Jump to content

Smithy

host
  • Posts

    13,371
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Profile Information

  • Location
    Northern Minnesota yah sure, you betcha

Recent Profile Visitors

88,189 profile views
  1. Smithy

    Giblets

    *mega-bump* I have 2 pints of chicken giblets, collected by a friend who saves them but whose wife won't touch them. I've finally gotten round to thawing one of the containers, and now I'm wondering what to do with them. I love fried chicken hearts...but am not likely to fry anything, any time soon. Up here @ChefCrash mentions chopping the gizzards finely, sauteeing with oil and butter, then braising in their own liquid until they're tender. That has some promise. Another idea is to stir-fry some or all of the giblets, along with some red bell pepper, onion and broccoli. But with what sort of sauce? What should I do with this stuff, now that I've committed to cooking it? I'm reasonably sure that a sheet pan roast in the oven is the wrong way to go. I'm also reasonably sure that I won't go to the trouble right now of wrapping the firmer giblets (hearts and gizzards) in bacon and then grilling them. Maybe next time around, with the second pint. Ideas, please.
  2. Smithy

    Dinner 2025

    Cabbage rolls are a real labor of love, even more so than meatballs. I applaud you, @Ann_T!
  3. My neighbor, who runs a small backyard farm and sells at the local farmers' market, went camping for the weekend. Her raspberries are coming ripe, and she graciously invited me and another neighbor to come pick the ripe ones rather than letting them fall to the ground. The other neighbor was busy, so I picked 2 buckets' worth -- one for me and one for her. They aren't as sweet or tart as I'd expected. Is my sense of taste going off? Maybe, since I've been battling a cold and a general loss of appetite. But...today, I tested my own backyard's wild rasberries. There's no comparison. I'm torn between selfish relief that it isn't me, and sorrow that my neighbor's farmed berries just aren't good this year. I don't plan to tell her.
  4. I'm no longer a big sweets person, but this looks really good to me. I should look around for recipes along these lines. I don't suppose you have one handy? (I also don't have access to maltitol syrup, with or without the formal chemical name you so hilariously provide) but I have a lot of honey and maple syrup.)
  5. Smithy

    Bread in China

    That's one of the funnier labels I've read in a while! 😀 Too bad it's only "not bad". It looks great in the photos.
  6. I'm with @Shelby so far: happy to live vicariously for the moment. Still, this is looking mighty good. Please keep the info coming.
  7. Smithy

    Bread in China

    Well, they look convincing in the photo!
  8. I had a bamboo cutting board and thought it was fine, although I didn't like it as well as my other boards and gave it away. (I think it was the dimensions that I didn't like.) What do you see as its shortcomings? And what's the rosewood like?
  9. I'd never heard of rubberwood until this post of yours, so I can't say anything from experience. Based on my quick reading, it looks as though you'll need to be diligent with the maintenance in order to prevent it from warping. For what it's worth, I find that to be true even with my maple Boos Board...and, I confess, I always put a protective cutting board atop my Boos Board to protect its surface! 😁
  10. There are some amazing colors in the photos above, @liuzhou. I'm used to seeing reds, oranges and yellows on mushrooms, but I don't recall ever seeing the blues and greens -- at least, not without some putrefaction. I especially like the teal tones in the first photo of the post above.
  11. Smithy

    Dinner 2025

    Gazpacho is another idea for those overripe tomatoes. Refreshing, filling, cool / cold.
  12. I postulate that that's the range of "low boil" as opposed to "full boil" or "rolling boil". I admit that so far I haven't found anything to support that terminology. However, Shirley Corriher in Cookwise notes that grain starches thicken at "just below the boiling point of water; can be held at this temperature without damage" (p. 275, First Edition, 1997) whereas root starches thicken at lower temperatures. The exact temperature depends on the exact starch, of course. My point here is that "just below the boiling point" may be that ill-defined 7-degree range.
  13. 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.
  14. 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. 😉
  15. 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.
×
×
  • Create New...