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radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Default)
radiantfracture

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radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Default)
This is a continuation of the experiment in trying to bake treats invented by The AI Weirdness neural net. (Scroll down to cookies post.)

I made two versions, incorporating various perspectives on the notion, including my own preoccupation with yeast and [personal profile] sazerac's suggestion about shortbread and marmalade.



It's all a little rustic and perhaps slightly reminiscent of Mendl's confections in The Grand Budapest Hotel.

Draft 1: A Loaf of Quitterbread

This is the big loaf in the photo (since cut into slices)

-Yeast-based nutmeg-flavoured coffee cake recipe from Le Internet
-Orange glaze


I liked this. It had the nice median feel between bread and cake that seemed important for quitterbread.

I do not think I raised my yeast quite right, and the recipe seemed to call for about twice as much flour as was necessary. The result is thus quite dense, but I like dense cake.

I looked at various recipes, including Ghanian butter bread, whence I got the nutmeg.

I think I'll make another draft of this with more spices and more upstanding yeast.

Pro: Definitely gives the sense that I started making bread and then quit
Con: These are clearly slices and not bars.

Can I just layer the slices? I feel like the grain would be going the wrong way or something.

Draft 2: Quitter(short)bread Sandwich Bars

These are the little square things. This is layers of the family shortbread recipe with apricot jam-orange buttercream icing in between the layers, to imitate the picture a little:



There wasn't very much jam (it was a tiny sample jar, not the gift jam) -- hence adding the orange.

I got worried that they weren't fancy enough, so I melted some chocolate and mixed it with pecans and draped that over some of them. Then I realized that I'd forgotten to sweeten the chocolate. However, the layers under the chocolate are so sweet that it doesn't actually matter.

Pro: I mean, shortbread.
Con: These are more bar-y, but still not very bar-y.

What makes a bar a bar?

[personal profile] sazerac's actual suggestion involved jam and royal icing, and that would be more bar-ish. I just didn't have enough experimental jam in the moment. I now have many, many egg whites, so I could definitely try that.

Maybe I want a layer of shortbread, then jam, then cake, then icing...

And other important issues -- sorry. I'm just enjoying fussing about something totally frivolous and low-pressure creative.

{rf}
radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Default)
Nothing left of the term now except trying to sweep up ten thousand barleycorns with a straw.

While I do that, let's talk sugar.

Thanks for the DW recipe jam.

Crowdsourced absurdist food project is a go. I put in a grocery order for some of the foundational ingredients for Neural-Network-Generated Baking. I'm going to start with Quitterbread Bars:



Because C's friend at the library is retiring and C. asked after quitterbread as a present.

For this first draft, I'm thinking I'll do a yeast coffeecake base (on the premise that I started yeast for bread-making, then, you know, quit), with a dairy-free butterscotch layer just to sort of match the artist's rendition. We'll see if I feel up to stacking the layers. Hopefully this will amount to, as [personal profile] marycatelli stipulated,
bars that you quit whatever you're doing to eat.
If that version doesn't work out, I'll use [personal profile] elusis's suggestion:
Quitterbread Bars are clearly pieces of Wonderbread, spread with chocolate icing from a can, slapped together, cut into "bars," and handed to your kid because who can be arsed to actually bake anyway?
I think we decided Quitterbread Bars clearly came from the Potterverse. Actually, in their skew-whiff portmanteaury, many of the cookie names sound Rowlingian (or do they echo other worlds to you?)

* * * * *

I am eating my knockoff version of K's dinner -- breaded sole and bok choy -- and considering I gave it much less care and attention, it was still tasty.

I brought home some exams to mark. We'll See.

{rf}
radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Default)
Do you anxiety bake? Does stirring batter induce a soothing flow state in you? Me too!

I also love autogenerated and random language poetry. I don't know what the connection might be. Anyway, here's a mostly nonsensical project.

I'd really quite like to derive real recipes for the imaginary cookies generated by the AI in the latest AI Weirdness post, particularly the following:
  • Lord's Honey Fight (which sounds DELICIOUS)
  • Fluffin Coffee Drops
  • Quitterbread Bars (v. Harry Pottery)
  • Merry Hunga Poppers
  • Hand Buttersacks
  • Hallowy Maples (also delicious)
  • Apricot Dream Moles
If a recipe arises that seems workable, I will undertake to make it over the winter break and post the results.

Any thoughts or inspirations? How do the names work for you as prompts for sense-images and baking algorithms?

Some of the Artist's Renditions )

First Reflections on Imaginary Cookies

The drawing in the post for Lord's Honey Fight shows a sort of cinnamon-roll-esque device. I think that's clever, but I'm not sure it's grand enough for a Lord's Honey Fight. Might that be a big pan of bars like a delicious, delicious field of mediaeval battle?

I'm thinking Fluffin Coffee Drops could be whipped shortbread with coffee flavouring. (I don't love whipped shortbread, but with coffee and a flurky name, maybe.)

Hallowy maples I see more or less as just a dish of cookie full of maple syrup. Maybe maple butter tarts (a real thing I had once and have never forgotten).

I was actually given a jar of homemade apricot jam that seems ideal for Apricot Dream Moles.

{rf}
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