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When me bake relatively dry items, like sugar cookies or brownies, we just keep them on a plate with plastic wrap over them and they are fine. But when I make something moist, like oatmeal cookies or the blond brownies I whipped up Sunday, they always seem to end up green and fuzzy before we can finish them. We've tried the plastic wrap, aluminum foil, Tupperware containers, tins, etc. Nothing seems to prevent them from getting moldy. Any ideas? I know they say sticking a piece of bread in the container can help by holding the moisture. I have to try that.
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Steve * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular. * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything? * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going. |
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I'm a trained pastry chef, I freeze everything and take them out as needed. You can then let them come to room temperature or nuke them. I like my cookies warm so I nuke them.
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do you wrap them individually?
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No, I find it is not necessary to wrap them individually. I have long rectangular tupperware type plastic containers with lids and I place my cookies in one, cupcakes in another and muffins in the third. I ice my cupcakes before freezing with no problem, but I've heard this is not recommended. When I make pancakes and waffles, I freeze these separately otherwise they tend to stick together.
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When I make any kind of cookies I tend to place a piece of bread into the tupperware container. I am a sucker for peanut butter cookies and this seems to make them not only last longer but keep them from getting hard!
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Baked stuff can go bad??????
Kidding actually before I learned to send it in with DH to work, stuff did go bad, and I learned to refridgerate what I wanted in the next couple of days or freeze if I wanted it to use later. |
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I am in the "they can go bad" camp. My guys can burn through a double batch of muffins (24) in a sitting. In fact, we quit making muffins into "muffins" and now just bake them in a 9x13 cake pan. I have them make two double batches at a time. But, when the guys were little, I used to freeze them in a bread sack. We could pull out as many as we needed.
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