Guest guest Posted September 17, 2003 Report Share Posted September 17, 2003 I wanted to make chocolate chip cookies, so I creamed fresh ground pastry flour with raw cultured butter and let it sit for 17 hours, then made the cookies with my normal recipe. My question is, would the raw cultured butter take out the phytates in the pastry flour - or is it better to use bulgar flour? I got the idea from Nourishing Traditions' " Cream Cheese Breakfast Pastries " (p.488) where butter and homemade cream cheese are mixed with the flour and left for 12- 24 hours. Also, for sugar, I have been using Florida Crystals' evaporated cane juice crystals, but am planning to switch to Rapadura. Can anyone tell me what the difference is between the two. From what I understand, Rapadura has never been crystalized or had the molasses removed whereas all the other types of evaporated cane juice crystals have had the molasses removed and then added back at some percentage? So, I'm not completely clear on the differences between all these less refined sugars. Thanks! Carol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 18, 2003 Report Share Posted September 18, 2003 Good question. I suspect cultured butter doesn't have enough moisture. Also, it might not be acidic enough, depending on how long it was cultured. Are there any liquid ingredients in the cookies you can add? I don't think I'd want to add eggs overnight, but cultured cream or milk would work much better than butter because it has a significant water content, which is necessary to neutralize the phytates. Maybe if you sweeten them with maple syrup and add that the night before? Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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