Wally was the last one here to have masa harina
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So...Good AriaIt all looks delicious!
No, electric. Old stove and new. When I first got either of them I compared the settings to an oven thermometer too. (though I realize the thermometer could have been off)Is your stove gas/propane? It might need to be adjusted.
I did notice that everything takes longer to cook at 7500 feet - especially rice. Bread took 3 rises instead of 2.
Everything I read seems to say that 2000 feet is the point where you start adjusting for high altitudes.
@wyoDreamer
I was wondering something...do you think my altitude (2000') has anything to do with my baking? When I made the conversion to DF and GF I was more near sea level and things seemed to take the required amount of time to bake according to GF recipes I used.
When I moved here I brought my old stove with me but in looking back... it didn't "seem to work as well" after the move. The same recipes in books, or ones I made up successfully on my own at the old farm, just did not want to bake up the same. At the time I chalked it up to stove age (over 10yro) and maybe a hard knock in the move. (good excuse for a new stove...right?)
Now I'm at 2000' and it seems like things always take a little bit longer to bake/cook no matter what I am making...old stove or new stove, same recipes.
Current stove is a mid level convection oven and even when using the convection feature it still seems to want to take an extra 5 minutes, sometimes 10.
When I canned after moving here I gave things an extra 5 minutes in the water bath, just in case, and we have 2 weather forecasts here...one Mountains/higher elevations and one for Valleys. I seem to usually get whatever is forecast for the Mountains. But I didn't think 2000' was enough for the "high altitude" adjustments for regular cooking/baking so it didn't occur to me to try the altitude ingredient changes here.
Not that GF recipes have a while lot of them that I have seen, like the non GF ones do, but still, now I'm wondering...
Air pressure is lower so food takes longer to bake.
This chart might be helpful:
high-altitude-baking
I moved from sea level in FL to almost 7,000 ft here in Wyoming. It has taken me a long time to get things to turn out right. And sometimes they still don't even with the adjustments.