Thread View: rec.food.cooking
19 messages
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Started by "Aussie Lurker"
Sun, 04 Jan 2004 05:30
Half and Half???
Author: "Aussie Lurker"
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 05:30
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 05:30
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Hi All, I hope everyone is enjoying the New Year. I am in the process of looking up recipes for using some of my leftover ham. Came across an ingredient called half and half. Could some one please let me know what it is and also perhaps an Australian equivalent (if there is one)? Many thanks, Aussie Lurker
Re: Half and Half???
Author: "Mabry"
Date: Sat, 03 Jan 2004 21:42
Date: Sat, 03 Jan 2004 21:42
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"Aussie Lurker" <hahaha@lol.com> wrote in message news:uxNJb.76791$aT.52889@news-server.bigpond.net.au... : Hi All, : : I hope everyone is enjoying the New Year. : : I am in the process of looking up recipes for using some of my leftover ham. : Came across an ingredient called half and half. Could some one please let : me know what it is and also perhaps an Australian equivalent (if there is : one)? : : Many thanks, : : Aussie Lurker : : It is half milk, half (table) cream. Chemistry-wise, use 3 parts milk to 1 part heavy cream. -Mabry-
Re: Half and Half???
Author: "Brian Macke"
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 01:50
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 01:50
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On Sun, 04 Jan 2004 05:53:21 +0000, Lorne Epp wrote: > Half-and-half is light cream, about 10% milk fat. Usually it's used > in coffee. Half-and-Half is (legally) between 10.5% and 18% milkfat. For the OP, it's basically a math problem to mix milk and cream to the right amounts to get within that window. Sadly you can't really substitute anything for it since it's in its own window of milkfat. Table Cream (18-30%) is typically near 25% so that's almost too much. Whole Milk (4%) is too thin. -- -Brian James Macke macke@strangelove.net "In order to get that which you wish for, you must first get that which builds it." -- Unknown
Re: Half and Half???
Author: djs0302@aol.comn
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 05:44
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 05:44
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Half and half is a mixture of whole milk and cream.
Re: Half and Half???
Author: Lorne Epp
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 05:53
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 05:53
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On Sun, 04 Jan 2004 05:30:02 GMT, "Aussie Lurker" <hahaha@lol.com> wrote: >Hi All, > >I hope everyone is enjoying the New Year. > >I am in the process of looking up recipes for using some of my leftover ham. >Came across an ingredient called half and half. Could some one please let >me know what it is and also perhaps an Australian equivalent (if there is >one)? Half-and-half is light cream, about 10% milk fat. Usually it's used in coffee. > >Many thanks, > >Aussie Lurker >
Re: Half and Half???
Author: Wayne Boatwright
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 08:15
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 08:15
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"Mabry" <provisoire@cox.net> wrote in news:yJNJb.304565$J77.173692 @fed1read07: > > "Aussie Lurker" <hahaha@lol.com> wrote in message > news:uxNJb.76791$aT.52889@news-server.bigpond.net.au... >: Hi All, >: >: I hope everyone is enjoying the New Year. >: >: I am in the process of looking up recipes for using some of my > leftover ham. >: Came across an ingredient called half and half. Could some one please > let >: me know what it is and also perhaps an Australian equivalent (if there > is >: one)? >: >: Many thanks, >: >: Aussie Lurker >: >: > It is half milk, half (table) cream. Chemistry-wise, use 3 parts milk > to 1 part heavy cream. > -Mabry- > > Do you think that single cream would work in its place? Wayne
Re: Half and Half???
Author: "Mabry"
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 09:14
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 09:14
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\ "Wayne Boatwright" <WayneBoatWright@SMN.worldnet.att.net> wrote in message news:Xns9466CB71C1Ewayneboatwright@204.127.36.1... : "Mabry" <provisoire@cox.net> wrote in news:yJNJb.304565$J77.173692 : @fed1read07: : : > : > "Aussie Lurker" <hahaha@lol.com> wrote in message : > news:uxNJb.76791$aT.52889@news-server.bigpond.net.au... : >: Hi All, : >: : >: I hope everyone is enjoying the New Year. : >: : >: I am in the process of looking up recipes for using some of my : > leftover ham. : >: Came across an ingredient called half and half. Could some one please : > let : >: me know what it is and also perhaps an Australian equivalent (if there : > is : >: one)? : >: : >: Many thanks, : >: : >: Aussie Lurker : >: : >: : > It is half milk, half (table) cream. Chemistry-wise, use 3 parts milk : > to 1 part heavy cream. : > -Mabry- : > : > : : Do you think that single cream would work in its place? : : Wayne No, because butterfat content is what distinguishes one type of cream from another. If you wish to use single cream with milk, then the proportions become 1:1. Theoretically, heavy/whipping cream is 40% butterfat (notable exception: products laced with various 'gums' to make them whip). Milk theoretically has a 3% butterfat content. Ever since it became difficult to find the "table" cream (20% butterfat) that had always been used for cereal, fruit, and coffee, I have used 1/2 milk + 1/2 heavy cream = 20% butterfat - in its place. This does have the advantage of my always having heavy cream on hand. Half & Half is the bastard marketing product that evolved from the discontinuation of use by the general public (for whatever reasons) of what you term single cream. FWIW I use only raw dairy products, unless unavailable, and greatly miss my weekly visits to a farm where my 80 year-old "milk lady" milked her only cow for me (while I patted the cow's head). -Mabry-
Re: Half and Half???
Author: Rhonda Anderson
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 11:10
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 11:10
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"Aussie Lurker" <hahaha@lol.com> wrote in news:uxNJb.76791$aT.52889@news-server.bigpond.net.au: > Hi All, > > I hope everyone is enjoying the New Year. > > I am in the process of looking up recipes for using some of my > leftover ham. Came across an ingredient called half and half. Could > some one please let me know what it is and also perhaps an Australian > equivalent (if there is one)? > > Many thanks, We don't have an Australian equivalent as far as I know. I can't recall the specifics on milk fat percentages (and I'm sure an RFCer in the US will know and post that) but the RFC FAQ gives the definition as HALF AND HALF - a mixture of half cream and half whole milk Here in Australia, just mix half pure cream and half full cream milk. So, if the recipe calls for, for example, 500ml half and half use 250ml cream and 250ml milk. Rhonda Anderson Cranebrook, NSW, Australia
Re: Half and Half???
Author: "Aussie Lurker"
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 11:45
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 11:45
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"Rhonda Anderson" <schumacher11@bigpond.com> wrote in message news:Xns9466E1A844A27schumacher11bigpondc@61.9.191.5... > We don't have an Australian equivalent as far as I know. I can't recall > the specifics on milk fat percentages (and I'm sure an RFCer in the US > will know and post that) but the RFC FAQ gives the definition as > > HALF AND HALF - a mixture of half cream and half whole milk > > Here in Australia, just mix half pure cream and half full cream milk. So, > if the recipe calls for, for example, 500ml half and half use 250ml cream > and 250ml milk. > Thanks for that Rhonda, I've never heard of it before :) Aussie Lurker
Re: Half and Half?
Author: "Brian Macke"
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 14:19
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 14:19
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On Sun, 04 Jan 2004 19:50:34 +0000, Julia Altshuler wrote: > With a lot of recipes, it doesn't matter the butterfat content > of the milk or cream. You can substitute one for the other with the > only difference being the richness or mouthfeel of the final dish. A lot, but it really depends on the dairy product's purpose. The biggest example of this is ice cream, where the fat content is one of three critical factors in how the ice cream freezes (other two are water and sugar). If you ever want to know how critical fat is in ice cream, look at the ingredients for a non-fat ice cream. It reads like a chemistry experiment gone horribly wrong. Another thing to be wary of is the boiling point of the dairy product you're using. Many meats are served at temperatures between the boiling points of milk and cream. Using heavy cream could lead to coagulation and scalding whereas milk could suffer neither of those fates. On the whole, you're right that milk products can be used interchangably. Just pay close attention to what its role is and if it's only to add flavor, then you're probably okay. > --Lia -- -Brian James Macke macke@strangelove.net "In order to get that which you wish for, you must first get that which builds it." -- Unknown
Re: Half and Half???
Author: hahabogus
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 15:01
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 15:01
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"Aussie Lurker" <hahaha@lol.com> wrote in news:n1TJb.77314$aT.54186@news-server.bigpond.net.au: > > "Rhonda Anderson" <schumacher11@bigpond.com> wrote in message > news:Xns9466E1A844A27schumacher11bigpondc@61.9.191.5... >> We don't have an Australian equivalent as far as I know. I can't >> recall the specifics on milk fat percentages (and I'm sure an RFCer >> in the US will know and post that) but the RFC FAQ gives the >> definition as >> >> HALF AND HALF - a mixture of half cream and half whole milk >> >> Here in Australia, just mix half pure cream and half full cream milk. >> So, if the recipe calls for, for example, 500ml half and half use >> 250ml cream and 250ml milk. >> > Thanks for that Rhonda, I've never heard of it before :) > > Aussie Lurker > > > Perhaps you use the term cerial cream, this cerial cream is half and half , at least in Canada. -- And the beet goes on! (or under) -me just a while ago
Re: Half and Half?
Author: "Brian Macke"
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 16:01
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 16:01
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On Sun, 04 Jan 2004 21:13:57 +0000, Julia Altshuler wrote: > I'd finished half a bowl, left the other half next to my bed without > washing up the dish and fell asleep. In the morning, you'd expect the > ice cream to have melted, but it held its shape. You could see the > structure with only a little of the natural ingredients pooled at the > bottom. Yeah I did something similar to that when I was a kid. I grabbed the tub of strawberry swirl from the freezer and left it in my closet by accident. The next day there was this stratified mess of yellow "fluff", clear brown liquid, and a pink syrup at the bottom. I was young and innocent at the time and continued to eat the cheap stuff. We were poor and living in a small town, so it's not like we had much of a choice. I didn't learn exactly what happened until I started making ice cream. Now I remember that tub of sediment whenever I see sales for the mass-produced stuff. > I've stuck with Haagen Dazs, Ben & Jerry's and Breyer's ever since. Breyer's is nice because they're one of the rare companies that makes a Philadelphia ice cream these days. New York ice cream is nice by itself, but Philadelphia vanilla is ideal for apple pie. Mmm. Oh, and Ben & Jerry's is okay, but severely downhill since Unilever bought them. I knew it got bad when I saw a Ben & Jerry's with a 50/50 split of two kinds of ice cream with a center of fudge. That screams "Extruder" to me, so I'd fully expect more air in the Ben & Jerry's product as a result. I haven't done a density toss in the ice cream section lately, but I'd guess that their ice cream weighs less than it used to. > --Lia -- -Brian James Macke macke@strangelove.net "In order to get that which you wish for, you must first get that which builds it." -- Unknown
Re: Half and Half???
Author: "lea b"
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 17:15
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 17:15
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Aussie Lurker wrote: > Hi All, > > I hope everyone is enjoying the New Year. > > I am in the process of looking up recipes for using some of my > leftover ham. Came across an ingredient called half and half. AFAIK, it is a milk product the Merkins enjoy in their coffee ( half milk, half cream ). Not sure how to relate it to the ham though ..
Re: Half and Half???
Author: Wayne Boatwright
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 17:25
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 17:25
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"Mabry" <provisoire@cox.net> wrote in news:KRXJb.349605$J77.15439@fed1read07: > \ > "Wayne Boatwright" <WayneBoatWright@SMN.worldnet.att.net> wrote in > message news:Xns9466CB71C1Ewayneboatwright@204.127.36.1... >: "Mabry" <provisoire@cox.net> wrote in news:yJNJb.304565$J77.173692 >: @fed1read07: >: >: > >: > "Aussie Lurker" <hahaha@lol.com> wrote in message >: > news:uxNJb.76791$aT.52889@news-server.bigpond.net.au... >: >: Hi All, >: >: >: >: I hope everyone is enjoying the New Year. >: >: >: >: I am in the process of looking up recipes for using some of my >: > leftover ham. >: >: Came across an ingredient called half and half. Could some one > please >: > let >: >: me know what it is and also perhaps an Australian equivalent (if > there >: > is >: >: one)? >: >: >: >: Many thanks, >: >: >: >: Aussie Lurker >: >: >: >: >: > It is half milk, half (table) cream. Chemistry-wise, use 3 parts > milk >: > to 1 part heavy cream. >: > -Mabry- >: > >: > >: >: Do you think that single cream would work in its place? >: >: Wayne > > No, because butterfat content is what distinguishes one type of cream > from another. If you wish to use single cream with milk, then the > proportions become 1:1. Theoretically, heavy/whipping cream is 40% > butterfat (notable exception: products laced with various 'gums' to Actually, I didn' state my question correctly. I meant substitute single cream in total for the half and half mixture. However, you've explained a lot more. Thank you, Wayne make > them whip). Milk theoretically has a 3% butterfat content. Ever > since it became difficult to find the "table" cream (20% butterfat) > that had always been used for cereal, fruit, and coffee, I have used > 1/2 milk + 1/2 heavy cream = 20% butterfat - in its place. This does > have the advantage of my always having heavy cream on hand. Half & > Half is the bastard marketing product that evolved from the > discontinuation of use by the general public (for whatever reasons) of > what you term single cream. > > FWIW I use only raw dairy products, unless unavailable, and greatly > miss my weekly visits to a farm where my 80 year-old "milk lady" > milked her only cow for me (while I patted the cow's head). > > -Mabry- > > > > > > > > > > > >
Re: Half and Half?
Author: Julia Altshuler
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 19:50
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 19:50
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I've been interested in everyone's answers since I only know the U.S. conventions on labeling milk products. I have a cheating sort of answer. With a lot of recipes, it doesn't matter the butterfat content of the milk or cream. You can substitute one for the other with the only difference being the richness or mouthfeel of the final dish. For example: soup. The original recipe might call for cream (40% butterfat). I don't want a soup with quite that caloric and fat content so I use half and half (roughly 10-14% butterfat) instead. Sure you can tell the difference, but the soup is still edible. It works in the opposite direction too. There are recipes in heart-healthy cookbooks that call for skim milk (zero butterfat) that are too thin for my taste. I use whole milk (4%), and I'm happy with the result. --Lia
Re: Half and Half?
Author: Julia Altshuler
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 21:13
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 21:13
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Brian Macke wrote: l factors in how the ice cream freezes (other two are water and > sugar). If you ever want to know how critical fat is in ice cream, look at > the ingredients for a non-fat ice cream. It reads like a chemistry > experiment gone horribly wrong. Heh. You've reminded me of another way of knowing the critical importance of cream in ice cream. The last time I bought ice cream with more ingredients besides the usual cream, sugar, eggs, etc. was back in college. I'd finished half a bowl, left the other half next to my bed without washing up the dish and fell asleep. In the morning, you'd expect the ice cream to have melted, but it held its shape. You could see the structure with only a little of the natural ingredients pooled at the bottom. I've stuck with Haagen Dazs, Ben & Jerry's and Breyer's ever since. --Lia
Re: Half and Half???
Author: sackv@uni-duesse
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 22:44
Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 22:44
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Rhonda Anderson <schumacher11@bigpond.com> wrote: > We don't have an Australian equivalent as far as I know. I can't recall > the specifics on milk fat percentages (and I'm sure an RFCer in the US > will know and post that) but the RFC FAQ gives the definition as > > HALF AND HALF - a mixture of half cream and half whole milk That same rfc FAQ, section 1.3, also sez: The minimum milk fat content by weight for various types of cream: [...] Half Cream 12% (=Half and Half*) * Half and Half has only 10% butterfat in British Columbia. Victor
Re: Half and Half???
Author: Rhonda Anderson
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 08:58
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 08:58
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sackv@uni-duesseldorf.de (Victor Sack) wrote in news:1g71m8h.k7x2pf1phoo9iN%sackv@uni-duesseldorf.de: > Rhonda Anderson <schumacher11@bigpond.com> wrote: > >> We don't have an Australian equivalent as far as I know. I can't >> recall the specifics on milk fat percentages (and I'm sure an RFCer >> in the US will know and post that) but the RFC FAQ gives the >> definition as >> >> HALF AND HALF - a mixture of half cream and half whole milk > > That same rfc FAQ, section 1.3, also sez: > > The minimum milk fat content by weight for various types of cream: > [...] > Half Cream 12% (=Half and Half*) > > * Half and Half has only 10% butterfat in British Columbia. > > Victor Thanks Victor. I just quickly looked for the definition. Rhonda Cranebrook, NSW, Australia
Re: Half and Half???
Author: Rhonda Anderson
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 09:59
Date: Mon, 05 Jan 2004 09:59
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hahabogus <not@valid.invalid> wrote in news:Xns94665BF239549notvalidinvalid@127.0.0.1: > "Aussie Lurker" <hahaha@lol.com> wrote in > news:n1TJb.77314$aT.54186@news-server.bigpond.net.au: > >> >> "Rhonda Anderson" <schumacher11@bigpond.com> wrote in message >> news:Xns9466E1A844A27schumacher11bigpondc@61.9.191.5... >>> We don't have an Australian equivalent as far as I know. I can't >>> recall the specifics on milk fat percentages (and I'm sure an RFCer >>> in the US will know and post that) but the RFC FAQ gives the >>> definition as >>> >>> HALF AND HALF - a mixture of half cream and half whole milk >>> >>> Here in Australia, just mix half pure cream and half full cream >>> milk. So, if the recipe calls for, for example, 500ml half and half >>> use 250ml cream and 250ml milk. >>> >> Thanks for that Rhonda, I've never heard of it before :) >> >> Aussie Lurker >> >> >> > > Perhaps you use the term cerial cream, this cerial cream is half and > half , at least in Canada. > No, never heard of cereal cream. I don't believe we have any product that equates to half and half. BTW, where does the term "cereal cream" come from? Is it intended to be used on breakfast cereal? Just curious <g>. Rhonda Anderson Cranebrook, NSW, Australia
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