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Atavachron View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 27 2015 at 21:54
Originally posted by Raff Raff wrote:

I am definitely stealing that cashew recipe!

I'm stealing the word 'moreish' .

Doing a slow-simmer chili with hunks of pork shoulder drenched in powdered chipotle, garlic, chopped onion, s&p; fried in olive oil till just browned but still raw in middle before adding strained tomatoes, some water, Worcesteshire, a little beer, brown sugar, dry oregano, cumin, tobasco, more chipotle if needed.   Turn heat to low and cover till meat is cooked and flavors have come together, add more salt if required.   Served with a sourcream dollop and WheatThins on the side.

A can of drained and rinsed red kidney beans is optional.




Edited by Atavachron - February 27 2015 at 22:15
"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 28 2015 at 02:32
^ Pork chilli ... yum!

Last Sunday I cooked beef short-rib (method 5 pages back), I was away on business for the rest of the week but Debs texted me the following day, (as I dined on over-cooked fish in a second-rate hotel), to say that the left-overs made the best chilli ever. Needless to say, she didn't save me any.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 28 2015 at 02:42
Funny thing about using shoulder is that by the time its been well simmered, the meat itself has imparted most of its flavor to the sauce and is left a largely bland, grey mass
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 28 2015 at 02:48
I don't get that problem using pork shoulder to make puerco pibil or goulash... those get marinaded in the spice mix for a few hours before searing so perhaps that really does seal in the flavour better. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 28 2015 at 02:57
Yes I don't let the meat sit in the rub long, I just let it cook in and bloom a bit in the pot--  but seasoning the meat well is absolutely key to good flavor, something that took me a long time to understand.  The whole "No-Salt!"  trend really threw things too, people started waaayy under-salting and it's taken awhile to get back to basics.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2015 at 12:30
Cooked tandori-style fish in Coconut and Ginger sauce over the weekend, it looked exactly like this:


As you can see, it was served with a simple salad scattered with those honey-roast chilli cashews I've been banging on about. The fillets of fish (whiting) seemed rather small once I got home so I quickly defrosted some king prawns and marinaded them in turmeric, chopped chili and ginger to boost the protein-level of the plate a tad. I can honestly say it was absolutely fantastic and like nothing I've ever eaten before, so light and delicate with a subtle heat from the chilli and ginger.

The little flecks are deep fried flakes of rice. I remember having flaked rice in my childhood as a milk pudding and hating it, I could never why anyone would want to make a rice pudding with the texture of porridge. Then I read that if you fried the flakes they puffed up and became crunchy, its taken me weeks to find anywhere that still sells flaked rice and managed to eventually find some in a wholefood retailer. I now have a kilo of the stuff and only used a small spoonful here, I suspect this packet will last me years.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 13 2015 at 23:28
Homestyle potatoes & onions, with a couple NY strips pan-fried with olive oil, lemon, Worc, and garlic
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 14 2015 at 11:42
Nice coincidence: Tonight we’ll have a pie with leek and mushrooms. I made the crust yesterday and half of the filling earlier today, so the only thing I’ll have to do, is to mix cream, eggs and nutmeg, put the filling on the pie, top with grated cheese and bake it in the oven for half an hour.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 14 2015 at 20:05
^ I do a similar onion & bacon pie with sourcream, egg, and a nice crust -  I think it's German by origin

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 18 2015 at 01:07
Had some decent corned beef w/ cabbage & potatoes tonight, I like a nice fatty brisket





Edited by Atavachron - March 18 2015 at 01:08
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 03 2015 at 00:46
rubbed a NY strip with olive oil & garlic and fried in a hot skillet, steamed broccoli smothered in parmesan, butter & black pepper on the side

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 25 2015 at 04:36
This is a cooking method for fish I've never tried before and just *have* to share it...

I'm a fan of Heston Blumenthal as a TV entertainer - I love watching his shows but his recipes are just too involved to attempt at home - as much as I would love to try his braised belly pork cooked at 70ºC (158ºF) for 18 hours is just not something I can do in a domestic oven - not withstanding that the oven is incapable of setting such a low temperature accurately enough to prevent food poisoning it would mean starting the cooking at 1 o'clock in the morning to be able to put food on the table in time for the evening meal. No, I'm quite content with a 3 hour roast at 150ºC à la Tom Kerridge (though today I am trying it with Blumenthal's brine solution instead of Kerridge's). I do use some of Blumenthal's simpler methods and techniques - trice-cooked chips for example and his cheese-sauce/fondue/welsh rarebit recipe really is the best ever.

Last night Debs bought two nice fillets of Lemon Sole - which is a great flatfish that requires delicate cooking as it can quickly overcook and dry-out that I normally gently fry in butter then finish off with a squeeze of lemon to make a buttery lemon sauce or occasionally I'll roll them up and gently bake them in the oven with a splash of white wine and once in a blue moon I'll do the classic Sole Véronique that never fails to please. However, yesterday I wanted to try something different so spent a lazy half-hour going through the recipe books looking for inspiration and everything seemed to be variations on a theme until I opened the pages of "Heston Blumenthal At Home" - and spied: 'Crispy Lemon Sole with Potted Shrimps and Cucumber' ... curious I thought to myself, sounds interesting and, after carefully reading through the recipe, quite achievable ... I didn't have any potted shrimps but was pretty confident I could improvise an alternative from the contents of the store-cupboard.

It went something like this...

2 slices of white bread
2 fillets of Lemon Sole, skin removed. (skin was later cooked and fed to the cats)
Ground nut oil for frying

2 anchovy fillets, finely chopped
¼ cucumber, peeled, de-seeded, sliced and quartered
8 brined caper berries
A tablespoon of fresh dill, finely chopped (I used the feathery top leaves of a fennel bulb because the dill in my herb garden hasn't recovered from winter yet)
Grated zest and juice of ½ fresh lemon
Some butter, about 25gm

Preheat oven to 120ºC.

Place cucumber pieces in a small bowl and sprinkle with salt and put to one side - this will draw out some of the water. Take two pieces of white sandwich bread (the nasty pre-sliced factory-processed stuff that tastes like cotton wool - this is the one time when artisan home-baked wholemeal seeded granary spelt sour-dough will not do), remove the crusts, place between two sheets of cling-film and using a rolling pin flatten to around 2mm thick, remove from film. Season both sides with salt and pepper and sprinkle with half the lemon zest, place the fish fillets on top of each slice - as the fillet will be longer than a slice of bread, fold the tail over so that it all fits neatly¹ - trim off excess bread and throw out the window for the birds. [/edit: the bread trimmings, not the fish LOL]

Melt the butter in a small saucepan over a low heat, add the capers, anchovies and remaining lemon zest once the butter has melted. Meanwhile heat the groundnut oil in a frying pan over a medium heat - carefully place the fish in the pan bread-side down and cook for 3 minutes until the bread is nice and golden, then transfer it baking tray and place it in the oven for a further 5 minutes. While this is baking add the chopped dill to the butter sauce then add the lemon juice, give it a brisk stir/whisk to emulsify the butter and lemon juice. Just as you are ready to remove the fish from the oven, add the cucumber (draining off any excess liquid first) and give it all one last stir to coat all the 'cumber in the lemon-butter and then season with a quick grind of black-pepper (no need to add salt - there's enough in the anchovies and capers).

Spoon the anchovied cucumbers and capers onto the plate then carefully place the fish on top (bread-side up), pour over whatever sauce remains. Serve with fresh peas and whatever starchy-staple suits your fancy - we had chips because I am a philistine. It would also go nicely with a peppery salad, I guess, if you must.

The effect was quite remarkable - the hot cucumber was a surprising revelation that worked perfectly with the fish, the saltiness of the anchovies and capers contrasted against the lemon and butter sauce and the bread gave it a crispy bite that simply melted away in the mouth as you ate it. It was a piece of culinary genius that will go on my "will do this again" list.



¹In Heston's world where waste is not an issue and presentation is everything he would trim the fish and bread into a nice neat rectangle - in the real world where I'm paying £18/kg for lemon sole I am prepared to forego neatness so will cook and eat it untrimmed, hence the folded tail-end.


Edited by Dean - April 25 2015 at 05:04
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 25 2015 at 04:57
Looks like something to try some time, Dean. Clap

Coming week I'll be alone with my son, so one evening will be dedicated to making his favourite food together: sushi in all shapes and forms. More on that when the day has come ;-)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 25 2015 at 05:35
I love sushi, sashimi and onigri. What time is dinner? Big smile


Just before christmas Alex and I had a dad'n'daughter day in London, around lunchtime we were walking around Soho looking for somewhere to eat and saw an long plate-glass window set into a plain black highly-polished marble fronted restaurant. Through the window we could see precision rows of delicate French-style patisserie that were all too tempting and inviting, and quite expensive so we continued on looking at other places but I could tell that both of us were still thinking about the exquisite sweets. Eventually I gave in to temptation and suggested we go back to the patisserie and have a drink and one of the desserts, so we did. It transpired that this wasn't a French-style patisserie at all, but a Chinese restaurant that specialised in dim-sum... as we both adore dim-sum, we just had to have some of that first. Alex ordered a fancy cocktail while I had a pot of silver needle white tea (at £7 a pot I might add) and we carefully chose a small selection of dim-sum, including some made with Wagu beef, leaving enough room for one of the desserts each. The bill came to about £70 - which was a tad more than I normally would have paid for a lunchtime snack, but it was worth every penny. Approve


If I had realised that this was a Michelin-starred restaurant called Yauatcha I probably would have thought twice, but I'm glad I didn't.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2015 at 13:23
LOL Sometimes the bill can take the breath out of you.

When my sister turned 17 she asked to go to a fancy Chinese restaurant she was curious about that was near the movie theater where she worked. My parents had some old friends with their kids in town visiting that night and so a total of 9 of us went to eat a multi-course meal at Beijing.
There was no real menu, just a choice of which of 2 meals the table would have, orange sherbet served between courses for palate cleansing. It was a nice time, food was great, and when Dad received the bill his face never changed expression. He quietly called over the head waiter and asked him to clarify something, none of us able to hear. He nodded, handed over his credit card and signed. After we left he joked, but not really, about putting off going car shopping for her, since dinner was over $500 after gratuity. LOL



In our efforts to eat a little better, we recently tried shirataki noodles. They're made from yams, are about 97% water and have 0 calories. High in fiber. Made a teriyaki pork and vegetable stir fry with them the other night, and they were really good.
They come in a bag of water, and smell like a fish market when you open them. After rinsing, the smell somewhat goes away, but they don't taste at all fishy, and are just a great noodle base for a dish.
We tried the tofu kind the first time, angel hair, and they were awful. Very off-putting texture and have a rubbery snap to them. But the real thing was surprisingly good.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2015 at 21:16
Because it's 10:00 PM and I'm all f**ked up on drugs and alcohol here is what I am going to eat before going to my bed. Actually I feel like French toast. Hope you guys have a flat top. Put milk and eggs in a bowl and mix them up real good. Then put some brown spices in it ( cinnamon ). Throw a couple of slices of white bead into it and saturate the f**k out of them an then throw them on the flat top. blast Rammstein Aschen Zu Aschen at ELEVEN volume  while you are preparing this fine dish. Don't burn them flip them over before they burn. Remove them from the flat top and serve on a 12 inch  plate to your loved one after squeezing half a bottle of Heinz ketchup all over it. She will love you. My wife always says to me, " at least he is making an effort" and pretends to enjoy my creation no matter how sh*t it is. Berlin Culinary Olympics here I come.

Cooking With Ken Frankenstein.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 18 2015 at 22:07
^ Sounds great except for the ketchup, and no butter on the griddle?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 19 2015 at 19:23
This is the next official installment of Cooking With Ken Frankenstein (copyright 2015 )

Now the bad news is that is you are going to have to go out and kill one of Gd's creatures. Or if you don't have the time for that you can go out to the local fish market and pick up a couple of halibut fillets. Get a bowl and put some lemon in it. Not a whole lemon without the skin but squeeze the juice out of it. The next thing you need is some flour and baking soda. I don't really know how much but mix it in with water and a lot of flat Guinness beer.Still with me? I'm trying to make this easy. Mix it up so it is not chunky. I hope you have a stove. Boil some oil and make sure you don't light the house on fire like I almost did a few times. Dip the  halibut into the mixture of flour lemon and baking soda  and then put it into the boiling oil. When it seems like it is considerably crispy remove it from the boiling oil with tongs. DO NOT USE YOUR BARE HANDS because you might find yourself with first degree burns. Serve with mayo mixed with diced pickles in a rolled up newspaper with McCain oven baked French fries. 

I call this dish Fish "n" Chips a la Ken. 

Next installment of Cooking with Ken Frankenstein :  Beans & Weiners Wild Surprise.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 22 2015 at 12:56
Speaking of beans and wieners, last night was chili dog night.

Used some leftover chili I'd made with ground beef, shredded pork I smoked myself, white beans and the most delicious chili blend you can find: Stubb's Chili Sauce.

Charred up some dogs on the grill to a crispy shade of coal, doused them with chili and onion, paired them with Trader Joe's South African spiced potato chips and tried to forget for a few minutes that I'm on a diet. LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 22 2015 at 20:39
^ Oh yeah, gotta burn the weenie.

"Too often we enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought."   -- John F. Kennedy
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