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Dinner! 2012


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#1201 Norm Matthews

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Posted 12 May 2012 - 01:37 PM

kayb, if you just need a small smoker, a Weber kettle will work as both a small smoker and regular grill. The one I have is the smallest one that company makes (Horizon smokers)

#1202 Paul Bacino

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Posted 12 May 2012 - 04:32 PM

You KNow I love a good RACK!!

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Its good to have Morels

#1203 SobaAddict70

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Posted 12 May 2012 - 05:46 PM

Recent dinners...

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Mesclun, heirloom tomatoes, wild turkey egg

The tomatoes were diced and tossed in a 1:1 mixture of olive oil, lemon juice, seasoned with sea salt, black pepper and chives.


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Penne with baby spinach, capers and heirloom tomatoes


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Artichokes, with garlic, parsley, mint and chiles


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Watercress and chickweed salad, with Greek yogurt and chive dressing

The dressing is 3 tablespoons Greek yogurt (Chobani is a good brand, or you can just strain plain, unflavored yogurt overnight in cheesecloth suspended over a bowl in the refrigerator), mixed with the juice of half a lemon, 1 tablespoon lemon zest, 1 tablespoon chopped chives, a pinch each of sea salt and freshly milled black pepper. This recipe will make more than enough dressing for the salad; use leftover dressing for sandwiches, or as a topping for steamed vegetables, or a baked potato.

Tonight will be leftover pasta. I was planning on savory corn pancakes but I think that will be tomorrow's breakfast instead (or maybe sweetened corn pancakes, no offense to percyn's "egg rule". :wink: )

Edited by SobaAddict70, 12 May 2012 - 05:48 PM.


#1204 Norm Matthews

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Posted 12 May 2012 - 06:25 PM

Dinner tonight was acorn squash baked with salt and pepper, maple syrup and butter. Cheeseburger had onion, mayo and a grilled deli bun. It is probably my imagination but since I moved to Kansas City, I think the hamburger tastes better. :)

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#1205 rarerollingobject

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Posted 13 May 2012 - 02:24 AM

Morcilla is not something I think I can source locally but that sure does look delicious. What do you think might make a good substitution?


I think you could use sausage meat, or maybe even just ground meat with something to bind..though the cooked morcilla was pretty crumbly anyway. The recipe I followed is here.

Still on a Spanishy kick, I made this recipe; scallops, broiled with chorizo and topped with crispy panko, lemon zest and parsley. And a little salad on top of mache dressed with sherry vinegar and mandarin olive oil.


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#1206 Paul Bacino

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Posted 13 May 2012 - 04:44 AM

So to complete the Dish
Double Lamb Chop on a bed of Keller Veal Stock Mushrooms topped with Serrano Mint Jelly!!

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Its good to have Morels

#1207 avaserfi

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Posted 13 May 2012 - 09:08 AM

Avarserfi, I'm intrigued by the broccoli custard. It looks lovely. Did it taste as good as it looks?


The base is essentially broccoli and cream with a few spices to round out the flavors, so it almost tastes like an extremely rich cream of broccoli soup.
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#1208 mm84321

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Posted 13 May 2012 - 01:13 PM

mm, please enlighten me on the maquereaux au vin blanc. I'm not certain what I'm looking at (but it's lovely!)


OK. So, you take a mackerel and cook it by pouring hot white wine (Muscadet, in this case) over, and leaving to simmer for a little bit. Then you keep it in the fridge overnight. The next day, you crumble the flesh, mix with cooked potatoes, rice vinegar and cream to make little fritters, which are coated in sake kasu and deep fried. You use some of the cooking wine to make an aspic, which goes on the bottom of each plate. The rest of the cooking wine is used to cook the carrots, which are then wrapped in seaweed. The other mackerel is cured in salt for 10 minutes, then submerged in rice vinegar and sake. This you slice thinly over each carrot.

It is a very good dish. You just have to like mackerel.

#1209 mm84321

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Posted 13 May 2012 - 05:37 PM

Turbot roasted in lobster butter

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#1210 C. sapidus

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Posted 13 May 2012 - 06:39 PM

PastaMeshugana – Thank you kindly, good sir

For Mother’s Day, Mrs. C requested seared tuna, so Vietnamese seemed appropriate.

Pan-seared tuna steaks – briefly marinated with lime juice, sugar, fish sauce, and oil before searing on a cast-iron pan. Served with coconut rice

Ginger-line dipping sauce – grated ginger, lime juice, sugar, and fish sauce

Vegetable garnish plate – Red-leaf lettuce, cucumbers, tomatoes, mint, and cilantro

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#1211 heidih

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Posted 13 May 2012 - 07:39 PM

Bruce - I just pulled some tuna steaks out of the freezer and was headed in the direction of curry, but your post has shifted my thinking and I will be doing something more simple and clean as you did above. I have 3 kinds of mint in the garden as well as other greens that would be good raw plus some lovely Kirby cukes and scallions in the fridge. I even have two very ripe limes off the tree from last season. Along with Rancho Gordo's evaporated cane sugar there will be a well rounded fish sauce based dip. Thank you for the inspiration :)
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#1212 rarerollingobject

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Posted 14 May 2012 - 01:56 AM

We all seem to be on fish..here, I cooked perch smeared in Dijon mustard and topped with panko and parsley, and samphire sauteed in butter and lemon. And a lightly-dressed green salad.

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#1213 Kim Shook

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Posted 14 May 2012 - 10:12 AM

Norm – your ribs are beautiful. They are one of the things that Mr. Kim hasn’t yet tried to smoke. I think that I’ll show him your picture!

Kay – I love the bacon wrapped chicken – what a great idea!

Stash – gorgeous meals! What does chickweed taste like?

A couple of recent dinners - salad:
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Scampi-style Surimi, turnip greens and creamed Swiss chard:
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Saturday night – a tiny little (2.5 lb.) prime rib roast:
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With roast potatoes, creamed Swiss chard and sautéed mushrooms:
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Mother’s Day I hosted what we called a brunch, but ended up serving it later than lunch would have been. So I’ll post it here – before meal nibbles:
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Nuts, cheese biscuits and kale chips. The kale chips were weird, but good:
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Egg, ham, cheese and hash brown casserole:
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Sweet Piggies (just pigs in a blanket with a sweet, buttery baked on sauce):
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Old time eG’ers will remember our dear Racheld who used to post here. Her son made these when we visited them a couple of years ago. They are positively addictive. My eency-weency little niece said with some surprise, “I ate SEVEN!”

Carolina Grits Souffle:
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Green salad and mixed berries w/ mint:
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Served with a dressing choice of a Dijon vinaigrette or a sweeter one made with pineapple and apple juices.

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Jacque Pepin’s Gougères:
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I did these with Cheddar and chives. Every time I make gougères, I wonder why I don’t do them more often. They are so easy and astonishingly delicious!

Dessert was roasted strawberry coconut milk ice cream and Dream cookies (a shortbread-type cooky that is our official family cooky):
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#1214 Norm Matthews

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Posted 14 May 2012 - 03:56 PM

I used my new smoker again today. Last night I took a small piece of pork shoulder and seasoned it with a rub, rolled and tied it and let it sit in the refrigerator overnight. Today I smoked it for 6 hours. This is half of it. I gave the other half to my back yard neighbors.

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#1215 pastameshugana

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Posted 14 May 2012 - 04:36 PM

Kim - I think every family should have an 'official' family cookie! Sounds wonderful! Great looking meal btw.
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#1216 kayb

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Posted 15 May 2012 - 01:53 PM


mm, please enlighten me on the maquereaux au vin blanc. I'm not certain what I'm looking at (but it's lovely!)


OK. So, you take a mackerel and cook it by pouring hot white wine (Muscadet, in this case) over, and leaving to simmer for a little bit. Then you keep it in the fridge overnight. The next day, you crumble the flesh, mix with cooked potatoes, rice vinegar and cream to make little fritters, which are coated in sake kasu and deep fried. You use some of the cooking wine to make an aspic, which goes on the bottom of each plate. The rest of the cooking wine is used to cook the carrots, which are then wrapped in seaweed. The other mackerel is cured in salt for 10 minutes, then submerged in rice vinegar and sake. This you slice thinly over each carrot.

It is a very good dish. You just have to like mackerel.


Fascinating! I may have to try this. I don't know that I've ever HAD fresh mackerel. Can you do it with other fish?
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#1217 ScottyBoy

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Posted 15 May 2012 - 02:52 PM

My poor roommate is sick so the poor thing gets some chicken soup...

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#1218 Hassouni

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Posted 15 May 2012 - 02:57 PM

Wow, that's a hell of a clear stock!

#1219 ScottyBoy

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Posted 15 May 2012 - 03:30 PM

Good old quick egg white raft.
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#1220 Shelby

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Posted 15 May 2012 - 04:15 PM

My poor roommate is sick so the poor thing gets some chicken soup...

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I need to get some of that shape pasta. I forget about it and it's great in soup. *cough cough* I might be coming down with something, too......*hint hint*

#1221 ScottyBoy

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Posted 15 May 2012 - 04:20 PM

Since he's whining like a little kid he gets little kiddie pasta :cool:
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#1222 avaserfi

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Posted 15 May 2012 - 09:41 PM

Geoduck risotto

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#1223 Honkman

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Posted 16 May 2012 - 10:18 AM

avaserfi - great looking dish as always but I am curious about the plate you were using for the dish. Do you have a photo of the plate and where did you buy it ? It might look like one I am trying to find for some time

#1224 FrogPrincesse

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Posted 16 May 2012 - 12:50 PM

I saw this beautiful roasted chicken with caramelized shallots on Kerry and Anna's excellent foodblog yesterday (here), and felt compelled to try it right away.

It was delicious and required very little prep (excluding the fact that I started with a whole chicken and that my butchering skills are still approximative... but I am working on it).

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Recipe by David Lebovitz.

#1225 mm84321

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Posted 16 May 2012 - 12:58 PM



mm, please enlighten me on the maquereaux au vin blanc. I'm not certain what I'm looking at (but it's lovely!)


OK. So, you take a mackerel and cook it by pouring hot white wine (Muscadet, in this case) over, and leaving to simmer for a little bit. Then you keep it in the fridge overnight. The next day, you crumble the flesh, mix with cooked potatoes, rice vinegar and cream to make little fritters, which are coated in sake kasu and deep fried. You use some of the cooking wine to make an aspic, which goes on the bottom of each plate. The rest of the cooking wine is used to cook the carrots, which are then wrapped in seaweed. The other mackerel is cured in salt for 10 minutes, then submerged in rice vinegar and sake. This you slice thinly over each carrot.

It is a very good dish. You just have to like mackerel.


Fascinating! I may have to try this. I don't know that I've ever HAD fresh mackerel. Can you do it with other fish?


I'm not certain that other fish would work quite as well as mackerel in this particular recipe. It's a pretty unique taste. That's not to say you can't substitute another oily fish. Herring might work. Someone on here may be able to give a better recommendation.

#1226 merstar

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Posted 16 May 2012 - 07:29 PM

Tonight was pan-seared rainbow trout with a garlic/butter/white wine/lemon/chervil/thyme/chive sauce. Brown rice and roasted broccoli and cauliflower on the side.
Dessert will be later - Homemade 2-layer butter cake with raspberry mousse inside and coated with a dark chocolate ganache.
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#1227 Franci

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Posted 16 May 2012 - 10:48 PM

My poor roommate is sick so the poor thing gets some chicken soup...

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Scottyboy, this picture is beautiful!

This is exactly my son kind of meal. Also the "stelline" pasta are his favourite.

#1228 ScottyBoy

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Posted 17 May 2012 - 12:19 AM

Thanks!
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#1229 Marie-Ora

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Posted 17 May 2012 - 03:40 AM

I have to say, that chicken soup is a triumph - the meat looks so moist and tender! Kudos ScottyBoy. When it comes to mealtimes, I follow my great uncle Carmelo who was famous (at least in our family) for checking in with his stomach every day and asking it 'Stomach! What you wanna eat??'. (You have to read it with an Italian accent or it doesn't sound right). Last night I asked the same question, and it came back 'Lindt 70% and glacé ginger'. So that was dinner. The day before it was Bobotie, which is a traditional Cape Malay dish (Cape Malay food mixes sweet, sour and curry flavors) with chutney, and the day before that I defrosted some ragù which I make large quantities of in a marathon chopping and cooking session, to the precise instructions of ancestors who may be watching, and would certainly have a conniption if I did it wrong, and then freeze (this may provoke said ancestors a little). Had it with pasta, along with a glass of decent chianti.

#1230 Keith_W

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Posted 17 May 2012 - 03:50 AM

When it comes to mealtimes, I follow my great uncle Carmelo who was famous (at least in our family) for checking in with his stomach every day and asking it 'Stomach! What you wanna eat??'. (You have to read it with an Italian accent or it doesn't sound right).


"Stomaco! Cosa vuoi da mangiare?"

Hmm, i'm not getting it :)
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