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Shakespeare View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 11 2007 at 09:14
My dad's been marinating wings in beer and red-hot, along with other stuff, for over a day for the cottage....it's going to be awesome.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 11 2007 at 09:47
Spicy wings on the barbecue? That's great - and it's just one use of chicken in Rafaella's book I guess. Smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 11 2007 at 21:06
Chicken breast marinateds with wine or flambed with whisky
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2007 at 07:17
Yesterday we made soup for 6, out of 2 kgs of fresh tomatoes, a bunch of freshly plucked basil, some garlic, white beans and finely chopped carrot. Served with a french baguette.
The soup was excellent, and a spoon would almost stay upright if you put it in. Big%20smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2007 at 11:03
I think tonight I'm doing meatloaf. I sauté onions with red and yellow bell peppers and add them to a mixture of ground chuck and italian sausage with some egg and bread crumbs.

I'm thinking of throwing a little twist in it by making smashed red potatoes, but putting the taters in the middle of the loaf. I've seen people put hard boiled eggs in the middle of a meatloaf, but whose to say you can't have a tunnel of mashed taters? Still pondering that one, though.

E


Edited by E-Dub - August 12 2007 at 11:04
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2007 at 18:12
Actually, in Italy people put all sorts of things in the middle of a meat loaf - one of the most popular fillings is frittata (a thin omelette), or a layer of cooked spinach and slices of ham and/or cheese. Of course you can try other vegetables - artichokes, asparagus, grilled eggplant slices, the sky's the limit.

As to the meatloaf mixture itself, have you ever tried using fresh breadcrumbs soaked in milk instead of dry breadcrumbs? This is what I always use when making either meatloaf or meatballs, and it makes the mixture very fluffy and tender.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2007 at 19:52
^ I should try the milk-soaked bread in my meatloaf sometime... another great option for meatloaf is a glaze over the top of honey, tomato paste or ketchup, and the kicker... some cumin.



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2007 at 19:59
Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

^ I should try the milk-soaked bread in my meatloaf sometime... another great option for meatloaf is a glaze over the top of honey, tomato paste or ketchup, and the kicker... some cumin.





The meatloaf tonight could've been the best I've ever made. I'm going to try the crumbs soaked in milk next time, though.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2007 at 20:06
and yummy meatloaf sandwiches tomorrow (?)

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2007 at 20:23
Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

and yummy meatloaf sandwiches tomorrow (?)



Man, meatloaf is just one of those foods that tastes better the next couple of days. I think we're planning on meatloaf leftovers on Tuesday.

E
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 12 2007 at 20:28
I remember my mom sometimes cooked meatloaf in a tomato sauce, the same she would use for meatballs. BTW, I rarely use sausage in the mixture - I'd rather go for minced ham, and of course grated Parmesan and minced parsley, together with the aforementioned fresh breadcrumbs soaked in milk. As to the onion, I don't always use it, though it adds lots of flavour.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 13 2007 at 18:30
Eric, I once heard of a Southern-style meatloaf recipe that used crushed cornflakes instead of breadcrumbs, and topped with a paste made from molasses, ketchup and brown sugar -- I'll have to try to find it, when you first mentioned making meatloaf I thought of that recipe...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 13 2007 at 18:56
Originally posted by E-Dub E-Dub wrote:

Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

and yummy meatloaf sandwiches tomorrow (?)



Man, meatloaf is just one of those foods that tastes better the next couple of days. I think we're planning on meatloaf leftovers on Tuesday.

E


Leg of lamb is another. I had some leftovers from this weekend, and I put them on a sandwich today, with that orange-rosemary dressing that I proposed for salmon a few pages back. Fabulous lunch!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 13 2007 at 19:07
I don't like using bread in anything (excpet sandwiches) and always look for an alternative - Brioche in Bread and Butter pudding is good, crumbled cheesy crackers (ie Ritz) are a much tastier coating than breadcrumbs for fish cakes and I don't like bread based stuffing anyway so only use nuts and sausage meat for the yuletide turkey.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 13 2007 at 21:36
I like a little bread (sourdough or cornbread) in my stuffing but of course it probably stemmed from the need to feed many, and to use up old bread. Dried fruit is another favorite of mine in dressing, apricots, prunes, cherries..





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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 14 2007 at 00:34
[QUOTE=darqdean]I don't like using bread in anything (excpet sandwiches) .[/QUOTE LOLLOLLOLLOLLOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2007 at 17:01
Originally posted by martinprog77 martinprog77 wrote:

[QUOTE=darqdean]I don't like using bread in anything (excpet sandwiches) .[/QUOTE LOLLOLLOLLOLLOL


^^ You forgot a right bracket, Martin Geek

This discussion of meatloaf makes me want to do one next weekend. Today I did a roasted rooster:

Take one rooster (1100-1400 grams), with skin. Stuff the belly with 3 quarters of a lemon, and some fresh rosemary. Loosen the skin on the breast, without tearing or cutting it. Stuff freshly chopped rosemary, thyme (and/or other green herbs) between the skin and the breast meat. Cover the breast side with a few slices smoked bacon. You can tie up the legs and wings now - or skip it like lazy me always does.
Brown briefly in a large oven tray, with some olive oil and butter so that the bacon sticks to the breasts and the skin browns a bit on all sides. Take off the heat and add diced vegetables - I used kohlrabi, patatoes, carrots and onion today. Put in the over on 200 degrees centigrade for 45-60 minutes. Bon appetit!


Edited by Angelo - August 18 2007 at 17:03
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2007 at 17:11
Originally posted by Angelo Angelo wrote:

Originally posted by martinprog77 martinprog77 wrote:

[QUOTE=darqdean]I don't like using bread in anything (excpet sandwiches) .[/QUOTE LOLLOLLOLLOLLOL


^^ You forgot a right bracket, Martin Geek

This discussion of meatloaf makes me want to do one next weekend. Today I did a roasted rooster:

Take one rooster (1100-1400 grams), with skin. Stuff the belly with 3 quarters of a lemon, and some fresh rosemary. Loosen the skin on the breast, without tearing or cutting it. Stuff freshly chopped rosemary, thyme (and/or other green herbs) between the skin and the breast meat. Cover the breast side with a few slices smoked bacon. You can tie up the legs and wings now - or skip it like lazy me always does.
Brown briefly in a large oven tray, with some olive oil and butter so that the bacon sticks to the breasts and the skin browns a bit on all sides. Take off the heat and add diced vegetables - I used kohlrabi, patatoes, carrots and onion today. Put in the over on 200 degrees centigrade for 45-60 minutes. Bon appetit!


mmmm... that sounds yummy Clap
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 18 2007 at 18:22
Mmmm Lemon and Chicken - the perfect combination Approve.
 
Have you tried Chicken with 40 cloves of garlic? It's a classic and although it sounds horrendous it won't have you stripping paint at 10 paces - the garlic turns sweet and scrummy with nice caramelised bits to chew on. Basically it's the same as Angelo's chicken recipe but with 40 cloves of unpeeled garlic scattered around the bird while it roasts. Keeps away vampires too.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 19 2007 at 03:36
^^Haven't tried that one Dean, but I did put in two whole garlic bulbs with a roast of beef once. It works out just the same, and tastes delicious.
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