard
As the great grand-daughter of european bakers, I've been eagerly awaiting this book as my family's recipes were lost to history. I've worked through the Secrets of a Jewish Baker and everything always turned out the way grandma made it. I can't wait to begin to work my way through what I know will be fool proof recipes along with all of the helpful tips. Our Greenstein books are our go-to's for everything Jewish and then some. I've searched the world for this book for several years and am beyond excited that its now here. I grew up eating eastern european breads and pastries in NY and Miami, George's recipes always capture that long lost flavor and texture. His recipes truly are the "secrets" that have been nearly lost to time and would be if not for his and his family's generosity of sharing them with the world. It's touching to read in the latest book how his family was committed to bringing his latest project to fruition. I am forever thankful that the Greenstein family completed and published this book. I've searched everywhere, bought more pastry books than I can count, tried more recipes and still wasn't able to approximate the results that George's pastry and bread recipes consistently produce. If you follow his instructions, you too can bring a taste of the old world into your home.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
THIS is it!!!
By Condor
This book is worth its weight in gold just for the rye sour starter recipe itself. I grew up on sour dough rye and have been trying to bake decent bread myself for years. What was missing was the rye sour, without that the bread just didn't taste the same.

While the book has a few tiny glitches such as the page number for the pumpernickel should be 137 instead of the given 167, in the recipes themselves I have not found any problems so far. The cornstarch glaze was a bit too thick, so I adjusted the amount of cornstarch down a bit and now it's perfect.

To me, bread making is as earthen and intimate a task as can be. Feeling the dough take on shape and consistency is not something that can be carved into absolute grams and pounds. You need to "feel" the dough which can have different needs depending on humidity and temperatures. Yet there is nothing more satisfying, at least in my opinion, than kneading a dough by hand and feeling its "life" between my hands.

I simply cannot recommend this book highly enough!

6 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
Wonderful pastry cookbook by George Greenstein
By iiiireader
“A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets” is another wonderful and welcome cookbook from George Greenstein. His first book, “Secrets of a Jewish Baker”, as a real god-send for me, at the time I received it, as a novice baker. I enjoyed reading and trying a variety of the bread recipes.

When I saw that Mr. Greenstein had another book being published, and this one involved pastry, I knew that I would have to get it and have fun making a whole new set of his tried and true recipes.

The book also includes many interesting stories and much information about a lifetime of knowledge by a professional baker. This is the type of information that is generally handed down from generation to generation and it is a real honor to be able to receive Mr. Greenstein's advice and knowledge.

There is a large number of recipes in the cookbook and more than I can list here. Suffice to say, it will keep me busy for a long time to come.

I received a temporary digital ARC copy of this book from the publisher, Ten Speed Press, via Netgalley. I have pre-ordered a copy for myself and one as a gift for a friend. I am considering how many more copies to buy this holiday season as gifts for family and friends. It is a real treasure of a book.

See all 43 customer reviews...

A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr PDF
A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr EPub
A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr Doc
A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr iBooks
A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr rtf
A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr Mobipocket
A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr Kindle

A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr PDF

A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr PDF

A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr PDF
A Jewish Baker's Pastry Secrets: Recipes from a New York Baking Legend for Strudel, Stollen, Danishes, Puff Pastry, and More, by George Gr PDF

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar