![]() ![]() Try covering the dough and placing it in the refrigerator for its first rise, to slow the action of the yeast give the dough more time to develop. Give the dough one extra rise by punching it down twice before forming it. Since rising times are much shorter at higher altitudes, you have a number of options to help its flavor. Make sure your bowl has plenty of room for the dough to rise in. Yeast Breadsĭecrease the amount of yeast in the recipe by 25%, and make water/flour adjustments as necessary to get a dough with the correct texture. Use the guidelines above to make adjustments. Lower the frying temperature by 3 degrees per 1,000 feet, and increase cooking times. Won't be dramatically affected will usually need extra water to help the dough to form. Use extra eggs to increase liquids if only part of an egg is needed, use the whites. Since leavening and evaporation proceed more quickly, the idea is to use a higher temperature to “set” the structure of baked goods before they overexpand and dry out. The table below gives guidelines about what adjustments to make for baking cookies at high-altitude: What to change Experienced high-altitude bakers know to bake at slightly higher temperature, with a shortened baking time. The principle adjustments recommended for cookies baked at higher altitudes (generally considered to be above 3,000 feet) are to increase the water slightly, to help the dough come together, and to decrease the amount of chemical leavens (baking powder, baking soda) used. Baking powder or baking sodaīecause cookies bake for a shorter amount of time than bread or cakes, and are relatively low in water and high in fat content, they're much less susceptible to the vagaries of high-altitude baking. When baking a recipe that calls both baking powder and baking soda plus an acidic ingredient, like buttermilk or sour cream, try switching to all baking powder and sweet milk. When using baking powder and baking soda, the following chart can help you how to adjust amounts. Additional flour helps to strengthen the structure of baked goods. In some recipes, a flour with a higher protein content may yield better results. For each additional 1,500 feet, add one more tablespoon. You can also use extra eggs as part of this liquid, depending on the recipe.Įxtra liquid keeps products from drying out at higher temperatures and evaporation rates.Īt 3,500 feet, add 1 more tablespoon per recipe. Increase by 1 1/2 teaspoons for each additional 1,000 feet. Increase by 1 to 2 tablespoons at 3,000 feet. ![]() Increased evaporation also increases concentration of sugar, which can weaken the structure of what you're baking Since leavening and evaporation proceed more quickly, the idea is to use a higher temperature to set the structure of baked goods before they overexpand and dry out.ĭecrease by 5-8 minutes per 30 minutes of baking time.īaking at higher temperatures means products are done sooner. Increase 15 to 25☏ use the lower increase when making chocolate or delicate cakes. For questions, refer to their websites or e-mail them. Because high-altitude baking is a complex subject, we recommend the excellent cooking guides from Colorado State University Extension and New Mexico State University. Turkey Breast with Zatar and Sumac (and Honey.Lemon Curd Cupcakes (or are they Muffins?).Alton Brown's 4-Minute Peanut Butter Fudge.If you happen to live at sea level and you give it a try, I'd be curious to see how yours works out. And if I ever move back down to sea level it'll probably work just fine. I'd like to get it to rise a little better, but hey, if it doesn't, that's fine too. It's still a little bit of a work in progress. and I used a half-pound of three of those. I'm calling it a half-pound cake because the original pound cake used a pound each of flour, sugar, butter, and eggs. The cake itself was moist and had great banana flavor. The outside browned nicely, and there were some really brown "ears" on the loaf that were completely unintentional, but were addictively munchy. It also took a lot longer to bake than I expected, but then again, that's not uncommon when I bake any cake. Not a nice domed top that I would have expected in a sea-level cake, but it was flat instead of being collapsed.Some days, I count that for a big win. The sides rose first and the center looked like a crater, but by the time it was done, the center had risen to meet the sides. This cake was a bit worrisome when it was baking. It doesn't help that I'm usually experimenting. And I've made a truce with boiling water.īut cakes are still iffy in my kitchen. I've managed to get bread and cookies and even cheesecakes to behave. Baking cakes at high altitude is interesting.
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