The Moist Exhausting Free Trip Ever - Link to Part II Thread pg. 244

Good Morning all !!! Marv too!!!:rotfl2:I "wooden leave him out":lmao:
Good Morning Rosie! You're a trip!!! :rotfl:

And wooden you like to know what I'm up to today.....:rolleyes1 Actually, I can't imagine any reason you wood. :laughing::laughing: Hopefully it will be quiet and uneventful!

Hope everyone has a Happy Labor Day! :thumbsup2 and you aren't having to actually "labor" today! :)
 
:lmao: Awesome! Only problem is....your "innocent" comments are few and far between!


.



Morning Rosie!

You wooden mean I make those comments deliberately!!!:rolleyes1:rotfl2:

Good Morning Rosie! You're a trip!!! :rotfl:

And wooden you like to know what I'm up to today.....:rolleyes1 Actually, I can't imagine any reason you wood. :laughing::laughing: Hopefully it will be quiet and uneventful!

Hope everyone has a Happy Labor Day! :thumbsup2 and you aren't having to actually "labor" today! :)

I dread to think what you have in store for me Marv!!! But I am off the believe if you dish it out ya better take it !!!:rotfl2::rotfl2::rotfl2:
 
You wooden mean I make those comments deliberately!!!:rolleyes1:rotfl2:



I dread to think what you have in store for me Marv!!! But I am off the believe if you dish it out ya better take it !!!:rotfl2::rotfl2::rotfl2:
Deliberately??? You???? No way!!! :lmao:

And the way Dan, Glenn, I and a few others go at it around here, I think you know where I stand on the dish it (or is that spoon it) and better be able to take it scenario. ;)
 

Thanks. No, I don't think we talked too much about the cheesecake last time. It'd be interesting to know about the cheesecake. It's definitely not like what we think of cheesecake over here. The texture is different -- it's more creamy than ours.

I found a recipe for it on allears.net ---> Bavarian Cheesecake Recipe

Thank you for posting the recipe, can you tell me what Baker's Cheese is? But it looks very much like the Käsesahnetorte I mentioned before. Looking for an English explanation of the German Käsekuchen (cheesecake) I found this on wikipedia. Do you want a recipe for a German Käsekuchen? It was one of my first baking products, which I baked nearly every weekend for at least several months. I can look for the recipe at home!

I think it was a mushroom, but I'm not 100% sure.
Mushroom sounds ok! It looked like an olive to me and I was astonished as this would not be a very traditional German food, although today of course many people eat olives - but not on a schnitzel :)
 
/
Thank you for posting the recipe, can you tell me what Baker's Cheese is?

Good question! No, I have no idea. I asked Judy and she said it's probably like cream cheese...so not a lot of help. She'd probably just substitute cream cheese for it.

But it looks very much like the Käsesahnetorte I mentioned before. Looking for an English explanation of the German Käsekuchen (cheesecake) I found this on wikipedia. Do you want a recipe for a German Käsekuchen? It was one of my first baking products, which I baked nearly every weekend for at least several months. I can look for the recipe at home!

Sure! The wikipedia picture looks like what we think of as cheesecake.

Mushroom sounds ok! It looked like an olive to me and I was astonished as this would not be a very traditional German food, although today of course many people eat olives - but not on a schnitzel :)

It was probably in the sauce that I put over the schnitzel.
 
Goodness, I missed 3 updates:scared1:

Looks like you all had a fun meet in DC. Liesa your hair looks great :thumbsup2

OH NO! Poor Judy! I don't do well on Mission Space either :confused3 The pictures you got in Norway are great. Love the picture of Marlene and the nose. :rotfl2: Such a family of comedians :lmao:

Your Biergarten meal looks like a lot of fun, we had considered dining there, but changed our mind at the sight of the menu... it's just not our type of thing. But the atmosphere looks like so much fun.

can't wait to see what's next.
 
I know....can you imagine a big serving of it, rather than a little taster? Oh, and some coffee.
Drooling.gif

I confess to having seconds. And putting the berries all over the top. :cloud9:

And OOH the recipe! here is what I found about Bakers Cheese

Baker's cheese is a fresh, soft, somewhat tangy cheese, in the cream-cheese, farmer's-cheese, fromage-frais, queso-fresco family – which is to say, the fresh or unripened cheeses.

Some people will tell you baker's cheese is nothing more than cottage cheese that has been drained of some of its whey. Do not listen to those people. We side with those who say it is a cheese in its own right, made from skim milk (therefore lower in fat), and softer, with a finer grain and more moisture than cottage cheese. (Clearly baker's cheese would have less moisture than cottage cheese if it were simply drained cottage cheese.)

Needless to say, baker's cheese is hard to find. It has generally been available only to foodservice buyers. Only two sources at the Savor Wisconsin Web site sells baker's cheese, and if you can't easily find something like that in Wisconsin, where are you going to turn?

There are those who swear that a cheesecake made with anything other than baker's cheese is not a real cheesecake. Given the difficulty of obtaining baker's cheese, we can't afford to listen to those people.

In Britain, lactic cheese, Colwick cheese, and Cottager's Cheese (not to be mistaken for cottage cheese) are the closest alternates.


Which does not make it an easy baking prospect! Sigh.

ahh my beloved spatzle, it looked good, to bad i didnt tell you to put that gravy sauce stuff on it when i saw you earlier in the week...it was teh stuff that was in the cans by the carving station by the spatzle....

i do have 1 question, glenn, do you remeber where judy was sitting at this meal?

if we have this diagram. below

0 j 0

x 0 0

where lets say you are the x in that diagram, was judy sitting where the J is located? if so, then i would like to count 2 judys in that update, because i can make out an arm of someone sitting in posistion J in one of your plate pictures. im just reaching here.:thumbsup2
:rotfl2:

I think Dan gets points just for the diagram!
 
Nice Biergarten review. How were you feeling after that beer flight? You didn't even mention the beers!!! Tsk tsk Glen. You're slipping ;)
 
Oh, I miss Biergarten! I wasn't able to convince anyone to go back this year.:sad2: No, the food is not my favorite, but I think we were all able to find enough things we enjoyed to fill up on. I absolutely love the ambience, though. And it really brings me back to childhood. I remember our meal there so clearly from my first trip with my grandparents in 1986. Ah, good times.

Cynthia, where did you find that info on Baker's cheese? That's the problem with Disney recipes. They'll give them to you if you ask, but they're written for the commercial kitchen. It can be difficult to modify.
 
First I would like to wish you and your family a Happy Labor Day as well. Just read that the last two updates and so sorry that Judy got sick. I think that's what keeps me off that ride. I have never been to Biergarten but would love to one day, just afraid the kids won't have anything to eat.
 
Oh, I miss Biergarten! I wasn't able to convince anyone to go back this year.:sad2: No, the food is not my favorite, but I think we were all able to find enough things we enjoyed to fill up on. I absolutely love the ambience, though. And it really brings me back to childhood. I remember our meal there so clearly from my first trip with my grandparents in 1986. Ah, good times.

Cynthia, where did you find that info on Baker's cheese? That's the problem with Disney recipes. They'll give them to you if you ask, but they're written for the commercial kitchen. It can be difficult to modify.

Google :rotfl:
 
Great update glennbo123, truly inspirational! :cool1: And I'm very glad Judy could enjoy the meal too :goodvibes

That's it, next year there's going to be a lunch at Biergarten, the trip planner commands it! :lmao:
 
Hope you are having a great long weekend, Glenn. Happy Labor Day to you too.

Yep, it's been nice!

Goodness, I missed 3 updates:scared1:

Glad you're caught up Jessica.

Looks like you all had a fun meet in DC. Liesa your hair looks great :thumbsup2

It was a great time!

OH NO! Poor Judy! I don't do well on Mission Space either :confused3 The pictures you got in Norway are great. Love the picture of Marlene and the nose. :rotfl2: Such a family of comedians :lmao:

She always told me she doesn't like spinning rides, but I pushed her to test it. Ooops.

Yeah, they hammed it up pretty good with the troll.

Your Biergarten meal looks like a lot of fun, we had considered dining there, but changed our mind at the sight of the menu... it's just not our type of thing. But the atmosphere looks like so much fun.

can't wait to see what's next.

There are a lot of other tempting places around the World Showcase, so I can see being lured away if the menu doesn't seem like what you'd really like.

I confess to having seconds. And putting the berries all over the top. :cloud9:

Confession is good for the soul. And seconds are good for the sweet tooth.

And OOH the recipe! here is what I found about Bakers Cheese

Baker's cheese is a fresh, soft, somewhat tangy cheese, in the cream-cheese, farmer's-cheese, fromage-frais, queso-fresco family – which is to say, the fresh or unripened cheeses.

Some people will tell you baker's cheese is nothing more than cottage cheese that has been drained of some of its whey. Do not listen to those people. We side with those who say it is a cheese in its own right, made from skim milk (therefore lower in fat), and softer, with a finer grain and more moisture than cottage cheese. (Clearly baker's cheese would have less moisture than cottage cheese if it were simply drained cottage cheese.)

Needless to say, baker's cheese is hard to find. It has generally been available only to foodservice buyers. Only two sources at the Savor Wisconsin Web site sells baker's cheese, and if you can't easily find something like that in Wisconsin, where are you going to turn?

There are those who swear that a cheesecake made with anything other than baker's cheese is not a real cheesecake. Given the difficulty of obtaining baker's cheese, we can't afford to listen to those people.

In Britain, lactic cheese, Colwick cheese, and Cottager's Cheese (not to be mistaken for cottage cheese) are the closest alternates.


Which does not make it an easy baking prospect! Sigh.

Interesting....but I wonder where I can get it; I've never even heard of the alternates.

I think Dan gets points just for the diagram!

I think I gave him a half-point. So competitive!

Nice Biergarten review. How were you feeling after that beer flight? You didn't even mention the beers!!! Tsk tsk Glen. You're slipping ;)

I was feeling pretty good!

You're right -- I should have focused a lot more on the beer in my review. I'd make a lousy Canadian!

Oh, I miss Biergarten! I wasn't able to convince anyone to go back this year.:sad2: No, the food is not my favorite, but I think we were all able to find enough things we enjoyed to fill up on. I absolutely love the ambience, though. And it really brings me back to childhood. I remember our meal there so clearly from my first trip with my grandparents in 1986. Ah, good times.

That's neat that it holds good memories for you.

I didn't have to do any convincing to go back...everyone wanted to.

Cynthia, where did you find that info on Baker's cheese? That's the problem with Disney recipes. They'll give them to you if you ask, but they're written for the commercial kitchen. It can be difficult to modify.

You're right. Although I've made the carrot-ginger soup and it's pretty easy.

First I would like to wish you and your family a Happy Labor Day as well. Just read that the last two updates and so sorry that Judy got sick. I think that's what keeps me off that ride. I have never been to Biergarten but would love to one day, just afraid the kids won't have anything to eat.

Thanks Laura! Before this trip I would have steered people to the Orange side, but now I say that if you think you might have trouble, you should stay with Green!

I don't think you have to worry about kids finding enough at any Disney buffet. There's always the standard nuggets and spaghetti, plus salads and chicken and all kinds of stuff. It's just a question of whether you want to spend buffet prices and have them eat that stuff that you could have gotten more cheaply somewhere else.


You're such a good researcher.

Tribilín;38118231 said:
Great update glennbo123, truly inspirational! :cool1: And I'm very glad Judy could enjoy the meal too :goodvibes

Inspirational, huh? That's a first!

Tribilín;38118231 said:
That's it, next year there's going to be a lunch at Biergarten, the trip planner commands it! :lmao:

That's the way to do it! Being the trip planner has its advantages.
 
I'm glad even you Americans didn't know about baker's cheese :goodvibes
Glennbo, I found my old recipe for Käsekuchen at home. I hope I'll have time today to translate it for you. It is very easy, but I fear you need Quark or a substitute, bakers' cheese would be good :lmao:
 
Hi Glenn, I am still busy settling into work and at home and just don't have much time for posting. But I still enjoyed reading your update very much and it seems that Katharina is providing the necessary German culinary comments! :goodvibes

I'm glad even you Americans didn't know about baker's cheese :goodvibes
Glennbo, I found my old recipe for Käsekuchen at home. I hope I'll have time today to translate it for you. It is very easy, but I fear you need Quark or a substitute, bakers' cheese would be good :lmao:

I briefly looked into this baker's cheese issue and I am quite convinced that this is actually quark. This website talks about Milwaukee cheesecake which is made with baker's cheese and considering that Milwaukee was the most German city in the US, I think it talks about the typical German Käsekuchen. And these people produce baker's cheese.
 
I'm glad my German experts have come to help!

I'm glad even you Americans didn't know about baker's cheese :goodvibes
Glennbo, I found my old recipe for Käsekuchen at home. I hope I'll have time today to translate it for you. It is very easy, but I fear you need Quark or a substitute, bakers' cheese would be good :lmao:

There's no rush on the recipe.

There's enough cheesecake consumed in the U.S. that you'd think we'd be able to get these products...baker's cheese and/or quark. But I don't think our stores have it.

Hi Glenn, I am still busy settling into work and at home and just don't have much time for posting. But I still enjoyed reading your update very much and it seems that Katharina is providing the necessary German culinary comments! :goodvibes

Yes, she is doing a great job! Good luck getting established at work and home.

I briefly looked into this baker's cheese issue and I am quite convinced that this is actually quark. This website talks about Milwaukee cheesecake which is made with baker's cheese and considering that Milwaukee was the most German city in the US, I think it talks about the typical German Käsekuchen. And these people produce baker's cheese.

I looked at "quark (cheese)" on wikipedia and it said that it is available in Canada as "baking cheese". It also said that it is rare in the U.S.
 

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