What can you expect in the Food Thread on PF?

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The discussion revolves around a vibrant exchange of food-related topics, with participants sharing favorite recipes, culinary experiences, and kitchen mishaps. A notable focus is on lentil recipes, with suggestions for dishes like chocolate lentil cake and lentil lasagna, as well as creative uses of lentils in various cuisines. Participants also share recipes for pasta with pesto, grilled shrimp marinades, and Indian dishes like dahl and gulab jamun. There’s a strong emphasis on improvisation in cooking, with many contributors discussing how they cook "by feel" rather than following strict measurements. The conversation also touches on cultural influences, such as the appreciation for Lebanese and South Indian cuisine, and the importance of traditional meals like the Indian sadya. Additionally, humorous anecdotes about kitchen disasters and the challenges of cooking techniques, like frying mozzarella sticks, add a lighthearted tone to the thread. Overall, the thread celebrates the joy of cooking and the communal sharing of food experiences.
  • #4,561
Evo said:
I always buy the prepared corned beef. I can find you a recipe if you want to corn your own, but I don't know anyone that does, but maybe it will be fun. What brand did you buy? Quality and flavor vary greatly between companies.
Wegmans. Turbo implied that I could get corned beef at a butcher's. I'll look around and see if that's so.
 
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  • #4,562
netgypsy said:
Corned beef and cabbage need to be cooked until the beef can be pulled apart like barbequed pork.
When I was done, it was much more tender than the thin sliced corn beef I get when I order a rachel sandwich, but not as tender as my wife's bbq pork. We all like our veggies a little on the tough side, so I didn't cook them as long as the recipe said.
 
  • #4,563
Jimmy Snyder said:
When I was done, it was much more tender than the thin sliced corn beef I get when I order a rachel sandwich, but not as tender as my wife's bbq pork. We all like our veggies a little on the tough side, so I didn't cook them as long as the recipe said.
Good for you. My wife and I do the same. When making a boiled dinner (vegetables and a hunk of meat) we try to keep the vegetables al dente. Try this again, Jimmy, though using a cheap shoulder roast (chuck roast is my favorite). Once again, trim off excess fat, simmer the hell out of that roast (low-slow is the key if you want tender pull-apart meat) and add your potatoes, carrots, turnip, etc. Last add your onions and cabbage. You have just made a New England boiled dinner.

Initial steps (critical!) are to sear the roast in peanut oil (high smoke point) until it is browned on all sides, and then add red wine and water to the pot to lift the browning residue off the bottom of the pot. The vegetables will pick up that nice meaty flavor from the stock. You can't add flavor later, so you have to start off right.

Edit: I should add that for the original browning of the roasts, my mother and grandmother didn't have peanut oil, and they used a bit of lard (high smoke point) to brown the meat. Mom didn't always use lard, but would would sear some salt-pork in a pot before adding the roast. Lard could be an expense, but she could always send me down-cellar to spear a hunk of the salt pork out of the little wooden cask.

I'm not a master chef, but I learned how to cook from some people who were killers in the kitchen. I'd love to open a restaurant, but everybody that I know in that business has suffered from burn-out, alcoholism, and family problems. The stress in that business is incredible, and I have to give kudos to anybody who has initiated a restaurant start-up, and has still kept their personal life and family relations healthy.
 
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  • #4,564
The restaurant business is like the horse business - to make a little money you have to start out with a lot of money.
 
  • #4,565
Yummy:

http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/03/29/10922289-urine-soaked-virgin-boy-eggs-are-a-springtime-taste-treat-in-china
 
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  • #4,566
gravenewworld said:
Yummy:

http://worldnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/03/29/10922289-urine-soaked-virgin-boy-eggs-are-a-springtime-taste-treat-in-china

 
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  • #4,567
I wonder where the third bay leaf went?
 
  • #4,568
My neighbor wanted to borrow my car again, so she offered to bring me a cup of her vegetable soup. OK.

The *soup* was a tasteless, bland, watery cup of tomatoes, carrots, green beans and a few tiny noodles.

Evo to the rescue! I added some of my Knorr Caldo de Tomate Con Sabor de Pollo. It made it edible. Of course I will tell her how wonderful it was. :eek:
 
  • #4,569
Oh, that soup certainly needed more tomatoes and celery for sure. Furtermore lots of thyme and origanum, and for the yummy factor chicken or beef dice well done and smoked bell peppers.

The clan came for dinner this evening and Enrunwen decided it should be burritos. She grabbed the Canon while dinner was prepared.

http://dl.dropbox.com/u/22026080/burrittos.jpg
 
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  • #4,570
Looking good Andre!
 
  • #4,571
Tonight we had a simple dinner of steak, baked potatoes avec des trous, brussels sprouts yucca, and okra Winfrey.

1.66 lbs ribeye steak bone in
4 russet potatoes
some brussels sprouts
one yucca
some okra
hot peppers.

Pre-preheat the oven to 375 degrees.
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.
Heat the oven to 375 degrees.
With a fork, poke a few holes in each end of the potatoes, wrap in foil and place in the oven for 1 hour.
Rub the steak with a little vegetable oil, salt, and pepper from a mill. Place on top a couple of sprigs of rosemary from the herb garden.
When the potatoes have been baking for 20 minutes, place the steak in the oven. After another 20 minutes turn it over. When the potatoes are done, the steak will be too.
Fry the okra with some hot peppers.
Boil the brussels sprouts with the yucca. Actually, I don't have any yucca so I just boiled the brussels sprouts.
 
  • #4,572
Did you sear the steaks before finishing in the oven?
 
  • #4,573
Andre said:
Oh, that soup certainly needed more tomatoes and celery for sure. Furtermore lots of thyme and origanum, and for the yummy factor chicken or beef dice well done and smoked bell peppers.

The clan came for dinner this evening and Enrunwen decided it should be burritos. She grabbed the Canon while dinner was prepared.

http://dl.dropbox.com/u/22026080/burrittos.jpg
Oh my. Save some for me Andre. And your photo is wonderful. :cool:
 
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  • #4,574
Jimmy,

What kind of hot peppers ?

Rhody...
 
  • #4,575
Evo said:
Did you sear the steaks before finishing in the oven?
No. I asked my wife about it and she said that just before the steak is ready I should turn the heat up high to finish it. Next time.

rhody said:
What kind of hot peppers ?
To taste. I used some hot pepper sauce in a jar that my wife got from the Chinese grocery. The name is in Chinese characters "Toward Heaven Chili". It's very hot but nothing like habaneros. It's packed with oil in it to fix the heat to your blood.
 
  • #4,576
Jimmy Snyder said:
No. I asked my wife about it and she said that just before the steak is ready I should turn the heat up high to finish it. Next time.
Sear the steaks first in a very hot skillet with salt and pepper, then finish the steaks in the oven. Searing helps keep the steaks nice and juicy. It really does matter. Searing after you have already dehydrated the steaks does no good. You really need to come up here and help me with planting season, and I will help you learn to be a decent cook.
 
  • #4,577
Searing is for taste, I have touted the maillard reaction for years. :biggrin:

Methods: Temper a steak by taking it out of the fridge and letting it sit at room temperature for about half an hour. Heat up a pan containing a thin layer of oil on the stove top. When the oil in the pan is smoking, place the steak in the pan. Make a note of all the changes that are occurring. Hear the sizzle of the meat in the oil. See the meat, where it touches the pan, start to change colors from deep red to gray to brown. But, most important, smell the new aromas emanating from the pan.

Are you hungry yet? I certainly am. A good sear can make a mediocre steak delightful. And a bad sear can render a good steak disappointing. A sear, in this case, doesn’t just give texture to your food. It creates new flavors. It creates new aromas. A good sear is the realization of an uncooked steak’s hidden potential.

All of this is a product of the Maillard reaction.

http://cen.acs.org/articles/89/i47/Maillard-Reaction.html
 
  • #4,578
All true. The browning (and subsequent lifting of those browned juices from the pan) are key to taking a cheap cut of beef to boiled-dinner perfection. Searing steaks is even more more critical, IMO, because you need to seal the outer surfaces to keep the juices in before final finishing.
 
  • #4,579
turbo said:
Searing steaks is even more more critical, IMO, because you need to seal the outer surfaces to keep the juices in before final finishing.

That's actually a myth, it doesn't seal the surface to keep in juices. It does reduce the total cooking time, making the end result more hydrated.
 
  • #4,580
Monique said:
That's actually a myth, it doesn't seal the surface to keep in juices. It does reduce the total cooking time, making the end result more hydrated.

Exactly, it's much better to slowly but thoroughly heat the steaks to some 30-35 oC ~(80-90F), using Maries bath with the steaks in a plastic bag. Then fry them short to the desired state and you'll be known as the incredible steak wizard.
 
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  • #4,581
I should point out that the final result was pretty good. The steak was medium rare with a pink center. So juicy that instead of cutting it into pieces, we poured it on the potatoes.
 
  • #4,582
Jimmy Snyder said:
I should point out that the final result was pretty good. The steak was medium rare with a pink center. So juicy that instead of cutting it into pieces, we poured it on the potatoes.
Sounds yummy, and that's what matters.

My mother would take a 1/2" steak and cook it for 45 minutes. It was like shoe leather, it made my jaw hurt trying to eat it. That's how she liked it. I never could figure out why people liked steak until I went to a steak house and got a properly cooked steak.
 
  • #4,583
Evo said:
My mother would take a 1/2" steak and cook it for 45 minutes. It was like shoe leather...
Just a guess, but I would be willing to bet that she got food poisoning one too many times and cooking it this way ensured that it never happened again.

Rhody...
 
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  • #4,584
Last night my wife put a small piece of leg of lamb in a marinade consisting of olive oil, salt, pepper from a mill, rosemary from the herb garden, and garlic. Tomorrow I'll roast it.
 
  • #4,585
Jimmy Snyder said:
Last night my wife put a small piece of leg of lamb in a marinade consisting of olive oil, salt, pepper from a mill, rosemary from the herb garden, and garlic. Tomorrow I'll roast it.
Oooohh!

Last night I was so tired, I ate cold salmon right out of the can.
 
  • #4,586
Roast leg of lamb, from mix.

1 piece of marinaded leg of lamb
brussels sprouts
broccoli
eggplant

Sear the lamb while heating the oven to 350.
Put the lamb in the oven with the potatoes left over from steak dinner a few nights ago.
Cut up the veggies.
When the center is 140F, take it out and let it rest for 10 minutes.
Start boiling the broccoli and brussels sprouts in a medley and fry the eggplant.

Serve with mint jelly and a cheap Argentine Malbec (what was I thinking?)
 
  • #4,587
Today was a day on the back deck with my father visiting. We had my hot/spicy marinated shrimp fresh off the grill, steamed clams with melted butter-and-vinegar dip, then pan-seared sea scallops in butter. We stretched all this out over 3+ hours with a pound of shrimp, 5 pounds of steamers, and a pound of scallops. Dessert was a Friendly's Thin Mint chocolate ice-cream cake.
 
  • #4,588
Japanese style Curry Rice. Warning: This recipe has absolutely nothing to do with curried rice.

Some medium grain white rice, the sticky kind.
Some stew meat
Some curry paste
Some potatoes
Some carrots
Some mushrooms
Some onions

Feeds: Some people.

I know brown rice is better for you, but trust me, it ruins this dish. You could use Basmati rice, but then it wouldn't be Japanese. We have a rice cooker. If you don't, just use 1 part water, 1 part rice and bring to a boil. When the water boils away, take it off the heat, put a lid on it and let it steam for 10 minutes.
Sear the meat cubes. If you don't want to sear them yourself, you can buy them ready made from Sears for pennies.
The 'curry paste' I'm using is called "Golden Curry" hot. Other brands are "House", and "Vermont".
Boil the stew meat, carrots, potatoes, and mushrooms. I don't put onions in myself, but I think most people do. If you do, I think it would be better to add them later or else they might melt. If you want them to melt, then go for it. Add the curry paste to make a thick sauce.
Lay a bed of rice on a dish and ladle the curry on it.
 
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  • #4,589
Jimmy Snyder said:
Japanese style Curry Rice. Warning: This recipe has absolutely nothing to do with curried rice.

Some medium grain white rice, the sticky kind.
Some stew meat
Some curry paste
Some potatoes
Some carrots
Some mushrooms
Some onions

Feeds: Some people.

I know brown rice is better for you, but trust me, it ruins this dish. You could use Basmati rice, but then it wouldn't be Japanese. We have a rice cooker. If you don't, just use 1 part water, 1 part rice and bring to a boil. When the water boils away, take it off the heat, put a lid on it and let it steam for 10 minutes.
Sear the meat cubes. If you don't want to sear them yourself, you can buy them ready made from Sears for pennies.
The 'curry paste' I'm using is called "Golden Curry" hot. Other brands are "House", and "Vermont".
Boil the stew meat, carrots, potatoes, and mushrooms. I don't put onions in myself, but I think most people do. If you do, I think it would be better to add them later or else they might melt. If you want them to melt, then go for it.
That sounds good. I like my onions melted.

I have curry powder, I guess the paste is a lot different?
 
  • #4,590
I'm making corned beef and cabbage tonight. I had Evo Child buy an extra brisket when they were half price.

Pot of water, dump in corned brisket, add spice packet, cover, bring to boil, reduce to simmer. This is a small one, so 2 hours should do it. I gots cabbage to add, (I'm starting to talk like a lol cat) and maybe a couple of potatoes. I have horseradish sauce. This one has so much fat, I'll be lucky to have enough left for breakfast.
 

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