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Put flavor in mayo and it scares the kkkrackers
(hexbear.net)
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What are the alternatives to aquafaba?
What's wrong with aquafaba?
Not the bean juice!
It's an untreated byproduct that you normally discard. Every culture that eats beans has discarded their bean rinse water; you don't really see recipes that have you cook the beans in their own rinse. Canned beans have been a thing for a century or more but there's a good reason why bean wastewater was only "discovered" by some random guy 10 years ago.
Saponins and other stuff in there are cool for industrial processes but you don't really want to ingest them.
Because there hasn't been a need to create an egg substitute that produces recipes that traditionally just used egg.
I thought the soak rinse was always discarded, the aquafaba is from the cooking water (either in a can or the pot it's boiled in)
You can taste saponins, a quick google search suggests that there are definitely some people making extremely bitter aquafaba (i.e. likely with a high saponin quantity) but that's not supposed to be the outcome.
What do you think is making the foaming effect, that varies from bean to bean?
I saw a recipe where you just blend together oil, soy milk, lemon juice, and salt, and it makes a really good mayo.
It does in their videos at least, I was never able to make something close to it.
you wanna use a food processor or a stick blender in my experience. also add some mustard to help it emulsify. most recipes are a slight variation on this one:
Add the oil as you blend, slowly until it gets a good consistency. I do this with garlic to make garlic bread at home
I think that would be acting as an emulsifier and thickener. I haven't made vegan mayo with it. I think the ingredients that I do use that would serve those roles are soy milk or a little starch.