Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Screw white bread. Something with some texture and substance.
Screw PB with hydrogenated oils.
‘Textured’ bread ruins PB&J!
Anonymous wrote:Best bread, peanut butter and jelly? I’m not talking about anything fancy just literally how you make yours if your kids love them. I didn’t grow up eating them so the ones I make never look as good as DS’s friends! Just trying to figure out what I’m doing wrong ...
Anonymous wrote:Screw white bread. Something with some texture and substance.
Screw PB with hydrogenated oils.
Anonymous wrote:put a thick layer of peanut butter on one side, and a very thin layer on the other. On the thin-layer side, add jelly - but only to the middle, and spread out but don't go within 1 cm of the edges. This way when it is put together/held/bitten the jelly will not squirt out the sides and ruin clothes/faces.
Also - having peanut butter on both sides prevents the sandwich from turning soggy. You can put in the fridge or freezer for lunches, and they will defrost with NO sign of sogginess. I know people who sit and marathon-make 100s of peanut butter sandwiches before school starts and stock up the freezer, then put them in the lunchboxes the night before. I just make 5 on Sunday nights, and they are in the fridge all week. The oil in the peanut butter prevents the sogginess that jelly brings.
You also have to decide whether you want jam, jelly, preserves or marmalade.
Jelly is made with fruit juice, no actual fruit, so is the clearest and thinnest. No chunks.
Jam is the clear winner for an award winning pb&j, with more pieces of actual fruit in it and a slightly looser, spoonable texture. Here, chopped or pureed fruit is cooked with sugar, so pieces of the fruit end up in the final product.
Preserves are less likely to be preferred by your little ones, as they contain the most fruit, more often than not in whole pieces, and have the least gel-like consistency.
Marmalade is preserves made with citrus - and who would eat that with peanut butter? Not I.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Best bread, peanut butter and jelly? I’m not talking about anything fancy just literally how you make yours if your kids love them. I didn’t grow up eating them so the ones I make never look as good as DS’s friends! Just trying to figure out what I’m doing wrong ...
I make the BEST PB&J.
Sara Lee honey wheat bread
Jif Peanut Butter (creamy, not crunchy. Simply Jif is OK)
Smuckers strawberry jelly
Take a butter knife full of peanut butter (about a heaping tablespoon) and spread it evenly on one side of bread. Don’t put too much as you’re not making a choke sandwich.
Next, on the other slice of bread spread a teaspoon of the strawberry jelly. You want to cover the entire slice, but not soak it. Wet pb&j is a no no.
Then take the peanut putter side and the jelly side and make them kiss. A nice gentle kiss - not like in old movie where they’re trying to chip each other’s teeth.
Finally, with your butter knife, cut the sandwich in either a diagonal or rectangle. If you’re feeling spicy, you can do squares or little triangles (NOT for beginners).
Voila! Your kids will love you.
Edited for Jelly not Jam because jam don’t shake like that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is "Bonne Maman" and how does everyone know about it but me? Is it found in regular grocery stores?
It is at Safeway and is very yummy. We like raspberry.
I think Costco sells it too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is "Bonne Maman" and how does everyone know about it but me? Is it found in regular grocery stores?
It is at Safeway and is very yummy. We like raspberry.
Anonymous wrote:What is "Bonne Maman" and how does everyone know about it but me? Is it found in regular grocery stores?
Anonymous wrote:This secret recipe’s been in my family for generations. You will need bread, peanut butter and jelly. Keep it to yourself please.
Anonymous wrote:Bonne Maman is quite simply the best jam in the world. Especially apricot.
It is easy to find at good grocery stores.