Okay, question.
What's the difference between icing and frosting? Is it regional?
Dawn ,'The Killer In Me'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Okay, question.
What's the difference between icing and frosting? Is it regional?
t Waving at erika, even though it's half on hour later
I think it's a thickness thing, I would say icing is thinner, but I don't bake. Hi, Nilly! I'm still here because I think my muse locked herself in my bathroom.
I think my muse locked herself in my bathroom.
Now I'm imagining her (him?) slipping you notes from under the door. How is the writing going on, by the way? "The Great Write" is one of the few threads I insist on actually catching up on instead of skipping, which means I'm thousands of posts behind and never get to say anything on-topic on-time there.
Howdy, Erika! For your amusement (and no other reason), here's McNulty as actually written by Shakespeare: "Prithee, the carnal knowledge didst I do?"
I think it's a thickness thing, I would say icing is thinner, but I don't bake.
I am with erika on this, even though I suspect it is a regional thing. But I'd say icing is closer to a glaze, and frosting is what you can make flowers out of.
OH! found it on Ask Jeeves (well I didn't, but my friend did).
Frosting has butter or shortening in it, along with the sugar. While icing is just sugar and water. Frosting holds shapes etc and is soft to the touch. Icing dries smooth and hardens.
God bless not only pie and cake, but the internets.
No! Frosting goes on with a knife, icing can be manipulated.
It's amazing what I'd have sworn I had no opinion on ten minutes ago.
Now I have to google and see if I need a new opinion.
Frosting has butter or shortening in it, along with the sugar. While icing is just sugar and water. Frosting holds shapes etc and is soft to the touch. Icing dries smooth and hardens.
Why do both have a low-temperature 'root', then? Because they're not liquidy? Because they may melt if handled wrongly?
[Edit: 7+3=8+2. I had the "6+4" same post # math earlier. It's like my post #s have a conversation of their own, without me.]
I googled, and my opinion is that the internet has lost consensus. Cook's Illustrated has much more frosting than icing, but its icing does have dairy in it.
Don't know about the origins of the term, Nilly.