|
I made dumplings last night and they were all wrinkly when I steamed them is there a trick to prevent that? Did I over-steam them?
|
# ? Jan 24, 2013 17:43 |
|
|
# ? May 11, 2024 10:29 |
|
I bought some chard today at the grocery store just for the hell of it. Anybody know a good chard recipe? I'd prefer to cook it somehow because I don't really like salads.
|
# ? Jan 25, 2013 04:08 |
|
Ron Don Volante posted:I bought some chard today at the grocery store just for the hell of it. Anybody know a good chard recipe? I'd prefer to cook it somehow because I don't really like salads. Take the stems, and chop them finely. Then, take the leaves and chop them roughly. This way, the leaves and stems will cook at more or less the same time. In a pan, heat some canola oil. Add a sprinkle of fennel or cumin seeds (or both if you have both). Cook until the whole place smells amazing. Add in one sliced onion, 3 cloves of sliced garlic, and a few pinches of red pepper flakes. Sautee the onions and garlic until they're just softened. Then, when the garlic and onion are softened, add the chard. Add a splash of white wine or vermouth or some other boozy booze. Let the whole mess cook for about two or three minutes. Finish with a bit of chopped parsley or oregano. Serve. Excellent. You'll find that the fennel and chard go together in a lovely way.
|
# ? Jan 25, 2013 04:16 |
|
I didn't have any fennel so I made a few substitutions but it turned out delicious. Thanks for the recipe!
|
# ? Jan 25, 2013 05:53 |
|
I want to make a decently-authentic mole. (Er, the sauce.) I know that making mole from scratch is a buttload of work, but other than that, I don't know what makes a proper mole. Anyone have a good recipe at hand? I googled it, but I don't know who to trust.
|
# ? Jan 25, 2013 06:34 |
|
Scott Bakula posted:Can anyone recommend a good lamb kofte kebab recipe and side dish? Or just some use of lamb mince that doesn't involve a tomato sauce. My access to fresh veg is fairly limited due to snow which is annoying Got cumin? Got garlic? Start from there.
|
# ? Jan 25, 2013 12:09 |
|
bringmyfishback posted:I want to make a decently-authentic mole. (Er, the sauce.) I know that making mole from scratch is a buttload of work, but other than that, I don't know what makes a proper mole. Anyone have a good recipe at hand? I googled it, but I don't know who to trust. Warning! "Proper" mole means lots of ingredients, and lots of steps. This is the recipe I made for my ICSA Battle Effort entry. I think it came from Epicurious. The most traditional way to serve this is with turkey, but pork or chicken work well, too. Serve with beans and rice or unfilled tamales. When served in a pile, sprinkle with sesame seeds. Ingredients Chiles * 1 cup lard or canola oil * 8 dried mulato chiles, stemmed, seeds and membranes removed * 6 dried pasilla chiles, stemmed, seeds and membranes removed * 5 dried ancho chile, stemmed, seeds and membranes removed Nuts and seeds * 1 tablespoon canola oil * 1/2 cup whole almonds * 1/4 cup pecans * 1 tablespoon unsalted roasted peanuts * 1/4 cup shelled pepitas * 3 tablespoons sesame seeds Fruits * 1/4 cup canola oil * 1 large ripe dark-skinned plantain, peeled, thickly sliced * 1 pound tomatillos, husked, rinsed, coarsely chopped * 1 pound plum tomatoes, coarsely chopped * 2/3 cup raisins Flavorings * 1 large white onion, peeled, cut into 8 wedges * 12 large garlic cloves, unpeeled * 5 whole cloves * 1 teaspoon whole black peppercorns * 5 whole allspice berries * 1 teaspoon cumin seeds * 1/2 teaspoon aniseed * 1 1-inch piece canela* or cinnamon stick * 1 teaspoon dried Mexican oregano * 1/2 teaspoon dried thyme * 1 teaspoon fine sea salt Thickeners * 3 tablespoons canola oil * 1 3x2x1-inch bread slice from firm French roll * 3 5- to 6-inch-diameter corn tortillas, coarsely chopped * 6 ounces Mexican chocolate, chopped * 1/2 cup chopped piloncillo** or (packed) dark brown sugar * 2 cups (about) low-salt chicken broth (if necessary) *Mexican cinnamon sticks with a delicate, floral flavor. **Mexican raw sugar shaped into hard cones. Smaller chunks are sometimes labeled panocha. If neither is available, substitute an equal weight of packed dark brown sugar. Preparation For chiles: Heat 1/2 cup lard in large skillet over medium-high heat. Working in batches, fry all chiles until beginning to blister and change color, about 15 seconds per side (do not burn). Using tongs and shaking off excess lard, transfer chiles to another large pot. Add 4 cups reserved turkey broth; bring to boil. Reduce heat; simmer uncovered until chiles are very soft, about 35 minutes. Strain liquid into 4-cup measuring cup; add enough reserved turkey broth to measure 4 cups. Chop chiles. Working in batches, puree chiles and 4 cups chile broth in blender until smooth. Heat remaining 1/2 cup lard in same pot over medium heat until almost smoking. Press chile puree through large mesh strainer into pot (mixture will sputter and bubble vigorously). Stir until puree thickens enough to form path on bottom of pot when wooden spoon is drawn across, about 15 minutes. Remove chile puree from heat. For nuts and seeds: Heat 1 tablespoon oil in large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add almonds and stir until color deepens, about 1 minute. Add pecans and peanuts; stir 1 minute. Add pepitas; stir 30 seconds. Transfer to blender. Add sesame seeds to skillet; stir 1 minute. Transfer 2 tablespoons sesame seeds to small bowl and reserve for garnish. Place remaining 1 tablespoon sesame seeds in blender with nuts. Add 1/2 cup reserved turkey broth and blend until thick puree forms. Add nut-and-seed puree to pot with chile puree. Cook over very low heat, stirring often, while preparing fruits. For fruits: Heat 1/4 cup oil in same skillet over high heat. Add plantain and sauté until golden, about 3 minutes. Using slotted spoon, transfer to paper towels. Add tomatillos and tomatoes to skillet; sauté until slightly softened, mashing with fork. Reduce heat to medium-low; simmer until thickened, stirring often, about 25 minutes. Add raisins and plantain; simmer 10 minutes, stirring often. Cool slightly. Working in batches, puree tomatillo mixture in blender with 2 cups reserved turkey broth. Strain mixture through sieve into chile-nut puree, pressing on solids to extract as much mixture as possible; discard solids in sieve. Continue cooking puree over very low heat while preparing flavorings, stirring often. For flavorings: Cook onion and garlic cloves in dry heavy medium skillet over medium heat until beginning to brown and soften, turning often, about 15 minutes. Cool slightly. Coarsely chop onion; peel garlic. Place in blender. Stir cloves in same skillet over medium-high heat until fragrant, about 20 seconds. Transfer cloves to spice mill or coffee grinder; add peppercorns and next 7 ingredients. Grind finely. Add to blender. Add 1 cup reserved turkey broth; blend until smooth. Stir spice mixture into chile-nut puree. Simmer mole over very low heat 30 minutes to blend flavors while preparing thickeners, stirring often (mole will bubble thickly). For thickeners: Heat 1 1/2 tablespoons oil in medium skillet over medium-high heat. Add bread slice; fry until golden, about 1 1/2 minutes per side. Transfer to blender. Add 1 1/2 tablespoons oil and tortillas to skillet; sauté 2 minutes. Transfer to blender with bread. Add 2 cups reserved turkey broth; blend until smooth. Add to mole; simmer 10 minutes. Add chocolate and piloncillo to mole; simmer over low heat 20 minutes, stirring often, scraping bottom of pot and adding more turkey broth (or chicken broth if necessary) by 1/2 cupfuls if mole is too thick (up to 2 cups more broth may be needed). Season with salt. Continue simmering over low heat until streaks of oil form on mole surface, about 10 minutes longer. (Can be made 3 days ahead. Cool slightly. Chill uncovered until cold, then cover and keep refrigerated. Rewarm over low heat, stirring and adding more broth if desired, before continuing.) Edit: oops typo. Squashy Nipples fucked around with this message at 21:40 on Jan 25, 2013 |
# ? Jan 25, 2013 13:48 |
|
Squashy Nipples posted:*delicious* This look AMAZING. One question, though- could I just use raisins instead of raisin flavoring?
|
# ? Jan 25, 2013 19:15 |
|
That reminds me of a mole recipe I found online the other day:http://allrecipes.com/recipe/mexican-mole-sauce/ posted:2 teaspoons vegetable oil I can't decide if I find this more hilarious or sad.
|
# ? Jan 25, 2013 19:48 |
|
EVG posted:That reminds me of a mole recipe I found online the other day: I'm voting 'sad'.
|
# ? Jan 25, 2013 20:21 |
|
Shnooks posted:I made dumplings last night and they were all wrinkly when I steamed them is there a trick to prevent that? Did I over-steam them? You mean like chinese dumplings? Aren't they supposed to end up wrinkly? While on he subject, I actually picked up a bunch of stuff for dumplings on a whim while at the farmer's market, so does anybody have good tips for a beginner recipe? I've never made dumplings or anything like them before, but they seem fairly simple. My plan is to make a bunch and freeze them, then boil/steam them as necessary. For reference, I picked up: baby bok choy, ginger root, baby vidalia (which I plan to use as a green onion substitute, since it's local and should be similar enough), and a can of bamboo shoot tips. I have some leftover ground sirloin that I plan to use as the meat, even if it isn't pork like it probably should be (I try to avoid eating pork when I can resist it).
|
# ? Jan 25, 2013 21:17 |
|
bringmyfishback posted:This look AMAZING. One question, though- could I just use raisins instead of raisin flavoring? That was a typo, the two sections ran together. 2/3 cups raisins, and then a list of 'flavorings'. You can sub for some of the nuts/seeds, and the brown sugar, but most of t he ingredients are worth tracking down, especially the peppers.
|
# ? Jan 25, 2013 21:42 |
|
EVG posted:That reminds me of a mole recipe I found online the other day: You forgot the part where it says, "Mix together and pour over a microwaved Hungry-Man XXL dinner. Serve with a disposable spoon."
|
# ? Jan 25, 2013 22:09 |
|
Zenzirouj posted:You mean like chinese dumplings? Aren't they supposed to end up wrinkly? While on he subject, I actually picked up a bunch of stuff for dumplings on a whim while at the farmer's market, so does anybody have good tips for a beginner recipe? I've never made dumplings or anything like them before, but they seem fairly simple. My plan is to make a bunch and freeze them, then boil/steam them as necessary. Kind of. I made Korean mandu
|
# ? Jan 26, 2013 03:37 |
|
Squashy Nipples posted:That was a typo, the two sections ran together. 2/3 cups raisins, and then a list of 'flavorings'. Oh, cool. I actually did find something called "raisin flavoring." The peppers should be no problem, surprisingly. Thank you so much! EVG posted:That reminds me of a mole recipe I found online the other day: I think that would definitely taste like mole- the animal.
|
# ? Jan 26, 2013 05:36 |
|
Does anyone have a good system for collecting / storing recipes from various sources for viewing online. The total is to get all the various recipes I have readable on my nexus 7.
|
# ? Jan 26, 2013 16:03 |
|
vulturesrow posted:Does anyone have a good system for collecting / storing recipes from various sources for viewing online. The total is to get all the various recipes I have readable on my nexus 7. Evernote.
|
# ? Jan 26, 2013 16:32 |
|
Thinking of turning a brisket in my freezer into brisket chili. Advice on how to do so? I'm pretty sure the brisket is already cooked.
|
# ? Jan 26, 2013 17:01 |
|
dino. posted:Evernote. Yeah I love evernote and I was thinking that might be the way to go. I would like the recipes to be actual recipes though, not scans or photos of stuff from magazines and books. Is there some good way to get them in editable text format? I know Evernote premium can turn scan documents into PDFs but Im not sure.
|
# ? Jan 26, 2013 17:11 |
|
Has anyone used the oven baking trick with bananas to make them ripen faster for banana bread? I was hoping to make a loaf of banana bread tomorrow but I don't think the bananas I bought will be ripe tomorrow. Or even in the next three days, even with the apple in the bag with them. I heard you can pop them in the oven for an hour or so but I was wondering what that would do to the taste.
|
# ? Jan 26, 2013 19:34 |
|
I've been away from SA for many years, so although I attempted to read this entire thread for duplication before posting, I just couldn't make it I have a couple random food questions. 1.) when I have really good fresh bread and I want to do an Italian olive oil plus herbs dip, what would you recommend for the types and amounts of herbs? I can never seem to make something as good as Carabas. When I worked there fifteen years ago, they guarded their spice recipe with their lives and let us Lowly servers dish it out in tiny pinches under pain of death. Are there diamonds in there or what? 2.) are there some people who just need more salt than others? I seem to love what my friends call a ridiculous amount of salt on everything. I'm not eating or cooking things with no flavor either. I like spices and hot stuff. I grow my own peppers and make my own flakes of all different varieties. Yet I still add more salt to almost everything then anyone else at e table. 3.) I like my steaks seared. I use the 500 degree oven cast iron pan method, sear on stove and then finish in the oven. It's delicious! But I think my oven fan sucks because my stupid roommate gets pissed every time I do it because the house fills with "smoke" and he insists that I'm burning everything, when I am not. 4.) how do I make good fries or chips from potatoes? I wanted to make crunchy potato slices with bacon and cheese, but I can never get the potatoes to cook! Is it just moisture? 5.) I have small hands even for a girl and I always use the smallest, sharpest blade possible for any task. It's clearly the most accurate and easy to use. Why does everyone else use huge knives for small things? Ok I think that's all -edit- 6.) after 6-7 years of growing my own peppers, and being a hot sauce lover, I'm convinced that any hot sauce preparation involving fresh peppers is inherently inferior to any concoction involving dried peppers turned into flakes or powder. Is there some awesome recipe i havent tried? After many many tries, nothing I've ever made with fresh peppers has been delicious. I like a very vinegary hot sauce FYI. DoggPickle fucked around with this message at 23:23 on Jan 26, 2013 |
# ? Jan 26, 2013 23:13 |
|
DoggPickle posted:I've been away from SA for many years, so although I attempted to read this entire thread for duplication before posting, I just couldn't make it I have a couple random food questions. 1.) when I have really good fresh bread and I want to do an Italian olive oil plus herbs dip, what would you recommend for the types and amounts of herbs? I can never seem to make something as good as Carabas. When I worked there fifteen years ago, they guarded their spice recipe with their lives and let us Lowly servers dish it out in tiny pinches under pain of death. Are there diamonds in there or what? Never had it, but I always felt that herbs and other crap ruins a good olive oil like adding creamer to coffee. Get better olive oil. 2.) are there some people who just need more salt than others? I seem to love what my friends call a ridiculous amount of salt on everything. I'm not eating or cooking things with no flavor either. I like spices and hot stuff. I grow my own peppers and make my own flakes of all different varieties. Yet I still add more salt to almost everything then anyone else at e table. Some people are sensitive, some people just don't know how food should taste. 3.) I like my steaks seared. I use the 500 degree oven cast iron pan method, sear on stove and then finish in the oven. It's delicious! But I think my oven fan sucks because my stupid roommate gets pissed every time I do it because the house fills with "smoke" and he insists that I'm burning everything, when I am not. Where is the question here? 4.) how do I make good fries or chips from potatoes? I wanted to make crunchy potato slices with bacon and cheese, but I can never get the potatoes to cook! Is it just moisture? Moisture and starch. You need to rinse off the excess starch from the cut potatoes until the water is clear and then dry thoroughly. A lot of people use the freezer to help remove excess moisture. Look up "Cook like heston: potatoes" on the youtubez 5.) I have small hands even for a girl and I always use the smallest, sharpest blade possible for any task. It's clearly the most accurate and easy to use. Why does everyone else use huge knives for small things? There are a few answers to this depending on situation. For one, only needing one knife is awesome because then you can get a really fantastically awesome knife. With practice you can work a 270mm gyuto just as delicately and accurately as a 150 mm utility knife. I think that a paring (< 100 mm) is still a good thing to have, though. Huge knives also give you the benefit of more steel real estate. Smashing a garlic clove with a small knife is a good way to hurt yourself. Used to do it all the time with a small santoku I used to have. This one time, slipped off the clove fell out of my left hand, wedged itself in between my right ringfinger and pinky and I instinctively tried to catch it. Needed surgery to repair 2 tendons that were shaved right off the bone and I now have limited range of motion on that pinky. Would have been less likely to happen with a wider knife face, probably impossible to happen if I had used a board scraper or a chinese cleaver. Also usable edge. When you have a long knife, you can use a long and smooth slicing motion for whatever. This results in cleaner cuts, especially important for things like sashimi and sushi. You also get more of a "belly" to use when doing elliptical slicing/chopping motions. 6.) after 6-7 years of growing my own peppers, and being a hot sauce lover, I'm convinced that any hot sauce preparation involving fresh peppers is inherently inferior to any concoction involving dried peppers turned into flakes or powder. Is there some awesome recipe i havent tried? After many many tries, nothing I've ever made with fresh peppers has been delicious. I like a very vinegary hot sauce FYI. kind of apples and oranges, but if you're after a vinegar type sauce then fresh isn't the way to go. Personally, I am probably the opposite of you, I think most vinegar/driedpepper sauces are completely trampled by vinegar and I greatly prefer the flavor of fresh chiles in sauces. Vinegar sauces also tend to be very bitter, I don't know why this is, probably the surface area of the chile powders and the acidity of the vinegar extracting tannin like things, who knows, I just don't generally care for it. Generally hot sauces follow a formula though: Chiles, allium, sour, herbs, salt. In the dried pepper world, that would probably be something like: Cayenne/arbol/japones, garlic/onion, vinegar, maybe some oregano or thyme. A sauce I would make for, say, tacos would be: Serrano/habanero/jalapeno, garlic/onion/scallion, roasted tomatillo/lime, cilantro. Perhaps something more south american to go with skirt steak: Jalapeno, garlic, red wine vinegar, parsley/oregano. Because of the water level inherent in a fresh chile sauce, you have to be pretty aggressive with the salt, in general. GrAviTy84 fucked around with this message at 00:04 on Jan 27, 2013 |
# ? Jan 27, 2013 00:00 |
|
Still parsing all the good answers. I apologize for the steak question. I guess the implied request was "how do I do this with less smoke" or should I just get a new vent hood? Because really, my steaks are delicious.
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 00:11 |
|
Steaks are gonna smoke at that temp. You could get a better range hood or you could tell your roommate to deal with it.
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 00:14 |
|
MinionOfCthulhu posted:Has anyone used the oven baking trick with bananas to make them ripen faster for banana bread? I was hoping to make a loaf of banana bread tomorrow but I don't think the bananas I bought will be ripe tomorrow. Or even in the next three days, even with the apple in the bag with them. I heard you can pop them in the oven for an hour or so but I was wondering what that would do to the taste. I dunno about this oven thing, but for future reference the bananas are the fruit that makes others ripen faster. Bananas release the hormone that makes fruit ripe... ethylene or something? So having the apple in there is just going to make the apple ripen, the apple isn't doing anything to the bananas.
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 06:16 |
|
Ethylene speeds ripening, and it's not just bananas that give it off. Apples and other fruit do too. So sticking fruit next to each other in a bag will speed up the ripening.
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 06:38 |
|
TychoCelchuuu posted:Apples and other fruit do too. So sticking fruit next to each other in a bag will speed up the ripening. Really? I thought it was just bananas that give off lots of it and that's why you keep bananas separated from other fruit, unless you're trying to ripen something.
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 06:52 |
|
Keep fruits away from fruits if you don't want them to ripen. Or keep them in the open so the ethylene can disperse.
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 07:04 |
|
The oven thing works great. The peels get completely black and the banana is even mushier than a naturally overripe one - not a texture I'd want to eat on its own - but it's perfect for nice moist banana bread. I like to bake a couple into mush and then add another just-slightly-overripe one, so you get some chunks of banana in the bread.
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 08:34 |
|
DoggPickle posted:Still parsing all the good answers. I apologize for the steak question. I guess the implied request was "how do I do this with less smoke" or should I just get a new vent hood? Because really, my steaks are delicious. You could try the reverse sear (oven first on wire rack and then sear them on skillet at the end). Your pan will be at smoke-making temperature for a shorter time http://www.marksdailyapple.com/how-to-cook-the-perfect-steak/#axzz2JA0JI7rq http://amazingribs.com/recipes/beef/searing_steaks.html
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 09:13 |
|
Smoke happens sometimes, and no house ive ever lived/cooked in, including catering in multimillion dollar homes, has had enough suction to prevent smoke when searing multiple big steaks
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 11:20 |
|
Steve Yun posted:You could try the reverse sear (oven first on wire rack and then sear them on skillet at the end). Your pan will be at smoke-making temperature for a shorter time I'm gonna try the reverse sear tonight! The big downside seems to be the much longer cooking time, but I'm most worried about getting the time/temp correct since I cook myself pretty small steaks, usually 4-6 ounces. At least my roommate went to Atlantic City so I can experiment in peace. I'll post my results, if anyone wants to know. I have two dogs, so even mistakes aren't wasted!
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 14:59 |
|
I've been getting way into making cocktails lately, and I've found that some drinks require for swishing around a small amount of absinthe or whatever in a glass and tossing out the rest. Being the frugal guy that I am, I'd rather not waste those few precious drops of absinthe, so I was wondering if I could just use a spray bottle like something found here: http://www.specialtybottle.com/amberbostonroundglassbottlesmi.aspx. I've seen a couple of bars do this, but I imagine they go through the contents of their spray bottles on the order of weeks or months rather than years, so I wanted to know what the likelihood is that the plastic tube of the atomizer will impart an off flavor or leech BPA or something if I leave it in for years at a time. I was considering trying to get plain caps along with atomizers and use the former for long term storage.
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 15:29 |
|
DoggPickle posted:-edit- I'm jealous that you grow your own! There is something between fresh and dried, too... Have you tried fermented hot sauce? Sriacha and Tabasco are both fermented from fresh pepper mash. Also, why not both? In my mind, dry is hotter, but the heat kind of builds, whereas fresh peppers have more of an immediate heat. The GF and I have been experimenting with making a Sriacha knock off that is much hotter then the original, and we've been using a combination of fresh peppers, blanched and juiced, fresh roasted peppers and dry Indian chili powder. It's a very thorough heat.
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 15:42 |
|
Squashy Nipples posted:I'm jealous that you grow your own! Please tell me more about this! What kind of peppers do you use? I am planning on growing peppers this year to try and make my own hot sauce.
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 17:51 |
|
TychoCelchuuu posted:Keep fruits away from fruits if you don't want them to ripen. Or keep them in the open so the ethylene can disperse. I have single bananas scattered throughout my apartment to slow them down. It looks ridiculous, but I love bananas when they have green tips. I absolutely hate when they pass that stage because it tastes too strong and the texture is off putting. There is a 1 or 2 day window where they're great. Any way to slow them down even more?
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 18:22 |
|
Why does making soup (especially soup with meat or bones) form a bunch of scum on top? What is it?
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 19:31 |
|
Lipoproteins. Theyre harmless and you don't have to skim them off, but it looks nicer if you do
Steve Yun fucked around with this message at 20:02 on Jan 27, 2013 |
# ? Jan 27, 2013 19:42 |
|
Steve Yun posted:Lipoproteins. Theyre harmless and you don't have to skim them off, but it looks nicer if you do
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 20:21 |
|
|
# ? May 11, 2024 10:29 |
|
vulturesrow posted:Does anyone have a good system for collecting / storing recipes from various sources for viewing online. The total is to get all the various recipes I have readable on my nexus 7. I am logged into Chrome on all my devices, so bookmarks sync pretty much instantly. I bookmark a recipe on my desktop, unlock my 7 and walk to the kitchen and its right there.
|
# ? Jan 27, 2013 20:47 |