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Padraic ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 16 2006 Location: Pennsylvania Status: Offline Points: 31169 |
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Tonight was a feeble attempt to recreate what I had at a restaurant about a week ago, but anyways:
Pan-seared ribeye - deglazed pan with just a little chicken stock, then sauteed onions and chanterelle mushrooms. Served over a bed of something called "Golden Jewel Blend" - Israeli couscous, orzo, baby chickpeas, and red quinoa. While very tasty, the restaurant version was wagyu sirloin with chanterelles over spaetzle - but of course a good deal of whatever they did, they didn't share, but the result was one of the best steak dishes I've ever eaten. Washing all this down tonight with a Pinot Noir from the Willamette Valley (Oregon). |
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Finnforest ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 03 2007 Location: The Heartland Status: Offline Points: 17410 |
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Mmmm, now that sound pretty tasty
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...that moment you realize you like "Mob Rules" better than "Heaven and Hell"
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Epignosis ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32566 |
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And to think I made my simple huevos rancheros for breakfast. Eggs, cheese, and hot sauce on a tortilla. ![]() ![]() My family comes to our house once a month and I cook for everyone. Today, it's braised pork in white wine, served with a side of rice pilaf. My mother is making a salad and my sister is making a dessert. |
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Dean ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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Not that I know of, though most large towns have shops that specialist teas where that kind of thing can be bought I wouldn't say the more exotic stuff is particularly popular. We Brits really do like our "everyday" (Indian Assam/Darjeeling blend) tea in vast quantities.
I know what you mean, most of what we recreate at home is a fair copy of what professionals can do with the right ingredients and the right equipment - even something as simple as pizza isnt the same when cooked in a domestic oven compared to one cooked in a wood-fired brick or clay oven, with all the flavours of 1000s of pizzas cooked before it stuck to the bottom of the crust.
![]() In this case it may even be psychological - eating at "15" was a big deal for us, the ambiance, the setting, the food itself and the fact that it was a "celebrity" restaurant will have affected our perception of how things tasted, and more importantly, our memories of them.
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Atavachron ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: September 30 2006 Location: Pearland Status: Offline Points: 65749 |
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Vernor's gingerale is the only brand I'll buy
I know the Chinese are fond of aged tea leaves and buds, do the English do this? I always noticed when I'd try to recreate something from a favorite restaurant - like say a real Philly cheesesteak sandwich - I could never get it to taste quite as good. Eventually I realized part of the problem was that I wasn't using a big old seasoned griddle, black and caked with decades of grease and burned-in flavor. Makes all the difference |
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Finnforest ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: February 03 2007 Location: The Heartland Status: Offline Points: 17410 |
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Nice post below, Dean. Redcurrant jelly sounds wonderful. I recently picked the meager crop of Rhubarb from behind Mom's lilacs and brought them to her, she made a nice rhubarb sauce which is great over good vanilla ice cream.
Last night I was dragged out to a "southern" restaurant for cajun food. OMG, what a freakin' nightmare. I don't know how you live like that Rob. Cajun this, blackened that, fiery this, smoked that.....my intestines will be protesting for days. Pass the maalox. Tastes good, but I guess it needs a strong gut. The baking powder biscuits were great though, I mostly ate those to minimize the damage from the peppery sh*t they put all over my chicken. |
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...that moment you realize you like "Mob Rules" better than "Heaven and Hell"
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Dean ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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Yeah Levi's stuff is ginger beer - I'm not sure why he calls it ginger ale - to me ginger ale is stuff like Canada Dry that's made with carbonated water, ginger beer produces its own fizz naturally through fermentation.
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Slartibartfast ![]() Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam Joined: April 29 2006 Location: Atlantais Status: Offline Points: 29630 |
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I'm assuming Levi's is actually ginger beer and called ginger ale? Ginger beer as I know it is like ginger ale but made with fresh ginger and has bite that the standard ginger ale soda does not. Anyway, the ginger beer as I know it makes a really good drink with dark rum: the dark and stormy.
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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Dean ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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Debs's mother is unwell at the moment so she's travelled up to Shropshire for the weekend to look after her; Alex is still at Uni so It's just me and the cats. Last night I threw together a quick corned-beef hash made with leftover mashed potato and a small amount of swede (a rumbletum with corned-beef), I stirred in half a tin of baked beans in the final minutes of cooking because I couldn't be bothered dirtying another pan just for those, I don't eat it very often because Debs doesn't like corned-beef, (but while the cat's away...). Tonight it's pan-fried fillet steak (on offer at the supermarket, too good an opportunity to miss), perhaps with baked potato rather than the usual (for me) rosti or chips, and served with fried mushrooms (with a touch of garlic) and whatever vegetables are in the garden. Tomorrow I'll prepare a chicken chassuer for when Debs gets home, that can cook while I'm pottering around in the garden (weather permitting).
This morning I picked ˝kg (1lb) of raspberries from a self-sown bush I discovered while clearing the undergrowth (more like overgrowth) at the top of the garden - I was looking for my rhubarb, but alas that has disappeared through neglect - not sure what to do with those, a Pavlova would be my first instinct. The gooseberry bushes are overloaded with fruit this year, they'll be ready in a week or so, as are the redcurrants - I don't eat those as a fruit, but make redcurrant jelly to serve with duck and/or lamb - they could do with a lot more rain (more than the pathetic drizzle that's coming down at the moment anyway). I took the time to prune the apple trees this year, so hopefully they will produce a glut of eating apples (of unknown variety, they were here when we bought the house) - I must plant a brambly apple tree, I love those apples when baked into a pie with blackberries and a pinch of cinnamon. Once I've cleared the top of the garden I intend to plant a lot more fruit trees and bushes - I find them to be of more use to me than home-grown vegetables (and a lot less work).
...and it tasted good - not great, but good. There's something lacking that I can't quite identify and don't think I will without returning to Cornwall to re-taste the original. The flavours develop in waves as you drink it, but it lacks that oomph I got when I tried it before - perhaps it was the variety of lavender flowers I used (or the quantity) - another lavender has come into flower, this one smells quite a bit stronger than the previous one, so maybe that will make a difference. I'll keep experimenting until I get it right (not that the current batch is wrong of course - it's still a many times better than any soft drink you can buy commercially)
...a success - not too lemony and just the right amount of elderflower flavour - the colour of the flowers didn't make any difference to the final drink, but hey-ho. I've a lemon verbena in the herb garden that I use the leaves from to make lemon-scented olive oil, in South America they use the flowers to make a soft drink in the same way I used elderflowers here... if it ever flowers that's certainly worth a try.
Made the ginger beer plant last Sunday and have been feeding it every day with more sugar and more ground ginger, so that will be ready tomorrow to convert into 4 ltrs (7 pints) of ginger beer. The "plant" is like the sourdough starter used to make sourdough bread - yeast, water, sugar and ground ginger is put in a large jar and fed with more sugar and ginger each day for a week, after that time the liquid is filtered off and mixed with sugar-water made by boiling ˝ltr of water and 1kg of sugar until the sugar has dissolved, this is then diluted with 3˝ltrs of cold water and bottled; after a week the result is gingery fizzy pop that has been know to explode glass bottles if mistreated. It's called a plant because you use half the filtered sediment to start the next batch (without adding more yeast) - the other half you give to a friend so they can start their own ginger beer plant (though if you want to keep your friends, its probably a good idea not to).
This morning 20 Grade "A" bourbon vanilla pods arrived in the post - I knew what it was before opening the parcel - the smell was overpowering but heavenly. I'll be using some of those to make my own vanilla extract (three split pods and a cup of white rum or vodka in a screw-top jar and left to mature for a couple of months) and the rest for vanilla sugar (either put the whole pod in a storage jar full of castor sugar, or blitz pod and granulated sugar in a food-processor or blender until the sugar is at the "castor" stage ... don't over do it or you'll get vanilla icing sugar... and that's not a lot of use). Buying in bulk from eBay appears to be a bargain - 20 pods for the price of 2 in a little glass jar from the supermarket, and they look a lot fresher than the Schwartz™ ones. Time to dig-out the icecream maker...
![]() bon appétit ![]() Edited by Dean - June 25 2011 at 08:39 |
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Atavachron ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: September 30 2006 Location: Pearland Status: Offline Points: 65749 |
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I have no doubt that butter makes all the difference, I threw in a nob tonight in lieu of the huge dollop of sourcream I usually put on .. and yes the anise would throw-off the whole thing, too dominant a flavor
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Dean ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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^ mmm, and ^^ mmmm - roast and chili - can't beat either of those - tonight it's "standard" beef chili (with chocolate of course) served with the spiced butter from this recipe - I've tried the chili from that recipe but the star anise kills it stone dead for me.
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Atavachron ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: September 30 2006 Location: Pearland Status: Offline Points: 65749 |
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^ oh ... yeah
Pork butt chili tonight, slow-cooked with onions, garlic, chipotles, beer, brown sugar, tomatoes, kidney beans, and plenty of spice |
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Epignosis ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 30 2007 Location: Raeford, NC Status: Offline Points: 32566 |
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Rump roast with potatoes, carrots, and onions with French bread and Merlot.
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Dean ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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glitterbags ![]() Forum Newbie ![]() ![]() Spam Chef Joined: June 11 2011 Status: Offline Points: 2 |
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macaroni cheese is on the table today. and fruit salad is for dessert, not the canned fruits but the fresh ones. ordinary preparations for my previous meals, but after viewing the Food network using my dish network offers, its like cooking like a chef all day long.
You can go to Food network for other options |
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Atavachron ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: September 30 2006 Location: Pearland Status: Offline Points: 65749 |
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the pickled garlic sounds great, I loved pickled anything, another interesting variation is preserved lemons;
quarter 4 or 5 lemons (you can leave them attached at one end by not cutting all the way if you want), rub some salt inside each lemon and pack them tightly in a glass jar, add a bit more salt and enough lemon juice to cover lemons. Let sealed jar stand unrefrigerated for at least 10 days inverting jar every day or so. Store in fridge, will keep a very long time and can be used in sauces, meat or veggie salads, stews, etc. You could also add a cinnamon stick or cloves for extra flavor. |
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Dean ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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Still on the bread making lark, moved on to pizza dough - this thing makes the best pizza I've tasted in a long time, as regulars of this thread will know, I'm not a fan of pizza, but this has made me a convert. I've been experimenting with adding Parmesan cheese and sun-dried tomatoes into the dough and then cooking that as a calzone pizza with homemade tomato sauce, mozzarella, red-onion, bell-peppers, mushrooms and lots of pepperoni. Definitely not going to a pizzeria ever again after eating this - how those places can get it so wrong when it's this easy is something I don't understand.
I've just polished off a plate of sweet bread with plenty of butter (to hell with the cholesterol count today - I'll be good tomorrow...) - this one was made with freshly squeezed orange juice instead of the normal water content, pieces of dried pineapple and some crystallised kiwi fruit I made at Christmas ago. Making the kiwi was a palaver, but well worth it - peeled and sliced kiwi was boiled in sugar and water for 3 minutes a day over several days, increasing the concentration of sugar each day until it was a thick and sticky syrup and the kiwi had turned translucent. The kiwi was then removed and left to dry on a cake cooling rack until it was completely dry - what you are left with is pieces of kiwi that are practically 99% sugar that just explode with intense kiwi flavour when you bite them. The left-over syrup was pretty spectacular too - just diluted with soda water and served over ice, or used to replace the sugar in a daiquiri.
Speaking of drinks... I think I've found the recipe for Jamie Oliver's home made Herbal Cola I tried at his "15" restaurant in Cornwall, to be fair to its real creator, I should call it Tristan Stephenson’s Herbal Cola ... http://uktv.co.uk/food/chef/aid/588920 as he is the owner of the bar in the 15 restaurant. I've made the syrup but not tasted it yet as I've run out of soda water - the only concern is the colour which hasn't the pinkish tinge of the original, I guess that's down to the lavender flowers I used, but it certainly smells right. Can't wait to taste it.
I've also "brewed" a few gallons of elderflower champagne as I do every year - this year my Elder 'Black Beauty' has produced a mass of delicate purple flowers so they went into the mash instead of the normal hedgerow white variety - it's not ready yet (another few days) so I don't know whether it is a success or failure.
I've been meaning to start a ginger beer plant for years as I really like ginger beer as a soft drink and get through litres of the stuff every summer (latest favourite is Levi Root's Reggae Reggae Reggae Ginger Ale) - perhaps this year is the year I'll finally do it.
Delving through my scraps of recipes I found an old recipe for pickled garlic given to me several years ago by a friend's mother (much to my friend's chagrin as she had been trying to get the recipe from her mum for years) - another really simple recipe that defies belief - 10 garlic bulbs peeled, 1 pint of white wine vinegar, 4 oz of honey (Lynn was a beekeeper - you can use sugar if you must) and a teaspoon of salt - boil the vinegar, salt and honey in a pan until it's smooth and simmering - add the garlic and simmer for 5 minutes - allow to cool and store in kilner jars (or screw-top jars) for at least a month. These little treasures are wonderful and sweet and not overpowering like raw garlic would be, really moreish.
I've also fired up the smoker a couple of times this year so far - a lightly hot-smoked salmon fillet that just melted in the mouth and (still my favourite) some smoked duck breast. I also air-cured some duck breast to make duck-ham, which was more like bresaola than ham and was great served with balsamic vinegar on some fresh-baked bread (made using traditional stone-ground seeded bread flour from the Wessex Mill company - delicious) and of course I'm still producing salmon and trout gravad lax, though the trout is still the winner there, the salmon goes on to be cold smoked as that is the more robust of the two fish and smoking would kill the delicate flavour of the trout (and I do like smoked salmon).
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Vibrationbaby ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Joined: February 13 2004 Status: Offline Points: 6898 |
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Name it.
actually a lot of we learned was forgotten. It was a good thing I lew with navigators that saved my life on more than one occasion. The navs were usually better educated than us pilots. We were in physical control of the airplane but they were in tactical and strategic control. Will the One Eleven it was the nav who handled the comms and made most of the vital judgements, They never got the credit that they deserved. Here is my latest concoction : Itn is a modern dish, I call it Cheetah/ Elvis blowdryer fusion. Ingredients : ! Elvis blowdryer I Cheetah 1Ted Nugent First when in able to prepare this fine dish you need Ted Nugent to go out with his crossbow and hunt dow the very elusive Cheetah one of the most respected members of the cat family. The successful capture and humane killing of this regal creature is only the first obsacle in this culinary adventure, Locaing an Elnis blowdryer might prove to be a wee bit more difficult unless that is if you have access to the Graceland museum of everything Elvis. Let's assume that you have overcome all of the difficulies of acquiring the ingredients.Nowyou need a big pot. and a huge meat grinder. From this stage it is pretty simple. Throw everthing into the meat grinder then afterwards throw into a deeep fryer adjusted at 275 degrees farenheit an then just serve it up after it has spent 12 minutes in a deep fried state. Don't forget the guest comment cards, Edited by Vibrationbaby - June 06 2011 at 14:17 |
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Dean ![]() Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
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Anyway, if it's water you are after, I've some dehydrated stuff I'm willing to part with for a price... Edited by Dean - June 02 2011 at 18:05 |
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Vibrationbaby ![]() Forum Senior Member ![]() Joined: February 13 2004 Status: Offline Points: 6898 |
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My recipe for water is this :
try an find some hydrorgen from somewhere. M y first guess wold be in the atmosphhere. that would be my first cloice..If there is no water avalable there I I,ve heard ther have been water discoveries in Mars. It's far but if you are raelly hngry i wouldn't thimk a few million miles wouldn't be that far off. |
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