Using Powdered Sugar in Crust for Cheesecake

Good afternoon, everyone -- is it at all possible to use powdered sugar in place of regular sugar in making a crust for cheesecake??? As usual, any and all replies are much appreciated.

Reply to
Diane W. Saunders
Loading thread data ...

I wouldn't do it, myself. I mean, what are neighbors for, if not to borrow a cup of sugar from.

I guess you could. Reduce the volume maybe 10% and mix it with the flour. It's going to contain some corn starch but that's not going to hurt anything.

Reply to
Eric Jorgensen

There are all types of crusts for cheesecakes ranging from crumb crusts, nut crusts, shortdough crusts, sponge cake, and probably some that I haven't mentioned. Without seeing the recipe, it would hard to comment on the substitution.

Reply to
Vox Humana

Come to think of it, I guess i was envisioning a pie crust. somehow i just didn't parse the word 'cheesecake'. It is friday after all.

powdered sugar mixed with graham cracker crumbs and butter would be Bad. I think you need granulated for that job.

Reply to
Eric Jorgensen

To answer the recipe question it is the 2 cups graham crackers, 1/2 stick butter and 1/3 cup suger. Anyway, I do appreciate the responses and I agree with sticking to regular sugar. My mind sometimes flies away to the outer regions of the universe.

Reply to
Diane W. Saunders

Why the hell do they put cornstarch in it, anyway? Just to make it feel smooth/silky? For some reason, I never realized it was there, untiul reading your note. Wouldn't matter, but I'm allergic to corn, just the starchy parts!

Dave

Reply to
Dave Bell

They put cornstarch in to keep it from clumping. ~Peggy

"Dave Bell" wrote

Reply to
Peggy

Growing up in Vienna, Austria, in the late 1920's and 30's, we had only two types of sugar, as far as I know: Sugar cubes and powdered sugar. Only powdered sugar was used for baking, the cubes were for hot tea and coffee.

I did not follow this thread, but why can powdered or confectioner's sugar not be used for baking? What does the cornstarch do in the baking process that makes it unusable for it?

Thank you. M

Reply to
Margaret Suran

I believe that the Austrian powdered sugar of the 20's isn't the same as the American 10X sugar. I've no documentation for this, except for the fact that the Austrian powdered sugar *could* be used for baking.

It's not the cornstarch that makes it unusable for baking. It's the physical difference between a powder and a granulated solid that makes powdered sugar unuseable.

Most US baking takes advantage of the way that granulated sugar behaves when mixed into a dough or batter. Powdered sugar doesn't work the same way. Powdered sugar doesn't dissolve into liquids or 'melt' into a batter the same way granulated sugar does.

jenn

-- Jenn Ridley : snipped-for-privacy@chartermi.net

Reply to
Jenn Ridley

My experience, also. Seems to contradict physics, with the enormously higher surface area of powdered sugar,as compared to granulated!

I think the next time I need powdered, it comes from the blender or coffee mill... (whirly-blade; the burr grinder stays for coffee!)

Dave

Reply to
Dave Bell

Thank you. I do not know whether the powdered sugar of my childhood was pure or mixed with cornstarch. I was going to use an old recipe that calls for powdered sugar, but I will use the finest granulated sugar instead.

Reply to
Margaret Suran

InspirePoint website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.