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> Pavlova advice please!

V
damster
post 27/01/2013, 06:43 AM
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We cooked our first pavlova yesterday and were feeling pretty chuffed.

We left it in the oven over night and now I can see it has wept liquid into the tray.

A bit of research suggests either the sugar wasn't beaten well enough or it is undercooked.

It was a 6 egg white recipe and we cooked it at 120 degrees in a fan forced oven for an hour and a half, cooled it in the oven and left it in the oven overnight.

If it just under beaten sugar, I'm less concerned but if it is undercooked I'm a bit concerned!

Is there a way to tell and can we still eat it?

Thanks so much!
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~sydblue~
post 27/01/2013, 07:12 AM
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How humid was it where you are?
The reason I ask is because mum would never leave it longer than it absolutely had to be when it was really humid. She even tried avoiding cooking them in wet weather.
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damster
post 27/01/2013, 07:22 AM
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We're in northern central Victoria and it is as dry as!
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Jeni
post 27/01/2013, 07:41 AM
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I cook Pavs all the time and in my opinion they weep when the sugar is not dissolved. It will be fine to eat.
I never time the cooking of them but go more on the look, we like nice and crunchy on the outside and marshmallow on the inside. Enjoy
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damster
post 27/01/2013, 01:27 PM
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Thanks!
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Leafprincess
post 27/01/2013, 01:42 PM
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Pop a teaspoon of cream of tartar when mixing the egg whites to stabalise a pav

Make sure you use a clean stainless steel bowl & no oil on the beaters.

Humidity will kill a pav, but not a concern where you are
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