#15 in Baking mats
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Reddit mentions of Vremi 3 Piece Silicone Baking Mat Set - Silicone Mat for Baking Sheets Nonstick - Half Quarter Sheet Silicone Baking Mats for Cookie Sheet Pans - Non Stick Rolling Silicone Baking Cooking Sheet Mats
Sentiment score: 1
Reddit mentions: 1
We found 1 Reddit mentions of Vremi 3 Piece Silicone Baking Mat Set - Silicone Mat for Baking Sheets Nonstick - Half Quarter Sheet Silicone Baking Mats for Cookie Sheet Pans - Non Stick Rolling Silicone Baking Cooking Sheet Mats. Here are the top ones.
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QUARTER and HALF SHEETS BAKING MATS - Our 3 piece baking mat set includes two standard 11.5 x 16.5 inch half sheet mats and one 9 x 13 inches quarter sheet mat for creating homemade goodies at any size. Designed with colorful trim for fun baking with kidsNONSTICK REUSABLE SILICONE - Food grade nonstick silicone mats are reinforced with transparent flexible fiberglass weave; a healthy BPA free alternative to disposable tin foil, parchment paper or grease spray that lets you bake and remove treats with easePERFECT PASTRY RESULTS HEATED EVENLY - Flexible yet tear resistant and designed to withstand years of use. Cold resistant from -40°F with heat resistance up to 480°F. Ideal for a bread loaf roll, cupcake or macaroon batch, holiday cookies and moreFOR PROFESSIONAL COMMERCIAL and HOME USE - Long lasting non toxic pastry mats with 0.75 mm thick design for a home or a professional dessert chef can be used with almost all standard pans. A nice gift set of 3 for those who love baking or candy makingROLLS UP FOR EASY STORAGE - Large medium and small cooking and baking mats can be laid flat or rolled and stored in the cabinet or drawer to save space for other utensils. Hand wash with soapy water and dry thoroughly to clean (not dishwasher safe)
Specs:
Color | Multicolor |
Height | 2.36 Inches |
Length | 12.6 Inches |
Number of items | 3 |
Size | Silicone Baking Cooking Sheet Mats |
Weight | 0.79 Pounds |
Width | 2.36 Inches |
I have a basic digital food scale from Walmart. No idea what brand, I just like them to be digital and weigh in both ounces and grams, and have a rare feature (that allows you to place an empty container on the scale and then reset the weight to zero before you add ingredients so that you don't have to do that math manually).
I started out converting my recipes into oz. but I ran into two problems: my scale only read two decimals, and it rounded to the nearest .05 oz. For improved accuracy, I've switched to grams and have been much happier. I only weigh items that would normally be measured by cups, like flour and sugar. Things that are measured in tsp. or tbsp. I leave alone because those weights are negligible anyway. I place a mixing bowl onto the food scale and just dump my flours and sugars directly from the package into the bowl to weigh, so I end up using fewer dishes and making less mess. After weighing, I just dump each ingredient into the mixer and stir. It takes a few minutes to switch your brain over to this system, but I absolutely believe it's worth it.
It's also really easy to scale recipes up or down by nearly any amount-for instance, I have one recipe that uses canned pumpkin, but it calls for something like 2 oz. more pumpkin than is in a standard can, so I used to open two cans and discard the remainder because it was very difficult to figure out how to scale the recipe up when some ingredients were divisible by 1/4 cups and others by 1/3. When measuring by weight, I can easily adjust the recipe to use either a single can of pumpkin or two cans by multiplying all my ingredient weights by either .83 or 1.33 respectively.
I doubt silicone mats would work to line cake pans, as you can't cut them and you would need it to cover the sides of the pan to really be effective. However, there are tons of options for silicone baking pans. Here's just one example from Amazon. I've never used these for baking, but I do have a cupcake pan and a mini loaf pan that I use for freezing things like homemade chicken stock, herbs in oil, etc. and have been very happy with them. They aren't as slick as the baking mats so you may still need to oil them-that would be something to research before diving in.