It appears you have not registered with our community. To register please click here ...
Please feel free to discuss and post anything that you would like to discuss. No matter how weird and bizarre it sounds.
0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.
Salisbury SteakIf you were German, you'd probably refer to this as "Hamburg Steak." It's sorta like that, but not completely. The dish was invented in the mid 1800's by a physician named Dr. James Salisbury. This recipe is my own particular version of it, picky eater that I am.Steaks:1.00 lb Ground turkey (or beef, veal, buffalo, pork...)1.00 ea Egg0.50 c Bread crumbs0.25 c Onion, minced1.00 ea Garlic clove, minced0.50 ts Kosher salt1.00 ts Dried Oregano0.50 ts Dried Parsley3.00 ea Shots of hot sauce (your favorite kind, I like love Cajun Power Spicy Garlic Pepper Sauce)-.-- -- Black pepper (fresh ground, of course, added to taste)3.00 tb Olive oil & butter for sauteingGravy:4.00 tb All-purpose flour3.00 c Beef or chicken brothPreheat your oven to 375ºFBegin by heating up a couple tablespoons of olive oil (use the regular stuff, not EVOO) in your largest saute or frying pan while you mince the onions and garlic. Sweat the onions in the oil over medium-low heat until they begin to turn translucent, then add the garlic and continue to cook until all the onions are cooked translucent. Remove the pan from the heat and remove the onions and garlic from the pan while leaving most of the oil behind, and set them aside to cool. While the aromatics are cooling, mix the egg and hot sauce into the ground meat. Then add the sauteed aromatics (and whatever oil is with them), breadcrumbs, salt, pepper, oregano, and parsley. Mix well until the bread crumbs absorb all the liquid and no more dry breadcrumbs can be seen in the work bowl. The mixture should be sticky enough to hold its shape when formed into a ball.Return your pan to medium heat and add more oil and butter until there's enough in the pan to completely cover the bottom. While that is heating, quickly grease the bottom of a 9x9 or 9x16 baking dish with some cold butter and set aside nearby. Divide the meat mixture in half, then each half into thirds (6 total patties here...), then form each piece into an oval patty about 1/2 inch thick. Brown each side of each patty in your pan, then transfer the browned patties to your greased baking dish. These aren't cooked all the way through yet, just browned because browned tastes good. =)Have a look at your pan. There should be lots of browned bits (mmm...fond...) on the bottom and a good bit of oil. If it looks like you have less than 4 tablespoons of oil in there, add some more to make up the difference. Add 4 tb of flour to the oil, and whisk to combine. Let that cook for a minute, then pour in your cold broth. Whisk constantly over medium-high heat, making sure to scrape the bottom of the pan (obviously you don't want to use a non-stick pan here) to get the fond dissolved, until the gravy comes to a boil. Once it starts boiling, turn off the heat and pour the gravy over your salisbury steak patties in the baking dish.Transfer the dish of patties and gravy to your preheated oven and bake for 45 minutes. Serve with lots of gravy over mashed potatoes or white rice, with some green beans or peas on the side.
Pad ThaiThe key to this dish is to assemble all of your ingredients before you put the heat to your wok. Once you get started cooking, you have about ten minutes before the dish is ready to be plated, and you'll be stirring the whole time. Please forgive my amounts on this dish, I rarely measure anything when making it so I can only suggest you use these as ballpark values and adjust for your own tastes.Ingredients:8.00 oz Thai style rice noodles (I like the 3mm ones, but get what you prefer)1.00 c Chicken breast, cubed (raw)1.00 c Shrimp, peeled and deveined (raw)2.00 ea Eggs4.00 ea Garlic cloves, minced2.00 ts Corn starch2.00 tb Soy sauce1.50 c Bean sprouts0.25 c Scallions, sliced0.50 c Chicken broth4.00 tb Oil, vegetable or peanut(Sauce)2.00 tb Tamarind pulp0.25 c Boiling water2.00 tb Fish sauce1.00 ts Sriracha garlic chile sauce (up to 3 tsp to taste)2.00 ts Brown sugar (up to 3 tsp to taste)(Condiments)0.33 c Peanuts, thoroughly crushed or chopped1.00 ea Lime, cut into 8 wedgesDirections:Start by cutting up the chicken, then mix the soy sauce and corn starch into a slurry. Pour this slurry over the chicken and let it marinate until you're ready to start cooking.Fill a large bowl with the hottest tap water your faucet will put out. Immerse the rice noodles in this water and allow to soak for about 20 minutes or until the noodles have changed from translucent to opaque white and are flexible but still very firm to the bite (not soft enough to eat, just soft enough to be pliable). Don't forget to drain the noodles when they're ready. While the noodles are soaking, bring a quarter cup of water to a boil, then pour it over the tamarind pulp and let stand for 10 minutes before pressing the softened pulp and water through a fine strainer. Discard seeds and fibers.Combine the freshly extracted tamarind liquid with the brown sugar, fish sauce, and chile sauce. This is the pad thai sauce, and even though it doesn't look like much, this is powerful mojo and will be enough for all of the noodles involved in this recipe. While you wait for the noodles to soften, use the time to gather the rest of the mis en place: crack the eggs into a bowl and beat lightly, make sure the shrimp are thawed and in their own bowl, mince the ginger, and just generally gather all of the ingredients together so that they're at-hand when you need them.Fire up the wok. Get it hot. Hotter. I'm talkin' NASA hot. Add a couple tablespoons of oil and heat until the oil starts to shimmer. Add the minced garlic and half of the scallions and stir-fry until you smell garlic (30 seconds, max), then add the chicken and all of its marinade. Stir-fry until the pan becomes dry, then start adding in the chicken broth a couple tablespoons at a time, stirring the whole time. When the wok starts to look dry, add more broth. Repeat until the 0.5 c of broth is used up, then stir-fry until the pan is dry again. Push everything up the sides of the wok, away from the middle, then add a couple more tablespoons of oil right to the middle. Heat until the oil starts to shimmer, then pour the eggs in. Heat without stirring for 1 minute, then break the eggs up like you're scrambling them. Stir-fry for one more minute, then add in the shrimp. Stir-fry until the shrimp turns pink, then add the soaked-and-drained noodles right on top. Pour the prepared pad thai sauce over the noodles, then use a couple wooden spoons to stir-fry the noodles and everything else for one minute - you just want to heat the noodles and get everything mixed together here, so don't overdo the stirring. Add the bean sprouts and stir-fry for one more minute.Kill heat. Plate. Garnish with crushed peanuts, scallions, and lime wedges.Pig out.
Pecan pieThis ain't your grandma's pecan pie, the ingredients speak for themselves! Oh, this recipe also assumes you know how to make a 9" pie crust.Filling Ingredients:3.00 ea Eggs0.75 c Maple syrup, grade B if you can get it1.00 c Dark brown sugar, packed1.00 ts Vanilla extract0.50 c Unsalted butter, browned2.00 c Pecan halvesDirections:Start with your 9" unbaked pie shell in the fridge and the oven preheating to 350ºF. While the oven is preheating, make some browned butter. You don't know what browned butter is? That's easy: just put a stick of butter in a small saucepan and cook over medium heat until it smells nutty and the butter solids turn a nice golden brown color. Be very careful not to burn it! Allow this browned butter to cool completely before preparing the rest of the filling.To prepare the filling, whisk together the eggs, maple syrup, brown sugar, and vanilla in a small bowl. Once those are thoroughly combined, whisk in the browned butter. Place the pecans evenly over the bottom of the pie shell, then pour the filling over the pecans. Bake in the center of the preheated oven for 50 minutes to an hour, or until the filling is set and the crust is browned. Cool completely before serving with fresh whipped cream.I like a little pecan pie with my whipped cream, but that might just be me.
If a scene calls for 60 ninjas, it takes 10 weeks to find them, even if they are in the same elevator as you.
Millie's Favorite Beef Stew a la Taylor-MadeAKDinty Moore got nuttin' on this sh**.Ingredients2.00 lb Beef - appropriate cut for stewing, cut into 1" cubes2.00 tb Oil (or bacon drippings...mmm...)1.00 tb Salt0.50 ts Black Pepper1.00 ts Thyme (dried)1.00 ts Tarragon (dried)0.50 ts Smoked Paprika (optional, but nice)1.00 ea Bay Leaf10.5 oz Condensed Beef Broth (cheating, I know)16.0 oz Beer (Taylor-Made, of course...but you can use whatever you have)4.00 ea Medium Carrots - sliced on the bias into 1" thick pieces4.00 ea Medium to large waxy (red or yellow) Potatoes - washed, unpeeled, and 1" cubed1.00 ea Medium Celeriac - peeled and 1" cubed (I like this instead of onions or celery, though either could sub here)0.25 c All-purpose Flour0.25 c Water** This is a slow-cooking meal, so using a flour+water slurry to thicken it is okay because the flour will have plenty of time to cook. If you're short on time or need to cut a half hour out somewhere, use oil or butter instead of water and make a roux - just make sure you allow the roux to cool before using it in the hot stew.DirectionsIn spite of the long ingredient list, this is a very simple dish to make. Start by heating the oil in a heavy pot (or dutch oven, if you have one) on medium heat and then browning the meat in it - making sure to let the meat have plenty of contact time with the bottom of the pan so that you get some nice brown crust forming on the meat. Once the meat is brown on all sides, add the beer, beef stock, salt, pepper, paprika, thyme, tarragon, and bay leaf. Stir well to distribute everything evenly, and allow to come to a simmer. Once you start to see bubbles breaking the surface, drop the heat to low, lid the pot, and walk away for an hour and a half. Use this time to prep the vegetables.After the meat has cooked for an hour and a half, whisk the quarter cup of flour with an equal amount of water until it forms a smooth slurry, then stir the slurry into the stew. Next, stir in the prepared potatoes, carrots, and celeriac. I know it doesn't look like there's enough liquid in there to cover everything, but as long things are mostly covered when you press everything down into an even layer you'll be fine - there's a lot of water inside those veggies, some of which they'll give up to the stew over the next half hour. Lid the pot up again and find something to do for 30 minutes or so. The stew is done when the vegetables are all tender.