I just use plain old grocery store ammonia.
Quote from: Eric Kettenburg on August 01, 2008, 03:40:06 AMI just use plain old grocery store ammonia. Yes just plain household ammonia in the bottle at the grocery store ( NH3 + Water) Makes a grand 18th century style cake by the way!Jim
So are the lock parts baked in the pie and allowed to slowly cool on a window sill to anneal them correctly?
Jim, are you sure about that?. NH3 is ammonium nitrate (AKA anhydrous ammonia) which is a source of nitrogen applied as agricultural fertilizer in a gas state. It has a great affinity for water and therefore is easily added to water but I didn't know that grocery store ammonia was just NH3 + water. Interesting stuff.
Re the original post:I use regular household ammonia to change the appearance of cherry and oak (particularly white oak). Anhydrous ammonia may be available in rural areas but apparently should not be released into the atmosphere. I used to work for an answering service that took calls for Michigan's version of the EPA and whenever some farmer would release a little into the air he would get fined.Easy Off oven cleaner reportedly works good on cherry. I'm going to try that on some scrap that I have before I treat a stock or a piece of furniture with it. I wouldn't substitute the Easy Off in the cake recipe. By the way I've got a slew of recipes too. Maybe we can start a new forum.. Call it the Baking Powder Room