I made a baked raspberry "pudding" (I'm guessing that's in the British
sense of the word, since I suspect there wasn't really supposed to be
any liquid.) The raspberry mixture at the bottom was 2 cups
raspberries and 1 cup jam and the top part was flour, sugar, 8 egg
yolks, 6 oz. butter, lemon juice, vanilla, and baking powder.
It said to use a 9-inch round pan, but since I was afraid it would
drip over, I put a cookie sheet underneath it. The recipe said to bake
it for 40 minutes, after which you use the toothpick test. It
definitely wasn't ready, so I baked it another 10 minutes and tried
again. The toothpick seemed dry this time (and the recipe said "be
careful not to overbake") but the center was definitely underdone. (I
should have used a wide butter knife, not a skinny toothpick!)
Luckily, the people I served it to (most of whom were strangers)
seemed to love it.
My question is: Did the cookie sheet, in all likelihood, slow down the
baking process? Should I just tolerate a couple of drips to make sure
it bakes evenly? Thank you.
Lenona.
sense of the word, since I suspect there wasn't really supposed to be
any liquid.) The raspberry mixture at the bottom was 2 cups
raspberries and 1 cup jam and the top part was flour, sugar, 8 egg
yolks, 6 oz. butter, lemon juice, vanilla, and baking powder.
It said to use a 9-inch round pan, but since I was afraid it would
drip over, I put a cookie sheet underneath it. The recipe said to bake
it for 40 minutes, after which you use the toothpick test. It
definitely wasn't ready, so I baked it another 10 minutes and tried
again. The toothpick seemed dry this time (and the recipe said "be
careful not to overbake") but the center was definitely underdone. (I
should have used a wide butter knife, not a skinny toothpick!)
Luckily, the people I served it to (most of whom were strangers)
seemed to love it.
My question is: Did the cookie sheet, in all likelihood, slow down the
baking process? Should I just tolerate a couple of drips to make sure
it bakes evenly? Thank you.
Lenona.