Everywhere you look, there is a lot of
emphasis on cutting the fat out of our daily diets, but who wants to
cut out the fat if it means cutting out the flavor? When it comes to
baking, there is a way to cut down on your fat intake without
changing the ingredients in your favorite recipes. If you switch to
nonstick silicone bakeware, you can cut down on your fat intake with
minimal effort. Because the bakeware is nonstick, you never have to
use butter, shortening, or grease on your pans or sheets to ensure
easy food removal.
The first silicone items made exclusively
for baking were small silicone mats that fit nicely on your cookie
sheet and allowed you to bake cookies with out greasing the cookie
sheet or worrying about the bottoms getting burned. These little mats
were a huge success and stores were hard pressed to keep them in
stock.
As the popularity of these mats grew, manufacturers
decide to explore the idea of making more bakeware from silicone.
They began making spoons, spatulas, and whisks that could withstand
high heats and could be used with nonstick cookware with no fear of
ruining the coating. Silicone utensils were the perfect choice for
candy making or any other project that required a boiling and sticky
liquid to be stirred.
Kitchen supply manufacturers also
introduced silicone potholders and oven gloves. Because they can
withstand heats up to 500 degrees, they are the perfect insurance
that you won’t get burned when you pull a hot dish from your oven.
They don’t conduct heat the way that a cloth potholder does and
they are much sturdier and easy to keep clean than traditional
potholders. Home canners fell in love with silicone baker’s mitts
because they could actually reach into a pot of boiling water to
remove a hot jar of food once it was done processing. As an added
bonus these durable potholders do double duty as lid grippers making
opening jars a snap.
Once silicone hit kitchens in the form
of baking mats, utensils, and pot holders, kitchen experts began to
see the potential of this material in everyday baking. Suddenly
almost any type of bakeware that could traditionally be found in
stainless steel, aluminum, glass, or stoneware was being offered in
brightly colored silicone. Stores began selling muffin tins, bread
loaf pans, cake pans, and pie pans. The most popular pieces tend to
be the specialty designed cake pans that allow you to make cakes
shaped like everything from roses to pumpkins. They even have mini
cake pans that make individual, fancy shaped cakes.
The
popularity of silicone bakeware skyrocketed as cooks began to see the
benefits of using this material in their kitchens. Foods pop out of
silicone pans with amazing ease. You never need to grease, flour, or
even use cooking spray on a silicone pan and that adds up to lots of
calories and fat grams saved with each meal. Because silicone is very
flexible, it is easy to bend and twist it so that cakes and breads
pop out easily. You never have to force baked goods out of the pan,
so they retain there shape and you don’t see a lot of split and
broken cakes.
Silicone is a bakers dream when it comes to
making evenly cooked delicacies. The material distributes heat
evenly, so you never end up with a cake that is burned around the
edges and still not cooked in the middle. It also cools down quickly
ensuring that you foods will not continue cooking and possibly drying
out once you remove them from the oven.
Because silicone is
nonstick, cleanup is a breeze. A little soap and water and any crumb
left on your bakeware disappears. It is nonporous, so it never
retains any odors from the foods you cook. Completely versatile it
goes from oven to table to freezer and can even be thrown in the
dishwasher. Once you are done cleaning it, storage is a snap. With
its flexibility, you can twist it, bend it, fold it or mash it up so
it can fit in the smallest of drawers or cupboards.
If you
haven’t tried silicone bakeware, add a piece or two to your
kitchen. You will be surprised at its quality and flexibility.
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