-
Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.
All Activity
- Past hour
-
Ice cream and orgeat.
- Today
-
Perhaps that explains why my poaching chicken thighs disappeared ....
-
Wednesday afternoon we went over to the Lime Out floating taco bar for linner. It’s only reachable by boat. You could easily swim to it from shore, but they only serve people who arrive via boat because they have cocktails, and swimming plus cocktails is usually not a good idea. Years ago there was a boat like this at a different beach that only served drinks, no food, and you had to swim to it. They did have a few issues over there with over served people getting into trouble in the water. That boat was destroyed in the hurricanes and not rebuilt. Lime Out floating taco bar You sit on floating lily pads, and the servers come out in that floating platform to push your food and drinks to you. We went later in the afternoon so it was not busy. Earlier in the day it’s always jammed up here. A couple of the tacos we ordered. Korean tuna, and two rum pork rib Another Korean tuna, a grouper seveche, and a jerked tuna with pineapple radish salsa We ended the day with a swim at Maho beach. That guy with the cooler at the water line is collecting water samples for the National Park. They issue beach water quality reports regularly. Yesterday we headed out with no set plans around noon time. By some small miracle, there was a parking spot at Trunk Bay. We could not let the opportunity pass us by, so we ended up spending the day here. There were a lot of other people, but the end of the beach we like is never crowded. We called an audible and made a last minute reservation for dinner at Extra Virgin Bistro. It’s a three course prix fixe. I am still full today haha. Here’s the menu Drinks. I tried the coco loco mocktail (just ok). Sister had a limin’, husband had a martini, and nephew had a up in smoke First course. Sister and I had the ricotta Nephew was excited that he could have the calamari. I think the chef made him a double portion, because this was huge niece and husband chose the pork belly Second course. Nephew had the sausage gnocchi Niece had the spinach salad with goat cheese and popcorn snd the rest of us had the wild mushroom pappardelle i could have stopped here, but it was time for the third course. Three of us had the tuna niece chose the short rib and nephew had the filet and then niece and nephew wanted dessert! Niece had the apple crisp and nephew had the passionfruit bread puddong Today is our last full day, and I don’t know what we are doing for food, but probably not much after that huge meal!
-
It’s the Black Hole of Boiling. Nothing should be cooked there! 🙃
-
I think your cats are eating better than I am!! I've seen those on a buffet in Malaysia. All different sizes... They're even better when rehydrated and then fried!
-
And what is the missing 7-degrees between simmering and boiling called and what would you cook at those temps?
-
@blue_dolphin interesting article . thank you for sharing.
-
This article has a pretty good boil vs simmer discussion.
-
-
This is true, but bubbles start to develop at lower temperatures. "Simmer" covers a much wider range of temperatures than I'd thought back then, and the observed, for-practical-cooking-purposes boil happens at slightly less than 100C. In addition, the viscosity affects boiling point when it isn't pure water.
-
Exactly, once 100C is attained, any extra energy goes to the latent heat of vaporization.... So the more heat energy there is, the more violent the boil as there's more vaporization, but temp stays the same.
-
You could try Wondra flour, but on advice from an Asian cooking show, I've stopped using corn starch and use potato starch. It's very forgiving and I plan on trying it for other non-flour thickeners. Make a slurry in water and stir in.
-
But boiling water never exceeds 100℃ at sea level or whatever temperature appertains a different altitudes. In any one place, there is no difference in temperature between a boil and a hard boil.
-
@TdeV To answer your question about the shelf life of arrowroot, the simple answer, per the author of the linked srticle, is "I have found arrow root to have a limited shelf life." https://www.realbakingwithrose.com/blog/2014/04/05/the_secret_shelf_life_of_arrow
-
This is a pop tart ice cream sandwich. Available only at Walmart. Shown being admired by Rocco. Other devotee’s include my middle son. I don’t get the appeal.
-
Can the chicken be removed from the sauce? If so, I'd try whisking it to see if that improves the texture. If not, I think I'd go with the pastry topping...or else, serve the whole thing over cooked rice, so nobody can see the texture. 😉
-
Yes. The qualitative summation is here: Somewhere back then we had a discussion about what temperatures would correlate to that activity, but it depends on the liquid involved as well as altitude. (At the time, we were discussing the temperatures for simmering vs. boiling at something like 5,000' MSL.) If I find an authoritative source on the activation temperatures for the starches in question I'll post it here, unless someone else gets to it first.
-
Uhh, yeah. That’s the one. It helps to know that I do research in addition to clinical work. I have an ability to be fascinated with things other people find skull numbingly boring
-
I am often gun shy about buying produce at TJ's, but the "donut nectarines" are juicy and flavorful. The plastic clamshell holds each fruit (pkg of 4) to prevent bruising. Not a great value at $3.99 for the package of 4, but fun for a change of pace.
-
Yesterday DH and I made a yogurt lemon chicken dish that tastes fine but I think it looks a bit grainy. DH thinks the sauce is not broken. To @Shel_B's point, this sauce used arrowroot (could be a bit old) and the sauce is not very thick. Can I add something/cook something to make the sauce creamier, more homogeneous? And thicker? Or, could I put a piece of pastry on top so the guests won't notice the texture? 😅
-
This is what I found. Thanks. https://scholars.direct/Articles/industrial-biotechnology/jib-3-003.pdf
-
-
A very reasonable suggestion. I was posting from my phone and being lazy. Chu el al. ”An Investigation on the Effects of Varying Temperatures on Gelatin Denaturation in Response to Enzymatic Reactions from Fruit Extracts.” Journal of Industrial Biotechnology. Vol3, Issue 1, Pages 10-18.
-
What will you use it for?
-
Nor is papaya a form of terrible barbecue I made in my 20’s Hmm.
-
Who's Online 9 Members, 1 Anonymous, 956 Guests (See full list)
-
Popular Now
-
Recent Forum Images