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Extruded Food
First Try

My first attempt at using this extruder wasn't entirely successful - it was the same recipe, without the semolina. It made a good, soft dough, but unfortunately, it spread out and lost its shape during cooking.

first attempt at extruded cookies

Other Possibilities

Others have assembled stacks of differently-coloured square extrusions from these machines, then sliced them to make pixel cookies.

Pasta is the obvious next thing to try. Not all of the dies will be suitable for this.

Savoury snacks like cheese straws might work, or little snack biscuits formed by slicing off pieces of the extruded dough as they emerge.

And I might even have a go at making my own dies to fit this machine...


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May 2011 - I found a second hand set of Play-Doh shaping tools in a charity shop for the bargain price of £1.50. The set includes a couple of different extruder tools which have potential for fun in the kitchen.

Play Doh tools
Food fun with Play Doh tools

I began by cleaning and sanitising the whole set - it's all hard plastic, so this was easy, although the large extruder tool has a surprising number of small nooks and crevices, considering it's designed to be used with something that is good at getting stuck in them.

I eventually got it all free of dried remnants of dough, then washed, rinsed and drained everything.


Food fun with Play Doh tools

I made a quick dough out of 150g plain flour, 150g semolina, 100g caster sugar, 85g butter, an egg, some vanilla extract and a pinch of salt.

I blended this all together in the food processor until it formed doughy clumps, then turned it out and kneaded it a little.


Food fun with Play Doh tools

Then I let loose with the extruder, using about a walnut-sized piece of dough each time, and with a sharp knife on standby to trim off the extrusions after squeezing them onto the tray.

I had about a dozen different options available from the shape dies in the set, so I tried them all.


Food fun with Play Doh tools

Some of the shape dies offered the opportunity to arrange the extruded pieces in different ways, for example, one produced four thin ribbons - and these could be either left to tumble randomly into a heap, or swirled into a rosette, or concertina-folded, and so on.


Food fun with Play Doh tools

The semolina in my dough made it quite coarse and grainy - meaning that for some of the more intricately-shaped dies, the extrusion didn't exit smoothly, but the ragged surface was still quite decorative and regular in appearance, so it just added to the effect..

I baked the shapes in the oven at 160C for ten minutes.


Food fun with Play Doh tools

They held their shape very well during baking - just taking on a tinge of nutty brown on the edges and thinner parts.

I left them to cool for ten minutes before trying to handle them. - then I transferred them to a wire rack.


Considering their humble and juvenile origins, I think they look quite posh and grown-up. Some are more appealing than others (the wormy ones just looks wrong, to me).

extruded biscuits

This recipe yielded quite dense, crunchy biscuits - tasty, but a bit too hard to eat on their own. They are brilliant for dunking in coffee or hot chocolate though - because they hold together really well.

extruded biscuits
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If you want to see where this kind of thinking leads...
http://www.cookingissues.com/2011/01/24/fantastic-stochasic-masa-finally-a-good-3-d-food-printing-application/

Posted by epolo on May 31 2011 at 16:57