Why are my dumplings made of evil?

Why are my dumplings made of evil? - Close-Up Shot of Raw Dumplings in a Bowl

I made a fairly simple chicken-and-dumpling stew recipe; however, after one bite of dumpling, I have the most wretched aftertaste. The soup is fine; however, the dumplings taste totally nasty, kind of bitter and repulsive and a little like vomit (My fiancee describes it as "metal and bad"). If there had been anything in my mouth by the time that taste hit, I'd have spit it out instinctively.

The recipe calls for 1/3 cup Bisquick Heart Smart baking mix and 1/3 cup buttermilk to make the dumpling dough; I doubled it because I was making a large pot of stew. The stew tastes fine once I ditch the dumplings; it contained chicken broth (made from bouillon cubes), milk, cornstarch, cooked chicken, parsnips, carrots, celery, and onions. The dumplings were dropped by spoonfuls into the stew and cooked for about 7 minutes, as per the recipe directions. I have not made this specific recipe before. The consistency of the dumplings seemed fine; they were a little bland due to lack of seasoning, but otherwise all was well until that aftertaste hit.

What could have gone wrong? The buttermilk was purchased just a few days before, well within its expiration date (Nov 24th), and the baking mix had been used for pancakes earlier in the week (which were a little bland but not disastrous)



Best Answer

Spoiled buttermilk wouldn't give a metallic aftertaste, but I wouldn't expect old baking mix to do so either.

I would suspect that your box of bisquick is either contaminated, or you may have gotten a bad box. Sometimes manufacturing processes don't go right, so it might be that your box got far too big a portion of baking powder, or some other component of the mix. In the manufacturing process all the ingredients are supposed to be well mixed but it isn't unheard of for a clod to make it through the process intact. I'd throw the box out.




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Why are my dumplings made of evil? - Round White and Blue Ceramic Bowl With Cooked Ball Soup and Brown Wooden Chopsticks
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Why are my dumplings made of evil? - Women In The Kitchen Preparing Food



Why are my dumplings dark in the middle?

If the middle is significantly darker than the outside, the dumpling is not done! I also make sure my heat is on the low side because I've found that when you put a lid on a pot, ingredients heat up and tend to stick to the bottom and burn.

Why are some of my dumplings doughy?

It could also be that your doughballs cooled your broth enough that the outer surface of the doughball couldn't get "set" fast enough and the flour began to mix with the broth. If that was the issue, I'd think hotter broth, a larger volume of hot broth, or smaller/fewer dumplings at once would help.

What is the secret to good dumplings?

Dumplings need very gentle handling, so mix only until the ingredients are just combined, and if your recipe involves rolling them out with extra flour, avoid using too much.

Why are my dumplings rubbery?

Don't Overwork the Dumpling Dough The dough might look a little lumpy, but that's okay! Overworking the dough is one of the easiest ways to end up with tough dumplings.



RICE BALLS




More answers regarding why are my dumplings made of evil?

Answer 2

The metallic aftertaste is because the mix had a unbalanced baking soda to phosphate ratio. Whenever your finished cook product is either yellow or has a orange spotted tint within it you have a unbalanced mix. The phosphate must have something to react with. A unbalanced PH will cause the aftertaste. (Metalic =too basic)

I believe that this mix uses a combo phosphate ratio. (V-90 plus Active-8= Stabil 9) One phosphate reacts immediately with water and will rise 80%. The balance will rise when heat activates it. The second phosphate rises 20% with water and is a primarily a heat activated phosphate.

You must mix and wait a minimum of 30 minutes when using phosphate based mixes to permit the leavening to balance out. You should use cold water only.

Answer 3

Maybe you used too much evil, as in mistaking teaspoons of evil for tablespoons of evil? :^D

Seriously, the recipe itself could have errors like that, either from being handwritten in one of its iterations en route to you, or even a simple typo. Common ones that could produce what you describe are teaspoon vs. tablespoon, baking powder vs. baking soda, etc.

Did you taste the powdered mix dry? I'm not sure what it would taste like in that form, but I'm guessing a bland, flourish kind of non-flavor as opposed to the metallic taste your husband picked up.

Is it possible the bowl in which you mixed the dumpling batter had something in it? Like unrinsed soap that made it into all or just a few of the dumplings, or someone sprayed another cleaner, one not intended for food utensils, in the area of the bowl?

Answer 4

Your dumplings taste bad because Bisquick tastes bad. No matter which variation you use, the stuff tastes horrible. I have been cooking for 40 years of married life and 10 years more under my Mother's tutelage. I can tell you precisely which item on a table has been made with Bisquick. And really, it is not hard to make dumplings, biscuits or cakes, using your own ingredients.

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