cakes vs cookies
Jul. 19th, 2011 09:51 amIn my defence, I don't make cookies very often, so four eggs sounded like a reasonable number. And somehow I read the lines "1 egg" and "4 c. flour" as "4 egg." It looked perfectly normal until I kept adding flour and it kept not turning into thick mixer-killing cookie dough.
On the bright side, it seems that the only difference between "cookies" and "cake batter" is the number of eggs you put in, and now we have a tasty maple sheet cake. Needs vanilla icing, but other than that.
Someday soon I will finish my post about maple syrup, about which Canada is unsurprisingly more serious than the US. Also someday soon I will rant about the difficulties of trying to buy food in Canada, with the Block O'Butter being the biggest offender.
On the bright side, it seems that the only difference between "cookies" and "cake batter" is the number of eggs you put in, and now we have a tasty maple sheet cake. Needs vanilla icing, but other than that.
Someday soon I will finish my post about maple syrup, about which Canada is unsurprisingly more serious than the US. Also someday soon I will rant about the difficulties of trying to buy food in Canada, with the Block O'Butter being the biggest offender.
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Date: 2011-07-23 05:58 pm (UTC)Breyer's ice cream is NOT the same, but the fancier stuff ("double churned" and anything else in black and purple packaging - I forget exactly all the words they use on the labels) is decent. The blue packages are not worth it - there are ingredients in there that have NO business in ice cream.
Nabisco is "Mr Christie" for some reason that I once looked up and don't remember, so it probably didn't make much sense. The products are similar but sometimes a bit different.
Almost all my trips to the US are shopping trips. I like Canada, but it just doesn't compare to the US when it comes to prices and selection on almost everything.