Justin Dunham

's journal about making things

Are avocadoes “vegan eggs”?

Filed under: Cooking Journal — Tags: , , , , , , , — Justin Dunham on October 15, 2011

Blackbird eggs. By Wikimedia Commons contributor Lokilech (picture links to page)

In this post I noted that I found some strange similarities between avocados and eggs. Avocados can be subsituted for eggs in some recipes (especially when not much egg is called for); they seize up and get rubbery just like eggs when they’re overcooked.

I also note, not that it’s relevant, that they’re constructed very similarly. Think about the inside of each – an embryo and its food source, suspended within the fruit by some other filling (egg white or avocado flesh). The possibility that avocados are some kind of “vegan egg” makes it tempting to draw as many parallels as possible.

So, I did a fair amount of research to try to understand whether avocados and eggs are really similar, chemically or in any other way. The answer, I’m afraid, is “not really”.

Baking

Avocados can do some neat baking tricks. You can make frosting, or substitute avocado for much of the butter in a brioche. The use of avocados in baking was the first thing that made me wonder if they have egg-like properties.

It is also true that avocados can substitute for eggs in baking occasionally, but generally only for a small amount of eggs – just one or 2. In this case, it’s also the fat that the avocado is taking the place of.

More generally, it turns out that in recipes like these, avocado is almost always substituting for butter, in order to add the fat that makes baked goods more tender and moist. This is a very similar technique to simply adding fruit puree, such as a blended banana, or applesauce, as a substitute. The difference with avocados is that they’re uniquely fatty – which is part of what makes them extra-delicious. As a result, they contribute more of what butter does than a banana or apple would. Just to be clear, however, it’s not really comparable. Butter is about 80% fat by weight, avocados 15%, and bananas less than 1%.

Emulsions

The other thing I wondered about avocados is whether they might be like eggs because they form emulsions. Before I go any further, let me explain what an emulsion is.

Normally, when you try to mix oil and vinegar together, or oil and water, you can’t. No matter how hard you agitate the mixture, all the little oil blobs inevitably find each other and then link up into one giant blob. There are lots of exceptions to this, however – mayonnaise, for example, contains water components (such as lemon juice and vinegar) and also lots of oil. And yet the mixture doesn’t separate.

This state is called an emulsion, and it’s brought about by emulsifers. Emulsifers are long molecules with one side that likes water and dissolves readily in it, and another side that likes oil and dissolves readily in it. When the molecule is simultaneously dissolved at both ends, oil and water molecules are linked together. One emulsifier you know is soap, which helps water remove grease from your hands. Another is the crema you sometimes get on good espresso, which is apparently an emulsion of coffee oils with water. Yum!

What keeps mayonnaise (our original example) from falling apart is a very common food emulsifier called lecithin. The readiest source of lecithin in a kitchen is the egg yolk, hence lecithin’s name from Greek lekithos (λέκιθος), “egg yolk”. The lecithin molecules from the yolk dissolve in the oil and water-based ingredients in mayonnaise, binding them together so the sauce is stable. There are lots of other emulsifiers too, including mustard, and there are even other common sources of lecithin, such as soy. But generally it’s egg yolks that play this role in the kitchen.

What does this have to do with avocados? If avocados are anything like eggs, you would expect them to have some emulsifying powers, like eggs. I think what made me suspect this was this Alton Brown recipe, in which he uses avocados instead of eggs to make ice cream. Eggs play a critical role in ice cream, which is to emulsify the fat and water present in the ingredients. How can you do away with them unless avocados also play this role?

It turns out that the fat in avocados is already emulsified within the fruit. This is the reason you can handle avocado flesh without getting your hands greasy. So, as far as I can tell, what you’re doing by adding avocado to ice cream is a little like adding butter (but much tastier and less weird), which shouldn’t really be a problem. And indeed, it turns out that avocados are a pretty weak emulsifer of anything else. You certainly can’t make mayonnaise with ‘em.

Conclusion

There are lots of other wonderful and delicious things you can do with eggs, too, like whipping them into a foam to make meringues, or making a delicious zabaglione or souffle. These are also things that avocados can’t do, though you may be able to find other egg substitutes for these contexts.

So, even though they look similar (at least to me), and poetically I would sort of like the avocado to be a vegan egg, it isn’t.

Catering 2

One of these days I need to learn how to work a grill.

Cornbread and (in the background) a couple of different types of salads. I made too much cornbread, but people were happy to take it home with them...

Tres leches and strawberry country cakes.

Note: This is a followup to this post.

A month or so ago, I wrote about some of the constraints I faced with catering a barbecue for 40 out of my tiny Philadelphia kitchen. (Seriously, I think the kitchen is about 30 square feet, including all counter space, oven, and fridge). In this entry, I’ll talk about my experience in cooking and how everything turned out.

One thing that is surprisingly difficult to do in cooking is scaling a recipe. I mean, it’s not too hard for things like salad where you just multiply out the ingredients, or for soup. But when you’re baking things – and that can be cakes, pastries, or lots of savory dishes as well – things often don’t turn out the way you expect. For example, these miniature carrot souffles still take the 11 minutes to bake that a full-sized souffle does. I recently made some beet donuts (more on that later), and same deal, the miniaturization does nothing.

Those are easy examples, because the timing changes but everything else is fine. More heart-rendingly, take note of my experience with cauliflower gratin, which I attempted to make at approximately triple the size (i.e. three portions in a 3x baking dish).

Disaster. The dish is basically cauliflower in a rich cheese sauce. It seemed to bake fine, though it took an abnormally long time. I waited an hour or so for it to cool, and as it cooled… the sauce separated. Instead of a thick, pudding-like sauce, I ended up with a layer of fat on the bottom, and pools of grease on the top, of the dish. The grease then soaked through all of the ingredients, creating an inedible, soggy messy. I had to throw it away! Six cauliflowers’ worth of gratin, gone. I’m not sure exactly what happened, but I guess the lesson is, don’t scale if you don’t have to. It would have been much better to just cook a bunch of normally-sized portions.

The other lesson is to make lots of different things; because I had done this, losing one dish didn’t matter. And actually, my experience with the cornbread I made was the opposite – the vastly scaled-up sheets (the recipe isn’t even for bread, it’s for muffins) were some of the best cornbread I have ever made, with a soft, moist interior and a slightly crunchy top.

Overall, the meal seems to have gone pretty well. The avocado and tomato salad, cornbread, and deviled eggs were devoured. Part of the art, of course, is to pick things that are difficult to screw up, which worked in my favor. People seemed to have an aversion to the potato salad; I couldn’t figure out why. The cakes I made didn’t get finished either (actually only about half of each cake was consumed), but I did hear several people struggle with their inability to put down their fork, despite being stuffed. Overriding your eaters’ free will is every chef’s main goal.

Banana cardamom ice cream with peanut brittle and raspberries

Filed under: Cooking Journal — Tags: , , , , , , — Justin Dunham on June 6, 2011

Ice cream!

I’ve written about this ice cream briefly before, and here’s the recipe. You start by crushing and toasting some cardamom pods, then steeping the cardamom – and banana slices – in milk for a while. After that’s chilled, you add raw (yes, raw!) egg yolks and honey, and put in your ice cream machine. I’m actually not a big cardamom fan, but the result is an ice cream that’s refreshing and sweet but also strangely earthly. The pale yellow color is beautiful also.

This time, I was looking for a way to dress up the presentation a bit, and I thought, how about ice cream sandwiches? And then I thought, really, peanut butter and banana is a classic combination, and one of Elvis’ favorites to boot.

And, I have been looking for an excuse to make some of the sugar-based confections that I wrote about in this recent entry about the molecular mechanics of sugar. So how about peanut brittle? (I used this recipe, which gives a buttery, salty and sweet peanut brittle that’s difficult to stop eating and that we contemplated using as a breakfast cereal). After I poured the peanut brittle, I used a cookie cutter to cut rounds in it as it melted so that I’d be able to build the sandwich.

As you can tell from the picture above, the “sandwich” concept was a failure – the ice cream melted too fast, and I didn’t have the patience to figure it out. Too much salt, perhaps? But everything tasted great in a giant bowl with some raspberries that added a jammy tartness to the dish.

Catering

Shopping list...

The ingredients for ten pounds of potato salad

This is about half of the shopping I did

Note: Part 2 of this post is here.

On this blog, I write a lot about dinners for two, and more recently dinners for five, seven, etc. I suppose it was inevitable that I would eventually end up catering a 40-person barbecue. Yes, inevitable!

So, when the opportunity arose to feed about half of my Wharton cohort, I took it. This doesn’t mean, reader, that I organized logistics for getting food to this event. I actually took a few days out and made all the food. This is possibly the best job I have ever had.

This first entry will be about the setup for the event, and then I’ll write another one about what I learned in trying to scale my recipes to feed more people and how everything turned out (pretty well).

Fortunately,  barbecues are pretty much the easiest possible events to cater as a newbie. The atmosphere is casual, people are relaxed, everything can be served at the same time, and everything is either served at room temperature or cooked a la minute. You may even be lucky enough – as I was – to have several very skilled grillmasters who will actually do the cooking for you.

Still, I had to think carefully about what to make. Here were my constraints:

  • Tiny kitchen. Seriously, it’s about 30′ square and that is including the floor space taken up by cabinets, the fridge, oven, etc. Storage would, therefore, be an issue – I couldn’t make massive quantities of food in advance that had to be refrigerated, and everything would have to be made sequentially since I didn’t have prep room for more than one dish at a time.
  • Limited time and resources. It was just me doing the cooking! So I’d have to be able to prepare a lot of things in advance, and I couldn’t do anything too complicated.
  • Transportation. Everything had to be packaged for, and survive, a 30-minute car trip to the barbecue site.

I thought about, and then rejected, several dishes such as biscuits (only really good right out of the oven, definitely wouldn’t keep overnight) and camp bananas (didn’t have time to make the truly prodigious quantities of marshmallows required). Fortunately I didn’t have to get too creative and ended up with a pretty good list of barbecue favorites:

The next problem was buying ingredients. Since I used to be an investment banker, when confronted with most problems I immediately think: “Excel”. (This is true even though I quit quite a few years ago). Anyway, I made the giant spreadsheet you see pictured on the left to keep track of everything. In retrospect, I ended up overbuying a few things – a mistake in a recipe also almost caused me to buy 17 cups of paprika (at least $200 worth).

I had to be careful to buy things in a deliberate sequence, since (a) I couldn’t carry everything home at once, and (b) some things like avocadoes had to be bought early so they could ripen, whereas fresh berries had to be bought just before using them.

Finally, I had to schedule everything properly. Some things, like the avocado salad, I had to make the day of. Other things, like the cornbread and the cakes, I could make several days before. And then a few other things could be partially made in advance, and finished closer to the time – I made the potato salad and barbecue sauce, and marinated the chicken, the night before; I glazed the cakes the morning of the event, etc.

Breakfast

Fruit salad with plums and berries, including kiwi berry (actinidia arguta)

The full spread. Frittata, scones, fruit salad, orange juice, asparagus...

Frittata closeup. Check out the beautiful crust that develops.

For the first meeting of my Wharton learning team, I decided to make dinner. So I thought that, for the last meeting, it might be fitting to make breakfast. Plus breakfast would give me the chance to make a frittata; an excuse to make a new dish is often an important motivator for me. And I thought it would be a nice thing to do!

I got up early – real early; sunrise in our apartment is beautiful since we have a northern exposure. I made a fruit salad with a lemon/yogurt/honey sauce, I experimented with substituting strawberries for onions in this scone recipe (result fine), roasted some asparagus, and squeezed some orange juice. Oh, and I made this basil-potato frittata, which you can see in closeup on the left.

Fruit salad is kind of cheating, isn’t it? (So is fresh-squeezed orange juice, but it’s a crowd-pleaser). Regardless, people seemed to enjoy it. Since the Trader Joe’s that I live above doesn’t have great produce, I had to make some last-minute decisions about what went in, but the banana/plum/ berry combination seemed to work well.

I also had a chance to include actinidia arguta, also known as the hardy kiwi or kiwi berry. This was a fairly expensive addition, but I always like to try interesting products when I see them. The kiwi berry is basically a miniature kiwi, with a grape-like skin that you don’t need to peel off. Not really worth the extra money, but an interesting eating experience. I should mention, however, that I usually eat kiwis with the skin on, so perhaps I find regular kiwis (actinidia deliciosa) easier to handle than others do.

The frittata came out really well, also, and made great leftovers. I had never eaten one before this – for those who don’t know, a frittata is sort of like a quiche or giant omelette. However, unlike a quiche, there is no pastry shell, and unlike an omelette, the ingredients are cooked within the egg mixture instead of on top. This recipe includes a little baking powder as well, so you get some extra fluffiness, and since it’s baked for about an hour, a delicious and beautiful brown crust develops around the edges.

Not all was successful. I invested a huge amount of time in making this hash browns recipe – peeling 1.5 lbs of potatoes takes forever – and it was a total failure. I have never made hash browns before, so perhaps I did something wrong in making the recipe. Did excluding the lardons make that much of a difference? Did I just not wring the shredded potatoes out enough? Whatever the error, I was left with a disc of shredded potatoes, burned on the outside and soggy and uncooked on the inside, that stuck fast to the pan.

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