Sugar High. Nicole Hampton
Bar Tart 224
Bourbon-Spiked Chocolate-Caramel Tart227
Baking has always been a part of my life. I started baking with my mom at a really young age, before I could even reach the counter. We baked cookies from scratch, and sometimes pulled out my grandma’s recipe for peanut brittle, but otherwise we used a lot of boxed mixes. (I’ll admit, to this day, sometimes I just crave a good ol’ reliable box-mix cake.)
As I grew up, I started to experiment more with from-scratch baking, and you probably know how that went. I’ve lived at a high altitude for most of my life, and I’ve had a shocking number of failures in the kitchen.
When I first started blogging, I lived down near sea level in Boston, but I had an apartment-sized oven, which was a whole new struggle. When I moved in, I didn’t even know that apartment-sized ovens were a thing. After finally building a collection of bakeware that actually fit in my oven, it was about time to move back home to the original struggle of baking at high altitude.
Cupcakes were my first stop. Listen, there are few things more disappointing than driving to the grocery store, buying all the stuff, and spending huge amounts of time measuring and mixing just to pull sunken, dense, eggy messes from the oven. For the longest time, I couldn’t get the flavors right and I couldn’t get the texture right. Even after all my experimenting, I still think that homemade cakes are one of the hardest things to make at altitude.
As hard as normal cakes are, for some reason chocolate cakes are in a whole other
league. Chocolate cake batter always looks so luscious and silky, and I would think, “Yes, this is the one. It’s gonna be perfect.” Then I’d pull it out of the oven thirty minutes later to find that the middle had collapsed nearly all the way to the bottom of the cake pan, and that the rest was full of giant, gaping air pockets.
It’s just a bummer that baking at altitude requires so much trial and error. You put something in the oven, tasting great and looking right, and then your oven (and mine too) pulls some kind of mean magic trick in there. The good news is that baking is a science, and high-altitude baking has solutions. I’m here to show them to you.
Don’t get me wrong—I still burn Pop-Tarts® in the toaster oven at work, and I still have to fan smoke out of my kitchen with a dishtowel on occasion. But I do have some really reliable recipes that have had my back when I need to make a cake in a rush, or when I need to whip up a pie for a last-minute party.
Nowadays, it makes me feel more confident in the kitchen knowing that I can pull out my recipe box and choose any cake, bread, pie, or bar and it’ll work. No mean tricks from the oven! Baking is way more fun when it actually turns out beautifully in the end.
I hope that, through this book, you can find enjoyment in baking again, and that you, too, can have a secret stash of recipes that just do their thing in the oven and make you look good! Having a kitchen full of yummy treats ain’t so bad either.
BAKING THROUGH DOUGH EYES
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As someone who grew up in a high-altitude area, I always thought baking was harder than it really is. I constantly wondered how people were ever making homemade cakes work. I always heard people saying that baking is a science, and, of course, that’s true. But no matter how strictly I measured or how carefully I let my eggs come to room temperature, good things were just not happening.
Why are things so painfully different at high altitude? And how can you fix it? This book will give you the answers and show you how to bake things you actually want to eat on a regular basis. (I will refuse all responsibility for any weight gain due to the improvement of your baking skills.)
WHAT YOU MIGHT BE EXPERIENCING
While different types of baked goods have a different set of difficulties at altitude, there are some common things you might be seeing: • Cakes or cupcakes that look perfect while baking, but immediately sink in the center after they come out of the oven.
• Overly airy cakes and cupcakes that have large holes throughout.
• Cakes that are extremely dense, and taste and smell very eggy.
• Dense batters that take forever to bake through, resulting in an overcooked exterior and a raw center.
• Baked goods that have less flavor than you expect, even though you add salt, and vanilla, and other should-be-delicious things to flippin’everything.
• Yeast breads that seem to fail for, like, every single reason.
• Making all of these problems worse, your normal baking solutions and fix-its don’t seem to have the desired effect on your baking.
You guys, I have been there. But we’re gonna fix it together.
COMMON MYTHS ABOUT HIGH-ALTITUDE BAKING
Honestly, I always felt like the resources for this were so limited. For a really long time, my best guess as to what to do was to add more flour to literally everything. Turns out, that’s not how it works. Let’s start with some misconceptions about baking at a high altitude: • Adding flour solves everything: Adding flour is my go-to fix for cake issues, and it certainly does help with certain recipes. However, liquid actually evaporates more quickly at higher altitudes, which means that, in some cases, all adding flour will do is simply dry out your dish. Depending on what you’re baking, additional eggs, reduced sugar, or reduced leavening could be your solution, not extra flour.
• Cookies are affected as much as anything else: This is not an all-encompassing statement, but for the most part, cookies are less affected by altitude than other baked goods. I try most cookie recipes without any modifications first, or I might reduce the leavening as a first step. If you reduce leavening in any recipe, start with reducing it by 1⁄8 teaspoon for every 1 teaspoon of the leavening agent called for.
HIGH-ALTITUDE BAKING TIPS
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HIGH-ALTITUDE BAKING TIPS
• More baking powder/soda fixes sinking cakes: In fact, the reason that cakes sink at higher altitudes is because the leavening agent rises much faster up here, causing the cake to rise much too quickly. Then, it proceeds to fall and ruin your day. Reducing your baking powder or baking soda slightly, rather than increasing it, can help prevent cakes from sinking.
• Adding more salt will help with the lack of flavor: Of course, you should add at least a pinch of salt to any baked item, but at a high altitude, lack of salt is likely not the issue. Since liquids evaporate faster up here during baking, you’ll actually want to add more liquid to your recipe if flavor is an issue. Too much liquid may change the entire texture of the dough or batter, but usually a couple of teaspoons extra of oil, milk, or other liquid helps with flavor.
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