What's cooking? part 4

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Roasted beets are godly.

offee is for losers only, do you not c? (Abbbottt), Friday, 29 April 2011 04:30 (thirteen years ago) link

i have frequently done roasted beets + goat cheese + balsamic-dijon dressing drizzled over on top of mixed greens. yummm.

tehresa, Friday, 29 April 2011 04:42 (thirteen years ago) link

i actually made this lemon-feta-herb fish dish once that was pretty tasty (re fish + feta)
xpost

tehresa, Friday, 29 April 2011 04:44 (thirteen years ago) link

i remember i drastically cut down the amt of mayo because i hate mayo. i really just used it as a binding agent.

tehresa, Friday, 29 April 2011 04:45 (thirteen years ago) link

I was always sort of indifferent to beets but my wife loves them so I've come around. I usually end up roasting beets and mixing them with warm lentils, goat cheese, bacon, mustard vinaigrette, and some combination of roasted carrots and/or brussels sprouts.

joygoat, Friday, 29 April 2011 05:06 (thirteen years ago) link

i haven't cooked in so long :(

cop a cute abdomen (gbx), Friday, 29 April 2011 12:05 (thirteen years ago) link

i maade dutch picelets it was so good

brodie, Saturday, 30 April 2011 06:36 (thirteen years ago) link

i know it was mentioned somewhere on this thread before but how do i successfully roast these peeled garlic cloves? i was thinking about just wrapping them in foil and roasting @ 400 F for maybe 30mins, but i really have no idea.

just1n3, Saturday, 30 April 2011 17:43 (thirteen years ago) link

Made quinoa for first time ever today! Wouldn't say it's a masterpiece of anything but it's tasty and mixed with many many vegetables...

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Saturday, 30 April 2011 17:44 (thirteen years ago) link

I'm going to be healthy this summer if it kills me.

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Saturday, 30 April 2011 17:45 (thirteen years ago) link

i know it was mentioned somewhere on this thread before but how do i successfully roast these peeled garlic cloves? i was thinking about just wrapping them in foil and roasting @ 400 F for maybe 30mins, but i really have no idea.

Yep, that'll do it. Cooking time may vary depending on how roasted you like them, and a little oil helps make sure they cook evenly, but you've got it. And if you want to cook them at the same time as something else, you can roast them at just about any temperature, it'll just affect how long they take.

Bill, Saturday, 30 April 2011 17:59 (thirteen years ago) link

I bought a kiwano today on the reasoning that if a fruit terrifies you, it is worthy of purchase.

offee is for losers only, do you not c? (Abbbottt), Saturday, 30 April 2011 20:21 (thirteen years ago) link

I am thinking of cutting it up with some strawberries & using it in a Pimm's cup.

offee is for losers only, do you not c? (Abbbottt), Saturday, 30 April 2011 20:22 (thirteen years ago) link

thanks, bill!

was gonna make mashed potato with roasted garlic and roasted asparagus, but i sat in the sun and ate way too much homemade hummus and pesto and bread, followed by an it's-it, so i don't think i need a heavy dinner now.

just1n3, Saturday, 30 April 2011 23:42 (thirteen years ago) link

Is phở too much of a bother to make at home? Anyone done it before?
I just discovered I am about two miles away from a giant supermarket sized Asian grocery and now I am feeling a head rush of power! Real Thai eggplants for me!

offee is for losers only, do you not c? (Abbbottt), Sunday, 1 May 2011 16:59 (thirteen years ago) link

Most of the work with pho is making the stock, and shortcuts like canned/boxed American beef stock will definitely show. (I have some canned Vietnamese pho stock, I've just never gotten round to using it. That giant Asian grocery might have it, though - when I picked it up, I thought "you know, even if this isn't as good as pho made from scratch, it's probably a lot better than no pho at all," and it's a hell of a lot cheaper than making the stock from scratch. So that logic may work for you too.) I think a lot of people skimp on the stock because if we make stock at all, we think of it as something practical, utilitarian, economical - but making pho stock if you don't have access to a real butcher or a really comprehensive meat counter probably means spending $4-9 per pound on the cuts you need. Oxtail or shank, things like that - marrow might be cheaper but has too much fat and not enough collagen, and collagen-heavy cuts are hard to find in most stores now. Your Asian grocery might solve that problem too, though.

Anyway - because the stock is so important, I'll add what I would add for any talk about beef stock, which is that you really want to let it simmer (or not-quite-simmer, even) for a long, long time. At least all day. All weekend wouldn't kill you. Just the meat - any other flavorings can go in in the last hour or two for vegetables, maybe ~30 minutes for spices. You just want to convert as much of that collagen to gelatin as you can. If you pull the meat out of your stock and it still tastes like meat instead of papier-mache (don't eat papier-mache), you didn't do all you could.

eGullet is generally shit these days, but there's some decent pho talk in the archives.

Bill, Sunday, 1 May 2011 17:32 (thirteen years ago) link

I think a lot of people skimp on the stock because if we make stock at all, we think of it as something practical, utilitarian, economical - but making pho stock if you don't have access to a real butcher or a really comprehensive meat counter probably means spending $4-9 per pound on the cuts you need

I didn't explain this well - I mean that because stock-making is so often taught as something practical and penny-pinching (don't let your carrot peels go to waste, save them and make soup), we may shy away from instances of stock-making that are per-serving fairly expensive.

Bill, Sunday, 1 May 2011 17:36 (thirteen years ago) link

this recipe looks like the real deal:
http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Vietnamese-Pho-Rice-Noodle-Soup-with-Beef-232434
but it also looks borderline "a bother" on a few levels.

Marquis de Sade (outdoor_miner), Sunday, 1 May 2011 17:39 (thirteen years ago) link

Yeah even if the cuts used to make stock are $4-5 lb – it's probably not going to cost more per serving to make it at home as it would be to buy the equivalent quantity of the soup at a restaurant (or if it is I am paying for the adventure/braggin' rights of making that shits in mi casa). So that's ok. I get excited any time I get to use oxtails.

offee is for losers only, do you not c? (Abbbottt), Sunday, 1 May 2011 17:45 (thirteen years ago) link

I guess "a bother" was a silly phrase to use – I am willing to go p far to make a flavorful liquid to suspend shit in. It's not like the flavorful liquid needs you to watch it the whole time.

offee is for losers only, do you not c? (Abbbottt), Sunday, 1 May 2011 17:46 (thirteen years ago) link

Do you need meat, really, or can you just ask a meat cutter for bones?

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Sunday, 1 May 2011 17:47 (thirteen years ago) link

I mean CUTS of meat. You just need bones with some meat still attached to them, is what I should have said.

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Sunday, 1 May 2011 17:48 (thirteen years ago) link

Yeah, you need bones with a little meat and lots of cartilage. Your options for getting those bones vary a lot with where you live and how badly the state of butchering has deteriorated. (Pretty pretty badly, in NH, for instance. "Butchers" here are "stores that buy already-cut-up pieces of meat and marinate them for you.")

Bill, Sunday, 1 May 2011 17:55 (thirteen years ago) link

I am willing to go p far to make a flavorful liquid to suspend shit in. It's not like the flavorful liquid needs you to watch it the whole time.

That's how I feel about this stuff. I don't do a whole lot of things that are difficult, except maybe conceptually once in a while, but I do a lot of things that are time-consuming, because the time is usually spent with me around the corner working in the office, with an eye on the kitchen to make sure it isn't on fire.

Bill, Sunday, 1 May 2011 18:02 (thirteen years ago) link

I make stock twice a year with beef neckbones, $1.99/lb at the supermarket in Tupelo with the best meat dept. Lots of collagen, plenty of meat -- perfect for stock. Per Bourdain, I roast them for several hours, then add them to a vat of cold water (making sure to get all the scrapings off the sheet pans).

the wages of sin is about tree fiddy (WmC), Sunday, 1 May 2011 18:09 (thirteen years ago) link

I miss neckbones!

That's the other thing about stock, though, yeah - if you have the freezer space and large enough pots, you can make a lot of it and freeze it for later. Or concentrate it down into new-school demiglace and it's virtually immortal in the refrigerator. It's not harder to make 8 gallons of stock than it is to make 1 gallon, so what labor there is can be spread out more.

Bill, Sunday, 1 May 2011 19:23 (thirteen years ago) link

Butchers up there don't offer neckbones? They were the stock bone of choice for me out in Calif. as well.

the wages of sin is about tree fiddy (WmC), Sunday, 1 May 2011 20:02 (thirteen years ago) link

I'm not kidding, butchers here simply aren't butchers. They sell boneless skinless chicken breasts and steak tips, in various marinades. The first time I walked into one, I wanted to yell at them. It's a totally different approach than anything I've seen before. The meat counters at the supermarket, they vary - none of them seem to handle whole sides anymore, some of them don't even grind their own ground beef. But yeah, neck bones aren't a cut I've seen here at all. Braising cuts in general aren't terribly popular - pork picnic and chuck roasts, that's about it. Even oxtail isn't at my local store, I have to go to the other side of town for it.

Bill, Sunday, 1 May 2011 20:16 (thirteen years ago) link

I was so spoiled in Indiana - a butcher that gave me 3/4 of a headless goat, Mennonites selling their beef at the farmers market, local deer and buffalo ranches, Jungle Jims a few hours away in Cincinnati.

Bill, Sunday, 1 May 2011 20:17 (thirteen years ago) link

Woah thats weird and terrible and also makes me wonder how they can stay in business? i mean why would ppl even bother going there when they sound like they're the same as a supermarket meat counter (but worse) xpost

just sayin, Sunday, 1 May 2011 20:20 (thirteen years ago) link

It's the "convenience" - the angle is that this place, unlike the supermarket, has ten different marinades for you to pick from. The whole gamut from lemon pepper to pepper and lemon. I'm so glad this sounds crazy to other people, because I couldn't believe it when I moved here five years ago, and the place is still in business. (They have a freezer the size of a coke machine where they sell buffalo ribeyes, duck, and occasionally whole rabbits - a weird afterthought, but the reason I've gone back.)

Bill, Sunday, 1 May 2011 20:23 (thirteen years ago) link

I'm also still adjusting to oxtail being expensive, because when I was learning to cook in New Orleans, it was one of the cheap cuts next to the chicken feet and pigs' ears. I ate a lot of oxtail as a grad student because it's what I could afford. Ditto skirt steak.

Bill, Sunday, 1 May 2011 20:27 (thirteen years ago) link

I'm not kidding, butchers here simply aren't butchers.

North MS is in pretty much the same boat, except for that one store in Tupelo (and, I'd like to think, somewhere in Oxford, which is gaining traction as a serious eater's destination).

xp -- the last time I saw skirt steak was at the Dekalb Farmers Market in Atlanta, at $9/lb I think. Crazy.

the wages of sin is about tree fiddy (WmC), Sunday, 1 May 2011 20:40 (thirteen years ago) link

That is sheet madness. Skirt steak is SO BASIC and cheap!

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Sunday, 1 May 2011 20:49 (thirteen years ago) link

Err, sheer. I'm typing while standing up, should be sorting laundry right now.

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Sunday, 1 May 2011 20:49 (thirteen years ago) link

Oughta be! It's only - "only"! - $7/lb here, but is hard to find and almost entirely flavorless. Which is kind of a miracle of science for that particular cut. And although New Hampshire is generally more expensive than Louisiana or Indiana were, that's definitely not enough to account for this price difference.

Don't get me started on duck.

Bill, Sunday, 1 May 2011 21:08 (thirteen years ago) link

No, I'll start on duck, before going back to work. A couple years ago, maybe three or four years now but definitely after I'd lived here a year or two (so it's not simply a regional difference), the local price of duck doubled. I mean, it doubled all at once, because I was buying duck on a regular basis, and all of a sudden they were all $18-20 instead of $8-10. It never came back down.

I can only get whole frozen ducks here, except at Asian markets in Lowell's Little Cambodia - but the duck parts there are now always sold out, presumably because of everyone else getting frustrated by the cost of whole duck. The last time I bought a whole duck under $15, I had to eviscerate it myself.

Bill, Sunday, 1 May 2011 21:13 (thirteen years ago) link

"Butchers" here are "stores that buy already-cut-up pieces of meat and marinate them for you."

Heh, I'm in the UK, but this is exactly what my local butcher is. Luckily there are some very good traditional butchers in town, but in the suburbs a butcher is basically a place with 6 kinds of sausage, 6 kinds of marinated chicken breast, and a counter full of pre-cooked pies and pre-packaged bacon.

They don't give the impression of having anything more unusual in the back room, but maybe I should try asking; maybe it's just that having large cuts of meat and headless carcasses hanging within sight of the windows is frowned on these days.

russ conway's game of life (a passing spacecadet), Sunday, 1 May 2011 21:30 (thirteen years ago) link

I don't know of any grocery-store butchers that get a whole side of meat or w/e, I think they all get parts and cut them down these days. But at least if they have a meat dept with actual staff, you can ask if they have any more skirt steak in the back or can they roll you up a boneless tied pork roast, around 6lbs' worth, and so on.

Back up the lesbian canoe (Laurel), Sunday, 1 May 2011 21:42 (thirteen years ago) link

I'm more grossed out at the thought of someone else making marinades and marinating meat for me than I am at somebody else grinding my hamburger meat. I know what flavors I want and how long I want to marinate the meat, thankyouverymuch.

the wages of sin is about tree fiddy (WmC), Sunday, 1 May 2011 22:04 (thirteen years ago) link

Curry doughnuts, based on something I ate 10 years ago in Japan. Not my best idea, but not my worst.

4, 5, 6, The monkey's got a hockey stick (aldo), Monday, 2 May 2011 17:04 (thirteen years ago) link

~shudder~

how long does miso keep for? i bought a container of it for one recipe, and it wasn't exactly cheap. as per almost every american food, there is no expiry date or suggestion as to how long it keeps once opened.

just1n3, Monday, 2 May 2011 17:06 (thirteen years ago) link

pretty much forever, since it's fermented i.e. pickled

Jaq, Monday, 2 May 2011 17:14 (thirteen years ago) link

I have a never-opened container of white miso back in the depths of the fridge, bought a couple of years ago...I figure it's ok.

the wages of sin is about tree fiddy (WmC), Monday, 2 May 2011 17:21 (thirteen years ago) link

i have an opened-several-months-ago miso pack in an airtight box in the fridge, and last month tried it tentatively, wondering the same thing: it tasted and looked totally fine, and i wasn't ill after.

górecki's zygotic mynci (c sharp major), Monday, 2 May 2011 17:50 (thirteen years ago) link

oh that's great to know - i have recipe that calls for a second kind of miso, and was a bit dubious about spending the money, but if they keep forever...

hey, you guys recommend any recipe blogs?? i've been following a few - i gave up looking for specifically vegan recipes a while ago and haven't looked back - and my cooking has clearly improved. i feel way less stressed about food now!

just1n3, Monday, 2 May 2011 18:01 (thirteen years ago) link

I'm going through my freezer and figuring out what to eat in the next couple weeks and what to hang onto to cook for some friends who are visiting. Uni, goose, sweetbreads, squid, octopus (cooked), fava beans, cranberry beans, frog legs, huckleberries. All of it's so potentially interesting/great I feel guilty making it for just me, but Caitlin's out of town for a few weeks.

Bill, Tuesday, 3 May 2011 16:40 (thirteen years ago) link

And I just had a no-seafood request, soooo dinner for me tonight or tomorrow is squid stuffed with chorizo or chaurice, slow-cooked in tomato sauce.

Bill, Tuesday, 3 May 2011 16:56 (thirteen years ago) link

baller

cop a cute abdomen (gbx), Tuesday, 3 May 2011 17:58 (thirteen years ago) link

For the miso thing, I had a container of bonito miso in my fridge for well over a year (and thats the one with the bonito ie fish flavour added!). The only reason I had to turf it is because the lid fell off and it dried up, but it was otherwise perfectly fine.

Trayce, Wednesday, 4 May 2011 01:23 (thirteen years ago) link


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