What's cooking? part 4

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well, i guess what i was asking - since i've never eaten grits before - is whether the egg part of it seems essential to the taste or serving of it (if it's cooked with sweet potato).

just1n3, Sunday, 12 June 2011 20:25 (fifteen years ago)

it seems like the egg whites are used to set the grits into the muffin tins; one doesn't normally cook grits with egg whites.

kate78, Sunday, 12 June 2011 20:33 (fifteen years ago)

just put this on the 'what can't you find' thread but this is probably a better place for it. please help oh cooky ones:

i used to have a recipe ripped out of one of the guardian food magazines, (possibly a nigel slater one). it's for a roast chicken (covered in foil and steamed using stock, with veg like leeks and carrots cooked in the roasting tin as well) with a grilled lettuce thing on the side and brown rice with chorizo (or salami). probably the best meal i've ever had in my life. it's been an age since i last made it and have no clue where to start with it - searched everywhere online and no joy. does anyone know the recipe i mean? or a very similar one that might cut it?

NI, Monday, 13 June 2011 21:51 (fifteen years ago)

Dug out the Cuisinart with the intention of making zucchini pancakes, and saw that I was going to have to somehow extract moisture from the shredded vegetables, at which I scoffed and tried to think of a plan B.

I wound up shredding virtually every shreddable vegetable in my fridge to make a slaw with zucchini, fennel, onion, beet, mint, lime, oo, and I think I am going to eat it with some marinated stovetop-grilled portabellos and a roll? It's like this crazy pink mutant beast version of the thing Just!ne posted on fb for me. I think it tastes good, but I'm also kinda biased to like it since it contains a bunch of things I like. Not sure if it has any wider appeal...it's kind of a visual abomination.

Garyln (La Lechera), Saturday, 18 June 2011 00:24 (fifteen years ago)

yum!

if you don't want to de-moisturize shredded veg, i recommend mixing with chickpea flour, herbs/spices to make delicious pancake/latke type things.

tehresa, Saturday, 18 June 2011 00:26 (fifteen years ago)

that's what i was going to do, but i could NOT find chickpea flour at the store that normally has it. i did get some of my favorite guava paste blobs (bocadillo) though and i have eaten 3 already :)

good tip though -- where do you find this flour? it seems to elude me everywhere and i go to like 5 diff grocery stores for various things

heartbreak beet (La Lechera), Saturday, 18 June 2011 00:28 (fifteen years ago)

chickpea flour is my new favourite thing - LOVE the taste of it, esp for breading things like mushrooms.

just1n3, Saturday, 18 June 2011 00:29 (fifteen years ago)

Zucchini is pretty easy though, I just squeeze it a handful at a time. Or you can do it all at once in a clean dish towel.

Mr. Patrick Batman (WmC), Saturday, 18 June 2011 00:33 (fifteen years ago)

i usually find it at whole foods or like stores (they had it everywhere in seattle, here it is wf and natural foods stores).

ooh i bet it is super yum on mushrooms!

tehresa, Saturday, 18 June 2011 01:34 (fifteen years ago)

bob's red mill packages it

tehresa, Saturday, 18 June 2011 01:34 (fifteen years ago)

my current sadface is that i still can't find decent zucchini! went to store last night and it was all sad looking. isn't it time for zucchini now?

tehresa, Saturday, 18 June 2011 01:35 (fifteen years ago)

Should be -- my mother told me their yellow squash is coming in, and the seasons are the same I think.

Mr. Patrick Batman (WmC), Saturday, 18 June 2011 01:58 (fifteen years ago)

i think there's just a conspiracy among dc grocers to deprive me of all the vegetables i want at all times of year.

tehresa, Saturday, 18 June 2011 01:59 (fifteen years ago)

Bought some locally-milled grits at the Tupelo farmers market last month. Finally made some a couple of days ago and they went straight into the trash. Too coarsely ground, bitter tasting, and it included the hull or the pericarp or whatever of the kernel, which I could cook for a year and it wouldn't get tender.

Mr. Patrick Batman (WmC), Saturday, 18 June 2011 14:50 (fifteen years ago)

Whoa! I've never had grits taste bitter.

Bill, Saturday, 18 June 2011 14:54 (fifteen years ago)

It was quite an unpleasant surprise!

Mr. Patrick Batman (WmC), Saturday, 18 June 2011 14:56 (fifteen years ago)

Yeah, I would think so! I wonder what causes that - if it's the grind, or the wrong kind of corn, or what.

Bill, Saturday, 18 June 2011 15:07 (fifteen years ago)

Bill, did you ever get a vacuum sealer? The reason I ask is, this afternoon my daughter thawed out a sealed pack of the gravlax I made four years ago and it's just fiiiiine.

Mr. Patrick Batman (WmC), Tuesday, 21 June 2011 00:35 (fifteen years ago)

Still haven't! Someday, though. This time of year I always wish I had one so I could compress watermelon and cucumber.

Bill, Tuesday, 21 June 2011 00:40 (fifteen years ago)

She made Gravlax Egg McMuffins for dinner. What hath I wrought!

Mr. Patrick Batman (WmC), Tuesday, 21 June 2011 00:44 (fifteen years ago)

Keep an eye on Woot.com - I got a Rival vacuum sealer that works great for <$20. Works with the less expensive rolls or the precut bags. I've been using it to bruise and sous vide asparagus etc as well as pack perishibles.

Jaq, Tuesday, 21 June 2011 00:50 (fifteen years ago)

Father's day celebration w/ my pops. He's taking care of chicken, I've made:

Goat cheese, red pepper and roasted eggplant sandwich on tomato basil bread (bought Pop a panini press – this is his favorite sandwich). Surprise!
Blueberry buttermilk upside down cake from the latest Bon Appetit magazine. It is splendid.
Chiogga beet and carrot slaw with coriander and sumac
Ravioli filled with sweet potato, honey, Szechuan pepper, five spice, and garlic. (This is kind of a rip off from Ming Tsai's latest, amazing, book.)

remy bean, Tuesday, 21 June 2011 20:01 (fifteen years ago)

Had amazing tequila and food in Mexico (in a little tourist enclave ...) and we're going to try to recreate the experience. I'm responsible for hot sauces. I remember a wonderful habanero sauce which i believe was just minced habanero in vinegar. Anyone have tips about salsa fresca? Or any other ideas?

lukas, Tuesday, 21 June 2011 20:24 (fifteen years ago)

i have been mad lazy lately and got one of those tubes of cilantro (mixed w/ a little oil to form a paste)... have been squeezing that into salsa to perk up boring jars.

tehresa, Tuesday, 21 June 2011 20:36 (fifteen years ago)

tbh it's good cilantro flavor and so much easier than chopping. also it doesn't go bad. i can never get through a bunch of cilantro before it starts to turn.

tehresa, Tuesday, 21 June 2011 20:37 (fifteen years ago)

Bayless salsa recipes are pretty foolproof and easy if you have a food processor. I love his Mexico Everyday book. A little googling will serve your needs, I'd imagine.

heartbreak beet (La Lechera), Tuesday, 21 June 2011 20:40 (fifteen years ago)

Yeah, I don't have an especially ambitious goal here. More talented chefs will be making actual food. Thanks!

lukas, Tuesday, 21 June 2011 20:49 (fifteen years ago)

Bayless recommendation seconded. And any time you're looking for a specific Mexican dish, Diana Kennedy is another good one to check - can't remember if you can search her books on Amazon (which saves a trip to the library).

For the first time since Christmas I found duck in the supermarket here - just in time for my birthday! I have some unbelievable bullshit to try to deal with this week, so if I succeed at doing so, this weekend will be a combined birthday/bullshit-survival celebration with smoked duck, foie, Georgia peaches, Hubig's pies, and whatever else celebratory I can dig out of the cupboards.

Bill, Tuesday, 21 June 2011 20:51 (fifteen years ago)

awesome!! sounds great :)

i am trying to figure out how i will celebrate the end of my week (and this job) but that may be less about cooking and more about the cocktails thread...

tehresa, Tuesday, 21 June 2011 21:10 (fifteen years ago)

i have had good luck w/ easy bayless recipes, but his moles are prone to disaster in my experience. i have made 3 of them, and all of them have turned out weird and crappy

remy bean, Wednesday, 22 June 2011 01:34 (fifteen years ago)

made a slaw this am for work potluck. lots of ppl were bringing in meat-heavy dishes (chicken meatballs w/ peanut sauce, bbq pork loin, etc.) so i went with savoy and red cabbage, mango, jicama, yellow pepper, carrot. made vinaigrette last night and let it marinate red onion pieces: lime & lemon juice, rice vinegar, sesame oil, s&p, a dab of honey, cilantro, something else i'm forgetting now... i hope it's good and not too acidic. i'm bringing fresh mint to garnish it before serving.

tehresa, Wednesday, 22 June 2011 12:18 (fifteen years ago)

Whole Foods, I'm gonna hate how much I spend on you when the local one opens next year, but man am I happy to have sunflower greens and pea shoots. (And three kinds of miso and six kinds of cheese, and hanger steak.)

Bill, Wednesday, 22 June 2011 18:06 (fifteen years ago)

crossposted from the Father's Day thread because my wife and daughter can't get too much credit for the work they put in on this:

badam sandheko (Nepalese spiced peanuts)

chicken beli ram with chapatis
pan-fried halloumi
coconut shrimp with 2 dipping sauces
portobello banh mi "sliders"

mojito ice

cedar planked salmon with dill mustard
wild rice, roasted asparagus

berry ice

kulfi
green tea & mint biscuits

Every bit of it was fantastic.

Mr. Patrick Batman (WmC), Wednesday, 22 June 2011 18:23 (fifteen years ago)

sounds good, but i do not understand what a portobello banh mi slider is. pls to explain?

remy bean, Wednesday, 22 June 2011 18:28 (fifteen years ago)

Roasted portobellos; marinated daikon/carrots; cucumber, sliced jalapenos, basil leaves; sauce of soy, lime juice, fish sauce, sesame oil, garlic, sugar. They toasted hoagie rolls a bit, added a good bit of the sauce and a very light amt of mayonnaise (all the recipes J. found called for mayo), loaded the roll up with mushrooms and vegetables, sliced it into small slider-sized portions.

If anybody is feeling like being critical of any lack of "authenticity" in this sandwich, please keep it to yourself.

Mr. Patrick Batman (WmC), Wednesday, 22 June 2011 18:41 (fifteen years ago)

(not meant at you, remy)

Mr. Patrick Batman (WmC), Wednesday, 22 June 2011 18:41 (fifteen years ago)

That sounds awesome!

Bill, Wednesday, 22 June 2011 18:54 (fifteen years ago)

It was a full day of eating, six hours total with a couple of long breaks to digest and let our eyes uncross.

Mentioned it on a couple other places, but it was THE best piece of fish I've ever eaten. (Copper River wild-caught)

Finally the payoff for having procreated!

Mr. Patrick Batman (WmC), Wednesday, 22 June 2011 18:59 (fifteen years ago)

holy shit that banh mi sounds phenomenal

all the pretty HOOSes (gbx), Wednesday, 22 June 2011 19:05 (fifteen years ago)

and TOTALLY inauthentic

all the pretty HOOSes (gbx), Wednesday, 22 June 2011 19:05 (fifteen years ago)

the inauthenticity was the tastiest part

Mr. Patrick Batman (WmC), Wednesday, 22 June 2011 19:06 (fifteen years ago)

yeah, it sounds great!

remy bean, Wednesday, 22 June 2011 19:08 (fifteen years ago)

For ages I've had "bahn mi hot dog" on my whiteboard - if anything invites personal touches, it's the bahn mi.

Bill, Wednesday, 22 June 2011 19:14 (fifteen years ago)

made my own salsa and refried beans today, and had a boned chicken leg which i grilled with this. salsa i put in...red onion, a chilli, 6 tomatoes, lime juice, spoon of cumin, pinch of chilli powder, clove of garlic, salt/pepper, tiny bit of water. didn't have coriander/cilantro or i would have used that too.

for the refried beans i sort of adlibbed, fried a chilli and some garlic with a spoon of cumin, threw black beans in a pot, added a bit of water, mashed it up, added lime juice and salt/pepper and some hot sauce.

it was a really nice meal.

MAYBE YOU SHOULDN'T BE LIVING HERE!! (Local Garda), Wednesday, 22 June 2011 21:15 (fifteen years ago)

I made katsu curry tonight. I needed a comfort meal!

I'll show you the power of laughter! (Abbbottt), Sunday, 26 June 2011 04:24 (fifteen years ago)

"island style" pork tenderloins last night. rub the meat w/cumin-cinnamon-chili powder and S&P, brown it. leave it in the pan and coat w/a mix of brown sugar (one cup) chopped garlic and tabasco. cook at 350 for 30 min or so. serve on a salad of spinach, napa cabbage, bell pepper, orange sections, avocado and golden raisins dressed w/vinaigrette including toasted curry powder, lime, orange juice.

every time I make this it seems a little busy flavor-wise but it tastes good and people love it.

backlash stan straw man fan (m coleman), Monday, 27 June 2011 10:01 (fifteen years ago)

I made my comfort meal yesterday, it was scratch pancakes with Michigan maple syrup and it was exactly what I needed. Pancakes can be SO GOOD, people, and yet in public they're almost invariably tasteless mouth sponges!! Why is this??? I make them with an extra egg (so 2 total) and a lot of cinnamon and I try to use a nice flour or even a whole-grainy one -- right now it's the King Arthur's normal unbleached.

They can be delicious, I swear!

you're in the club and the light hits your ass like pow (Laurel), Monday, 27 June 2011 14:10 (fifteen years ago)

my ones can turn out a bit sponge-y :/ what is yr recipe laurel???

just sayin, Monday, 27 June 2011 14:12 (fifteen years ago)

P sure it's a basic from like BHG or sthing but I just tried to google it and none of the recps match up, so it might be my mother's personal adjustment. My copy is scribbled on a scrap of paper in my recipe binder. Taking a shot at it, I think it's:

1.5 C flour
1 tsp baking powder
3 tsp sugar
1 tsp salt
.5 tsp cinnamon (I'm positive I used more)

1 - 1.25 C milk (depends on desired consistency)
1 - 2 eggs (I use 2)
3 tsp melted butter

Mix wet into dry; do not overmix.

I'll double-check that tonight, don't anyone go out and make that yet in case you get a mouthful of salt or something.

you're in the club and the light hits your ass like pow (Laurel), Monday, 27 June 2011 14:24 (fifteen years ago)

this weekend will be a combined birthday/bullshit-survival celebration with smoked duck, foie, Georgia peaches, Hubig's pies...

I was half-right! (But did survive the bullshit.) Due to some sort of confusion, the peaches have not yet been shipped, so we're having them for the Fourth of July weekend up at the lake instead. I didn't break into the foie or the truffle salami, but the smoked duck was pretty decadent alongside radishes and potatoes roasted together, and quickly seared snap peas. Also made steak subs with hanger steak marinated in comeback sauce, with sunflower greens, spring onions, sharp provolone, and a sauce of steak drippings, pecan oil, barley miso, and sherry vinegar.

Big fan of snap peas cooked that way - grilling would be just as good or better, but I just tossed them on a cast-iron pan on medium-high heat for a total of about two minutes, until at least one side had been deeply browned. Ought to have taken a photo, but I never think to when the girlfriend's here.

Bill, Monday, 27 June 2011 14:55 (fifteen years ago)


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