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The brown sugar is a homogeneous mixture
sugar cookies,
Try adding melted butter...also you can boil it for a very short time then pour onto what you want...GOODLUCK!
In most cake recipes, the butter is creamed and blended with the sugar. Melted butter has different mixing qualities and would change the consistency of the batter. Melted butter should not be used unless specifically called for in the recipe.
mix the eggs and sugar until it become foamy and white, then you add the flour and melted butter gradually
You may need to start over again. It is possible that the sugar was not dissolved properly, or it may be that milk was added before the chocolate was melted and mixed with the butter. In that case, the chocolate may have seized up. It is possible to melt the seized chocolate, heating very slowly at low heat and stirring constantly.
Many powders and solids can be melted (liquefied) by heat. For instance, sugar and butter is often melted in cooking.
no no no
To cream, is to mix with a spoon, normally butter and sugar, as in cake pudding or cookie recipes. When asked to cream the butter and sugar, just beat with a spoon until the texture and colour changes, to a light airy consistency.
Melted sugar starts out as clear and colorless when it first liquefies. As it continues to cook and reaches higher temperatures, it progresses through various stages of caramelization, where the sugar begins to take on a range of brown hues. It can go from a light golden color to a deep amber, depending on how long it is cooked. If melted sugar is heated too long, it will eventually become dark brown and can burn, resulting in a bitter taste.
Best to use softened butter (room temperature). That will be plenty soft enough. If you use melted butter (example for cookies, etc.) your batter will spread too much in the initial cooking and baked cookies will be paper thin and hard as a rock!Melted butter is also hot, and can curdle milk if mixed. Not good.
Brown buttered carrots! Om nom nom