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Smithy

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Everything posted by Smithy

  1. Smithy

    Solar cooking

    That kickstarter campaign is over and done, but I see it's commercially available now: SolSource Parabolic Solar Cooker
  2. Please do go on, bobag87. This is very interesting, and as close as I'm likely to get to making tamales. ;-)
  3. Smithy

    Persimmons

    I don't remember the pudding one way or the other, but I found this card in Mom's recipe box while I was looking for the persimmon cookie recipe. (I haven't given up looking for that recipe. I *know* I had it last winter.) This recipe is as written on the card. Although I don't recall it, I do swear by Patti's cooking. Persimmon Pudding, from my cousin Patti Smith (makes 8 - 12 servings) * Enough pulp from halved rip persimmons to make 2 cups (about 5 persimmons) * 2 c. sugar * 2 eggs, beaten * 1-1/2 c. buttermilk * 1 tsp. baking soda * 1-1/2 c. flour * 1 tsp. baking powder * 1 tsp. cinnamon * pinch salt * 1/2 c. heavy cream * 4 Tbsp. butter, melted Set oven to 350F. Mix pulp and sugar in large mixing bowl. Beat in the eggs. Stir buttermilk and soda together, then add to the pulp mixture and mix well. Sift flour, baking powder, cinnamon, and salt together. Gradually add to the pulp, and stir until combined. Add heavy cream. Mix. Grease a 9x13" pan with some of the butter, then stir the remaining butter into the batter. Bake until dark brown, and a toothpick comes out clean when inserted, about 1 hour. Cool. *********** I may have to try making this later this winter, when I can lay my hands on persimmons.
  4. Smithy

    Unfashionable Dinner

    The mock apple pie with Ritz crackers was surprisingly good. We never could figure out why the recipe worked, but it fooled a lot of people. I think my father and I could tell the difference, but Mom (who made wonderful apple pies) claimed she couldn't. Or maybe I have it the other way around. I may try it again someday, for kicks. I think I may be more discriminating now than I was back then. I've never heard of City Chicken. What was it?
  5. Brilliant. Absolutely sheer genius...and the photos in that post make me want to go buy a pizza NOW just for the pleasure of making pizza waffle pockets. Or whatever they decide to call it.
  6. I wish I'd seen either or both of your latest posts before yesterday's dinner party, David. They look luscious. Yesterday we had friends over to celebrate Oktoberfest, with a series of Oktoberfest beers, Gewurtztraminer and a Mosel wine, and more-or-less German-themed food. The theme broke down at dessert, however; my dreams of an apple strudel went out the window with my time management. Apple pie it was, using my standby crust and recipe, inherited from my mother. I've found yet another 'wild' apple tree with miniature apples: no more than half the size of a Red Delicious, roughly the same shape, and probably the firm delicious piquancy that the original was supposed to have. These were begging to be put into a pie. I still have a store of applets. I also supplemented the lot with a couple of store-bought full-sized apples whose variety I've forgotten, unfortunately. It was good that I bought them, because I wouldn't have had time to go get more of the wild apples. The store-bought apples (not Galas, Pippins, Fujis, Honeycrisp, Delicious, Macintosh, Granny Smiths...what was that variety?) were good filler although too sweet and soft to be ideal pie apples. Here's the blend I used: The large size of conventional apples pays off in the preparation. I use the slicer on a box grater to process apples for pie after I've peeled them. It's quicker than slicing apples and finer than using the hand-crank corer/slicer thing I have. The applets required great care to prevent losing a fingertip or fingernail to the slicer, because their diameter was 1" at most. The pie was ready go quickly: there's something to be said for tried-and-true recipes. Streusel topping makes it especially easy. The pie came out after our guests had arrived, so I didn't get a picture of the entire finished product. There wasn't much left over. I figure that means they liked it.
  7. Smithy

    Unfashionable Dinner

    I ran across the recipe for Mock Apple Pie using, of all things, Ritz crackers. My mother fooled a lot of people with that novelty. Now it's hard to imagine not having ready access to apples year-round. How times have changed in the USA. If that retro recipe sounds interesting, I'll post it.
  8. Smithy

    Persimmons

    I can't find it! I'll check with the rest of the family. I hope it isn't lost forever. While I was looking, I found my cousin's persimmon pudding recipe. Would that be of interest? No ice cream maker needed to make semifreddo. You could try that route.
  9. Smithy

    Unfashionable Dinner

    Heh. Jaymes, we have the evidence of your memory here! I too remember tamale pie, with revulsion. Our family never 'did' Mexican food when I was growing up; only my father liked it. Our school cafeteria often served tamale pie as one of the hot meal rotations, and on those days I was delighted that Mom had packed a lunch for me. Sometime in high school I began to enjoy Mexican food, and now I enjoy it in all its immense variety. But NOT tamale pie.
  10. Those are fun photos, dcarch. I have to take your word for it that those tomatoes are caramelized, however; I don't see any change in color. Is that a trick of the photo, or does dehydration change the browning reactions without affecting flavor appreciably?I just toss tomatoes in oil and roast them until they collapse and start to turn brown, and the puddle of escaped juice has dried somewhat. The skins don't bother me. I usually do this with whole cherry tomatoes. (Thinking back on it, I recall that the results weren't as good with large tomatoes even when I'd sliced them in half...getting them to NOT be watery took a long, long time.) This is one of my favorite condiments for pasta and for meat mixtures to go into stuffed roasted vegetables.
  11. Kerry, the blackcurrant puree has a beautiful color. I can imagine that in some lovely confections, and look forward to seeing what you do with it. I'm very curious to see what you have to say about the sous vide prime rib and the ozmasome. Do you have specific plans and tests for those yet? Try to reconstitute them as they are, or use the broken bits for flavor in something else? Will this mean less volume packed in the car for the next trip to Manitoulin Island, or just make room for more stuff to be thrown in? :-D
  12. Welcome to eGullet, loosethreads. Kerry's really started something good here, hasn't she? It's nice to see other freeze-drying advocates joining in. We look forward to your contributions.
  13. Woohoo! Breathing new life into the NYTimes Cookbook, perhaps? Too bad the app isn't for Android. Still, the web page shows some wonderful archives. Thanks for the links.
  14. This link is nice as far as it goes, but it would be more effective as a web page in html. When I see that 'pdf' extension, I know I'm going to have to go through an extra download step before I can open and read the thing. That may not apply to every web browser, but it applies to mine.
  15. Smithy

    Persimmons

    Thank you for that link, Maedl. I didn't know anything about wild persimmons, and now I know a little. My mother used to make persimmon cookies around Christmas time, using the cultivated persimmons from our area. I wonder how those cookies would turn out with wild persimmons?
  16. Smithy

    Persimmons

    Persimmon ice cream with some nut additive sounds good. Earlier this year I spent time messing around with making persimmon puddings from fuyu and hachiya persimmons. What are wild persimmons like? Photos and descriptions would be welcome. :-)
  17. Thank you for persevering until you got it right - and keeping us informed about the project! I think there are going to be a lot of "Bacon Burgers a la Tatoosh" being made, thanks to you. I'm looking forward to trying it. :-)
  18. Welcome, Jason. You have an impressive set of interests and skills. We're glad to have you here, and we look forward to your participation!
  19. After the last messy episode, I went in search of an implement that worked better than my standard knives, and came home with this: It's a definite improvement over a straight knife. The handle fit my hand and the slight curve to the blade reduced the number of cuts I had to make. It all made short work of the next 2 dozen ears, but I still did them outside. :-)
  20. Smithy

    Unfashionable Dinner

    Yes. According to Jane and Michael Stern, in their book American Gourmet, you brush Dijon mustard on the steaks, saute in clarified butter, add shallots and parsley, then add warmed Cognac and flame it. I suppose I'm unfashionable, but I still get a hoot out of flaming things...and I very much like the sauce this produces. There are some great blast-from-the-past ideas in this topic!
  21. They're gorgeous. Congratulations! Have you set up a safe for them, or can you trust your staff to keep their mitts off those knives?
  22. Regarding the hot sauce: I wonder whether some things need to be reconstituted with vinegar or another liquid that isn't water? (I had to stop myself from writing 'rehydrating with vinegar' :-D)
  23. Welcome, Mark.
  24. Smithy

    Dinner 2014 (Part 5)

    That sounds like more or less what I do. I love the versatility of that skillet dish: saute the vegetables (asparagus is one of our favorites), sweat the onions if I'm using them, cook the meat to the appropriate level if it's going in, then start building the alfredo sauce around it. I've taken to using pasta water to help stretch the sauce without adding quite so many calories, but this is one of our luxury meals so I don't worry too much about it. I've never added egg yolk. A favorite version involves asparagus and smoked salmon; the salmon gets folded in as the last step. Edit: shrimp is another favorite protein, and chicken works pretty well also.
  25. Do you have an idea of where you'd draw the line between "enhancer" and principal ingredient? I'm thinking of things like fish baked with lemon slices.
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