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- Past hour
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Exactly. Even the cat won't eat the chicken after making stock.
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using a commercially cooked chicken is easy . not more complicated than that. sort of like a very beginners stock. after that , maybe the beginner will think it through , possibly , or not.
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Salmon burger with cabbage and radish slaw I spread the bun and dressed the slaw with the cilantro-based Green Sauce from Good Things by Samin Nosrat. I tried a brief baking soda brine that Nik Sharma touted to reduce albumin leakage and improve the texture of salmon cooked on high heat and it lived up to that. He uses 2T baking soda/quart of cold water for 15 min. I rinsed off the brine, patted the fish dry and seasoned it before starting skin-side down in a very hot pan. very little albumin leakage, most of those bright spots are highlights.
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@weinoo what do you mean by ' round bone and arm bone ? ' I might have to get back to TJ's racks of lamb. many years ago , before they started carrying fresh meat , they had superb frozen racks of lamb. and they were not that expensive , when purchased for a treat. they came from Canada , back then. I think Tj's has racks from NewZealand , and possibly from Canada [ ? pre-tarrif ? ] Fresh ones , one way or the other.
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Thanks @Shelby! That's my new plan for tonight's tails.
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And it’s not like you can reduce the salt by just removing the skin because they’re injected throughout with brine!
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Costco loses money on every one of those birds. There is nowhere near me where I can get even one whole chicken for five bucks, let alone two! I like your method though!
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I think the difference is that, in the US, a Costco rotisserie chicken is like half the price of a raw chicken... plus it contributes that roasted flavor making a brown chicken stock as opposed to a white stock. In the past, I've made duck stock from Peking duck carcass, but I'm not a huge fan. Nowadays, I'd much rather make stock from raw feet/backs/wings. Then, went I want broth, I'll take the stock and poach the meat in it so the meat is perfect. When I make stock, the leftover chicken is inedible as (like Chris says) everything has been donated to the stock.
- Today
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Thaw and then cut down the top of the shell and loosen the meat. Season--I did Lawry's salt and pepper. Couple pats of butter. Vac pac (I had to trim the sharp edges off because they kept puncturing the bag arrrgh). SV at 140F for 45 mins. Mine were on the smaller side so 45 was plenty. 🤣🤣 The doctor seems to have no problem with him having high cholesterol so that's an excellent plan 🤣
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Okay, I've watched the video and I've read all the comments and it still doesn't make sense to me. I can't see sacrificing all that good chicken just to make broth. I guess I want to have my cake and eat it too. When I make broth for chicken soup, I also want some meat to put in that soup. I don't know how it is up there, but here, I can buy two whole raw chickens for the price of a rotisserie chicken. And I can buy the cheapest cut of all, the hindquarter or Maryland cut and have five times the amount of meat and bones for half the price of a rotisserie chicken. And I control the salt. I put those five hindquarters, 2 quarts of water and two teaspoons of good chicken bouillon in the pressure cooker and cook them for 18 minutes. Then I remove the chicken, strip the meat from the bones and save it. Then I return all the bone and skin to the pressure cooker and cook them for 30 minutes longer. That's enough to extract the collagen and whatever from the skin and bones so that I get a nice gelled broth. Any longer and it starts to get cloudy. I've been making broth this way for 10 years and haven't had a complaint yet.
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I love lamb shoulder and shoulder chops (both round bone and arm bone). I'd really love them slammed on a super hot grill - as they often do in Italy for lamb scottadito (though in theory they use rib chops, but I've had it with shoulder chops on the plate). Last night, for dinner: Paella, halfway cooked.
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I didn't see that. I looked for comments and for some reason, even after two tries, I didn't see them. Thank you.
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I can't imagine making chicken stock with a Costco roast chicken. Why not just have a salt lick?
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Walk into any deli in NYC and ask for a chicken salad sandwich, and what you're getting is chicken (either diced, minced, shredded) mixed with mayo, minced onion, minced celery, maybe some parsley, maybe a little acid, on whatever you've asked for it on (e.g.: rye, Kaiser roll, white bread, wheat bread, etc.). Personally, I like to add mustard and either lemon juice or red or white wine vinegar to my chicken salad. Mise: Chicken salad sandwich: Chicken salad on salad: When you start talking about dubious add-ins, such as dried cranberries, raisins, grapes, etc., you've moved to California.
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@Shelby If you make the mashed potatoes the Robuchon way, it's like 50/50 butter/potato - less carbs that way! 🤣
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If you discarded the carcass, you discarded most of the gelatin. Read the first comment on the video:
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Your Daily Sweets: What Are You Making and Baking? (2017 – )
Pete Fred replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
So much for that plan. A cold, damp, miserable Sunday confined indoors inevitably led to... Version 2.0 had more cake, less blondie, cooked longer, and a splash of lemon for brightness. I preferred it to version 1.0 but the problem now is I'm curious what a re-jigged version 3.0 with a bit of ooze might be like. Which is daft because I already know. It'll be the same kinda-OK cake, just somewhere between the two. But the weather's set in for the week, so the chances of me cracking are high. 🙄 -
Classic Chicken Salad or Loaded with Mix-Ins? What’s Your Go-To?
Tropicalsenior replied to a topic in Cooking
Here you kind of get into a territorial battle over definitions. Where I grew up in the Midwest, any meat that was ground or diced and mixed with mayonnaise and various add-ins was called salad. It was used on sandwiches. Examples: chicken salad, tuna salad, ham salad. In some areas, if the meat was ground fine it was called sandwich spread. Examples: ground bologna, ground ham, or ground roast beef. Prime examples in Europe are Wurstsalat and Coronation Chicken. Their primary component is meat not greens. Although I have not seen Coronation Chicken described as salad, only that it can be used as salad. The OP did not specify whether whether she meant for the chicken salad to be used in a sandwich or with greens as a meal. It does make a difference. To me, the example that I posted is not chicken salad. It is a salad with chicken. -
@Shelbywhat's your method for your sv tails?
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Wereyou pleased with the result? How was the salt content?
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I used the entire carcass.
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I watched the video several times and saw no mention of him using the entire carcass. I saw no bones in the meat hesparated, but images went by quickly. He did mention wanting a meaty stock.
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Every definition I've ever seen of salad has this to say They may word it differently, but all use "mixture" and "dressing". One ingredient and a dressing does not meet thar definition. I certainly wouldn't call it a salad; it's "chicken in mayonnaise". How was the chicken cooked? How the was mayonnaise? made?
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@Norm Matthews and @Paul Bacinoyou both have me drooling over your shrimp! Beef short ribs over REAL mashed potatoes. Ronnie's doctor is going to kill me. Fried bass, cheesy cauliflower and collard greens Tuna melts--no bread, done in bell peppers (don't look @rotuts) Salad and fried livers and gizzards Valentine's dinner Oysters Cheesy mashed potatoes Roasted asparagus SV'd lobster tail Chocolate cake and ice cream for dessert
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