Quoth Bella_Vixen
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How very vanilla.
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Did you ever eat unsweetened baking chocolate, or straight cocoa powder? It is not sweet at all. The only reason we love chocolate so much is that it has a ton of sugar added. If they didn't add sugar we'd hate it. The "original" chocolate drink (Mayas? Aztecs?) is probably not something too many people today would be interested in drinking.
On that note, if you like rich chocolate, try Haagen Dasz (sp?) Mayan Chocolate ice cream. It is really rich, a spoonful or two is enough. Chocolate ice cream with cinnamon and a fudge swirl. Hershey's also makes a Mayan Blend and an Aztec Blend hot chocolate mix. They are not overly sweet and have a bit of spice added. Beats Swiss Miss any day!I don't go in for ancient wisdom
I don't believe just 'cause ideas are tenacious
It means that they're worthy - Tim Minchin, "White Wine in the Sun"
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Quoth Sofar View PostTrust me. IT WILL TASTE WEIRD WITHOUT THE VANILLA. Vanilla is in everything chocolate that you eat. Even Hershey's chocolate syrup. Who's the cook here, huh?
That is all.I'm bringing disdain back...with a vengeance.
Oh, and your tool box called...you got out again.
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Had a friend rave about my iced tea. It was smooth, rich, and complex. Same with my coffee. "How come my iced tea doesnt' taste like that? I buy the same brand."
Cuz he wasn't putting vanilla extract in it. Just a couple drops to the pitcher, you shouldn't even be consious of tasting it. Same with the coffee.
Vanilla goes into everything. Cakes, cookies, all ice creams regardless of the flavors. Probably most sherberts. All puddings, regardless of flavor. Used this way, it is used as a boost, not a flavor.
What a bunch of maroons. "It will taste weird." You're right, this is like a bunch of children.
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Quoth Bella_Vixen View PostI was trying to say that the local custard place makes "chocolate" shakes with vanilla custard and chocolate syrup, and I can taste the vanilla, so I ask them to make mine with chocolate custard.
That is all.
Then again, the OP mentioned that the "ice cream" they use is not flavored at all. So the vanilla syrup would just add sweetness to balance out the chocolate. My senior year in college we got a little Friendly's ice cream station; we always had chocolate and vanilla, and one other flavor that varied (usually mint chip) and Fribble Mix, which is just unflavored ice milk. The Fribbles are made with that and flavored syrup (vanilla, chocolate, strawberry, or coffee, at the time, at least). I used to make myself chocolate-cherry Fribbles - I would add a couple spoonfuls of maraschino cherries...yum!I also used to use orange juice and vanilla ice cream with a dash of vanilla extract to make a creamsicle shake. Add some sugar and you get more of an Orange Julius flavor.
Last edited by BookstoreEscapee; 07-20-2007, 02:53 AM.I don't go in for ancient wisdom
I don't believe just 'cause ideas are tenacious
It means that they're worthy - Tim Minchin, "White Wine in the Sun"
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Quoth wagegoth View PostI use real vanilla extract, and add it to french toast, and the kids love it. It just adds that extra something.
Now I want French toast.Unseen but seeing
oh dear, now they're masquerading as sane-KiaKat
There isn't enough interpretive dance in the workplace these days-Irv
3rd shift needs love, too
RIP, mo bhrionglóid
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Clearly these are people who have never baked in their life. Otherwise, they'd think anything you put vanilla extract into will taste like vanilla.
Side note, I LOVE the smell of vanilla. My husband's parents brought us back a bottle of real vanilla from their last trip- can't remember where they went. It was SO MUCH BETTER than the crap they sell here, it smelled perfect. Now everything else seems substandard.
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Oh please. Oh please. Oh please.
This is a pet peeve of mine; I realize that there are far better issues to be concerned with, but I can't help it.
It's NOT "sherbert". It's SHERBET.
Sher-bet. It comes from the Arabic, "sharbat". Only one "r".
And, having thrown that little tizzy, I know from countless chocolate recipes that vanilla goes into everything. It just wouldn't be the same without the vanilla!
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Quoth BookstoreEscapee View PostOn that note, if you like rich chocolate, try Haagen Dasz (sp?) Mayan Chocolate ice cream. It is really rich, a spoonful or two is enough. Chocolate ice cream with cinnamon and a fudge swirl. Hershey's also makes a Mayan Blend and an Aztec Blend hot chocolate mix. They are not overly sweet and have a bit of spice added. Beats Swiss Miss any day!
Albertson's has a generic Mayan Chocolate that's also really good. Not quite as good as the Haagen Dasz, but very close, surprisingly.
I'll have to try the hot chocolate mix...
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Obviously these people have never baked a cookie in their lives.... um choc. chip cookies???? HELLO! It's on the package that you add vanilla! That's just the most basic recipe I can think of that MOST people will have made at one point in their lives.... of course, I guess that pre-made cookie dough is what everyone has turned to now <sigh>
Btw - the vanilla imitation crap you get at the grocery store is a waste product of paper factories (see below). Buy the real vanilla. It's a little more expensive, but it's worth it. And you can get it in small sizes, so the cost isn't too bad.
From: http://www.vanilla.com/html/facts-extracts.html
The two most common sources for synthetic vanillin have been Lignin Vanillin, a by-product of the paper industry, which has been chemically treated to resemble the taste of pure vanilla extract, and Ethyl Vanillin, which is a coal-tar derivative and frequently far stronger than either Lignin Vanillin or pure vanilla.
In the 1930s, the Ontario Paper Company, was struggling with the sulphite liquor, a by-product of paper making, which was polluting local streams near their plant. Company chemists realized it could be turned into synthetic vanillin, a viable but curious ecological solution to a big problem. If you grew up on synthetics, imitation vanilla will be a familiar flavor for you. Given the fact that vanilla isn't that expensive, you might consider learning to enjoy the real deal.
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Quoth air914 View PostBtw - the vanilla imitation crap you get at the grocery store is a waste product of paper factories (see below). Buy the real vanilla. It's a little more expensive, but it's worth it. And you can get it in small sizes, so the cost isn't too bad.You're not doing me a favor by eating here. I'm doing you a favor by feeding you.
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Quoth BookstoreEscapee View PostDid you ever eat unsweetened baking chocolate, or straight cocoa powder? It is not sweet at all. The only reason we love chocolate so much is that it has a ton of sugar added. If they didn't add sugar we'd hate it. The "original" chocolate drink (Mayas? Aztecs?) is probably not something too many people today would be interested in drinking.
Fera's tip of the day: put a few squares of a good bitter or dark chocolate in chili con carne. It's really yummy.
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A chocolate shake w/o a touch of vanilla doesn't taste right. Vanilla enhances the flavor of chocolate. Some people shouldn't be allowed out of the house w/o minders.Figers are vicious I tell ya. They crawl up your leg and steal your belly button lint.
I'm a case study.
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When I make a chocolate milkshake at home, I use vanilla ice cream and add Nestle's Quik chocolate syrup. Strange that these people have never used vanilla ice cream to make their own milkshake.It is a terrible thing to see and have no vision.
-Helen Keller
I got this av from Court Records, made by Croik!
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Quoth RecoveringKinkoid View PostVanilla goes into everything. Cakes, cookies, all ice creams regardless of the flavors. Probably most sherberts. All puddings, regardless of flavor. Used this way, it is used as a boost, not a flavor.
Quoth Mighty Girl View PostSide note, I LOVE the smell of vanilla.
Quoth Eireann View PostThis is a pet peeve of mine; I realize that there are far better issues to be concerned with, but I can't help it.
It's NOT "sherbert". It's SHERBET.
Sherbet is derived from the Arabic for drink, and is the same root from which we get syrup.
^-.-^Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden
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