I just made a posting concerning "a stick", and here I go again... In the
reciepe, I also found that "1/2 cup of Crisco" should be added. I live in
Sweden, and don't know what "Crisco" is, I couldn't find it in my
dictionary. So... what is "Crisco", is there any other name for it (so that
I might find it in my dictionary)? In what kind of store could I find it?
Thank you again,
Carl-Jonas Wernhoff
TTFN
--
Ric Cooney, CC (ret)
ric...@bellatlantic.net
"Carl-Jonas Wernhoff" <t...@linkoping.mail.telia.com> wrote in message
news:wC3E4.3847$74.5...@newsc.telia.net...
Crisco is a solid vegetable shortening used in baking & frying, though
it is not used as much these days as years ago.
It can be used for pie crusts (not as flaky as lard) and can be used
for frying, as it melts when heated. It can also be used to make
cookies and frosting.
It is sold in tubs of about 500g+ and also in "sticks", like our
butter & margerine are sold.
It comes in regular or butter flavor.
If available where you are, the grocery will have it, if anyone does.
Here it is in the same section as cooking oils or sometimes shelved
with baking supplies.
If you need a substuitute, post the recipe and I'm sure many people
here can offer solutions.
Gloryon
Linda
Crisco is NOT lard.. Crisco is a vegetable shortening. Lard is an
animal product-it's rendered fat.
Goomba
>Crisco is a brand name for lard. Here in the USA there is regular and
>butter-flavored Crisco and we get it at any supermarket. I never use it
>myself, but I hope this helps.
It's hydrogenated vegetable oil, i.e., vegetable shortening, not lard.
It has all the bad qualities of lard, but none of the flavor. I use
very little of it (pie crusts and corn bread) so I put to good use its
top quality, if that's the right word -- long shelf-life at room
temperature.
David
"JJMMJJ" <jjm...@aol.comebyteme> wrote in message
news:20000328102132...@ng-de1.aol.com...
>Hello,
>
>I just made a posting concerning "a stick", and here I go again... In the
>reciepe, I also found that "1/2 cup of Crisco" should be added. I live in
>Sweden, and don't know what "Crisco" is, I couldn't find it in my
>dictionary. So... what is "Crisco", is there any other name for it (so that
>I might find it in my dictionary)? In what kind of store could I find it?
>
Crisco is a US brand name for vegetable shortening--solid white grease
in a can. As I understand things, it's made from vegetable oil that
is hydrogenated enough to be solid at room temperature.
What are you cooking? There are substitutes--margaring, butter, or
lard come to mind.
M.Odom is at modomatkoyotedotcom
Criso is Hydrogenated Vegetable Oils, also known as
Shortening in the US. Is it saturated? I thought it
was poly-unsaturated.
I'd be surprised if even Sweeden has been sheltered from
shortening, but if I'm wrong, you're lucky. Crisco and it's
ilk have a distinctive and unpleasant taste. Especially in
frosting.
Good luck..
Greg Zywicki
In article <K84E4.461$ZH4....@typhoon1.gnilink.net>, "Ric
Cooney" <ric...@bellatlantic.net> wrote:
>Ah I have the answer here as well. Do I get a prize. Crisco is a
saturated
>all vegetable shortening product, used as a substitute for lard
or butter.
>http://www.crisco.com
>
>TTFN
>
>--
>Ric Cooney, CC (ret)
>ric...@bellatlantic.net
>
>"Carl-Jonas Wernhoff" <t...@linkoping.mail.telia.com> wrote in
message
>news:wC3E4.3847$74.5...@newsc.telia.net...
>> Hello,
>>
>> I just made a posting concerning "a stick", and here I go
again... In the
>> reciepe, I also found that "1/2 cup of Crisco" should be
added. I live in
>> Sweden, and don't know what "Crisco" is, I couldn't find it in
my
>> dictionary. So... what is "Crisco", is there any other name
for it (so
>that
>> I might find it in my dictionary)? In what kind of store could
I find it?
>>
>> Thank you again,
>> Carl-Jonas Wernhoff
>>
>>
>
>
>
>
* Sent from RemarQ http://www.remarq.com The Internet's Discussion Network *
The fastest and easiest way to search and participate in Usenet - Free!
> Ah I have the answer here as well. Do I get a prize. Crisco is a saturated
> all vegetable shortening product, used as a substitute for lard or butter.
> http://www.crisco.com
No prize. Crisco has been vegetable shortening for years but was originally
lard when first marketed as I recall. More to the point, since the person with
the question can't find any Crisco , can lard be substituted in equivalent
measure where a recipe calls for Crisco?
Hydrogenation increase the degree of saturation by attaching
more hydrogen atoms to the carbon atoms in the fat.
There is some body of opinion to the effect that fats that are
saturated artificially by hydrogenation (margarine, for example)
are unhealthier than naturally saturated fats (butter, for
instance)
Leonard
No, it wasn't--check out the above web site!
Brent
Yes I use both Lard and Crisco interchangably.
Also have P&G Stock <g>
--
Ric Cooney, CC (ret)
ric...@bellatlantic.net
"GW" <gwa...@pop.mpls.uswest.net> wrote in message
news:38E110E7...@pop.mpls.uswest.net...
> Ric Cooney wrote:
>
> > Ah I have the answer here as well. Do I get a prize. Crisco is a
saturated
> > all vegetable shortening product, used as a substitute for lard or
butter.
> > http://www.crisco.com
>
> No prize. Crisco has been vegetable shortening for years but was
originally
>More to the point, since the person with
>the question can't find any Crisco , can lard be substituted in equivalent
>measure where a recipe calls for Crisco?
Depends on the recipe. Crisco is tasteless; lard isn't.
David
Sorry for following up my own message. I meant to add an example,
which is that tamales, for one thing, are much better made with lard
than with Crisco or its equivalent.
David
Greg Zywicki
I didn't think real people made frosting with crisco. I thought only
icky grocery store bakeries did because it was cheaper than butter.
It's not a taste as much as a greasy feel in your mouth..
Goomba
Yes Maam, that greasy feeling in yer mouth is one good reason not to substitute
Crisco for K-Y Jelly... the other, even more important reason, boys and girls,
is that Crisco is SHORTENING! ;)
Sheldon
````````````
On a recent Night Court rerun, Judge Harry Stone had a wonderful line:
"I try to keep an open mind, but not so open that my brains fall out."
>snippage<
> I didn't think real people made frosting with crisco. I thought only
> icky grocery store bakeries did because it was cheaper than butter.
> It's not a taste as much as a greasy feel in your mouth..
> Goomba
There is nothing worse than frosting made with shortening! I think we
should revolt! Who's with me!?
--
Lulu in BC, taking up arms against cheapo bakeries
lu...@earthlingNospam.net, Remove Nospam to reply
I am Homer of Borg... Prepare to be...Ooooooh Donuts!
(interested) I've revolted lots of people ... if you need help, I'm
your man. So to speak.
nancy
LOL! Reminds me of lines from the movie "History of the World Pt. I":
Servant: The Peasants are revolting!
Queen: They certainly are!
That's probably not exactly right, but you get the drift ;-)
--
Lulu in BC, letting them eat cake
> > (interested) I've revolted lots of people ... if you need help, I'm
> > your man. So to speak.
> >
> > nancy
>
> LOL! Reminds me of lines from the movie "History of the World Pt. I":
>
> Servant: The Peasants are revolting!
> Queen: They certainly are!
>
> That's probably not exactly right, but you get the drift ;-)
>
> --
> Lulu in BC, letting them eat cake
(laughing) That's gotta be Mel Brooks or Monty Python. Either one,
peerless at making a play on words. Cracks me up.
nancy
> > > > I didn't think real people made frosting with crisco. I thought only
> > > > icky grocery store bakeries did because it was cheaper than butter.
> > > > It's not a taste as much as a greasy feel in your mouth..
> > > > Goomba
> > >
> > > There is nothing worse than frosting made with shortening! I think we
> > > should revolt! Who's with me!?
> >
> > (interested) I've revolted lots of people ... if you need help, I'm
> > your man. So to speak.
> >
> > nancy
>
> LOL! Reminds me of lines from the movie "History of the World Pt. I":
>
> Servant: The Peasants are revolting!
> Queen: They certainly are!
>
> That's probably not exactly right, but you get the drift ;-)
Hey.. Charles Aadams used to do the best cartoons.. and reminds me of
the joke:
"Momma.. I hate my sisters guts!"
"Shut up and eat what's put in front of you" <---Obfood
Goomba
WORSE yet!! Kroger store calls there greasy concoction "Kroger Kreamy"
and tout it as some miracle ingredient... when ever we have a party at
work folks get all impressed by these horribly greasy overly sweet
confections. They have never experienced a real cake, I swear.
Goomba
I managed a single-screen movie theatre (900 seats: beautiful!) that ran
History of the World. All. Summer. Long. Let me shake this out of my
head...
Count de Money...d'Monet! (Harvey Korman):
BUT YOUR HIGHNESS, THE PEOPLE ARE REVOLTING!
King Louis XVI (Mel Brooks):
YOU SAID IT, THEY STINK ON ICE.
Whew. I can now go another decade in peace.
--
Jeff Cook
je...@cookstudios.com
http://www.cookstudios.com
Washington DC area
>Crisco is tasteless; lard isn't. ...
>tamales, for one thing, are much better
>made with lard than with Crisco or its
>equivalent.
Yes, but I've made vegetarian tamales with Crisco with pretty good
results. And the commercial lard in the US ain't so great either.
So now you know more than you wanted to know about Crisco. It's a heart
attack in a can, but it's NOT all bad. It makes disgusting frosting, but it
makes terrific biscuits. Win some, lose some.
Felice
I cannot remember how they tasted.
Gloryon
>On Tue, 28 Mar 2000 14:12:20 -0500, Goomba <goo...@mindspring.com> wrote:
>> If only that were true, but many experiences with yucky
>> crisco-based frostings prove otherwise.
>>
>> Greg Zywicki
>
Crisco is a VEGETABLE shortening. Lard is beef fat,IIRC.
Jim Yanik,NRA member
<glo...@simi.com> writes:
>Subject: Re: What is "Crisco"
>From: "Alas, Babylon" <glo...@simi.com>
>Date: Wed, 29 Mar 2000 00:52:39 GMT
>Who cares what the cake "looks" like! If it doesn't taste good, why bother? I
That's why I don't like cakes from Chinese bakeries. The ones I've
tried look fabulous, with gorgeous fruit on top but taste like
nothing, zilch, nada. They are not "too sweet," which I understand is
their virtue, but eating them is pointless. (As opposed to other
pastries, tarts, etc. in Chinese bakeries).
Sue(tm)
Lead me not into temptation... I can find it myself!
sue at interport net