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culinary bear

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Posts posted by culinary bear

  1. If you go to Number 1 in late January sadly you may miss meeting the delightful Sam, the sommelier at #1, who I believe will be heading to Perth on a Margaret River wine junket.

    Howard, did you ever met David Harvey? He was the sommelier when I worked there, and he would bring the heeltaps of unfinished bottles into the kitchen for me to try. Delightful man. Last I heard he was working in Cliveden.

  2. For all we know you might have teeny tiny baby hands and that might be a jam jar.

    ...and I have, in fact, made confit budgies.

    Seriously though, I've got quite small hands for someone that's 6'4".

    For the pedantic otters amongst you, the jar is 24cm tall and has a circumference of 45cm. It weighs 4.1kg, according to the lovely digital scales I got for christmas (thanks, mum!) :)

  3. activa is the coolest thing in the world...........i can't believe how good it works.....

    our first attempt was glueing beef tenderloin scraps from the chain together and you couldn't tell the difference between it and a centercut filet mignon (well, if you look hard enough you can but I fooled alot of people)

    you didn't sell it, did you?

  4. I can relate by personal experience.  I have a large scar where my left thigh meets my hip where I was shot while deer hunting when I was 16.  We were on private land, and there should have been no other hunters around.  Fortunately the shot came from a great distance as it was a 30:30 slug and didn't do any serious damage.  Actually the doctor who removed it did more damage than the shot itself.  Another fortunate thing was that it was near zero (Wisconsin) and I didn't bleed much initially. 

    I was wearing bright orange!!!

    Personally, I believe owning a firearm should be dependent on passing a weapons handling and proficiency test, as well as psychometric evalutation... I mean, when was the last time you saw a bright orange deer walking around on its hind legs?

    Back to duck; I made a batch of ten legs and potted them up in a 3kg jar the other day... I'll stick a photo up in a minute or two.

    edited to add photo...

    gallery_17466_504_1105307226.jpg

    There really are ten legs in this pot... the hand is there as a guide to size.

  5. If someone named "Pusser" opened just about anything?

    There's a "pusser's rum" here in the UK. "Pusser" is a corruption of "purser", and the word is still widely used in the Navy. Anything referred to as "pusser's" is genuine naval issue; "pusser's crabs" are boots; "pusser's crabfat" is battleship-grey paint.

  6. That sounds absolutely brilliant, CB.  And so....fucking....simple.

    Sobbing into my second bourbon and coke,

    Marsha

    P.S.:  by the way, THANK YOU! 

    Next time.  Next time.

    And this, ladies and gentlemen, is a perfect example of why eGullet rocks.

    hee hee... glad to help.

  7. If I want a shingle to get to 1/4" high, for example, this is what I do :

    1) butter-and-flour the baking sheet

    2) apply docked shingles

    3) butter and flour the underside of an identical sheet

    4) place 1/4" spacers at the four corners of the sheet with the shingles on it

    5) place upper sheet on top of spacers

    6) bake as normal, giving an extra few minutes baking time to compensate for the insulating qualities of the top sheet.

    I'm sure there are other methods, but this one is fairly uncomplicated and works well for me - this way it rises to your pre-set limit and bakes completely flat.

  8. So, if you really want to get to the root of the problem, if you have any of the duck fat left over, and any of the potatoes, cook a potato naked, heat up some of that duck fat, and taste each independently.

    Freezing is interesting.  If you are using a deep freeze (dedicated freezer), it is one thing.  If you are using the freezer that is part of a fridge, there is often "air interchange" which I think leads me to think that if you had something stinky or off in the fridge while the duck fat was freezeing and the duck fat wasn't as sealed as you thought, there could be some "smell" contamination.

    That might be a decent explanation. Off-flavours in fats are usually caused by oxidation, giving a rancid flavour. This shouldn't really happen in a freezer unless it's being opened all the time and the fat isn't wrapped at all well. It might well be down to cross-contamination.

  9. Depends on the cheese:

    Grocery store cheddar, faux-parmesan, that sort of thing... you'll get away with it, as long as you're not going to try and keep it around forever.

    Artisanal cheeses, made with love and passion? I'll kill you myself if you even try. :)

  10. I've heard so many raves about potatoes roasted in duck fat, that I was anxious to try them. 

    I bought a tub of fat at a reputable meat market with a high turnover, divided it up in chunks & froze it.  That was about 2-3 months ago, & when I used it on N.Y. Eve, the potatoes had a peculiar,  off putting flavour.  I wanted to like them..... :sad:

    Did I store the fat too long, & what's the length of time it can be frozen?

    I wouldn't have thought the freezing process would have harmed the fat at all - even refrigerated it shouldn't go off in that length of time.

    Did you use some of the fat before you froze the rest? if so, how did it taste?

  11. Culinary bear, are you saying that Chester is in the Liverpool 'area'??? I ain't a scouser! Yes I know they are quite close but so is Liverpool to manchester and I wouldn't dare say they're in the same area

    No, but Liverpool is the largest nearby city to Chester and I was highlighting the fact that should you wanted a starred meal in Liverpool then Chester would be one of your natural options.

    eh la? :)

  12. I read VPL's Arkle review with interest.

    Does the man have a clue? Seriously, he writes decently in Private Eye, but he writes about the Arkle as if a particularly toothsome female pastry chef offered to wank him off between courses.

    I mean, I know that the Liverpool area (the highest-rosetted restaurant within a 20 mile radius of liverpool, including the city itself, has one rosette... one...) is as devoid of good places to eat as the moon, and has as much atmosphere, culinarily, at least (nods in the direction of Boris). One must go further afield.

    "Breathtakingly imaginative and innovative cuisine?"... no.

    Basics done well with a bit of a polish? yes.

    no more.

  13. Culinary Bear -- when sunchokes are on the menu, how well do they sell?

    Reasonably well. We're attached to a hotel, so the clientele varies from discerning diner to barely housetrained chimp.

    The veloute sold well, though some of the less, erm, erudite diners had questions about artichokes. Since the front of house staff have the collective IQ of a small snail, this was most easily solved by providing a display artichoke, which the waters could carry out and show people. Honestly, I swear if they were any less intelligent they'd have to be watered on a daily basis.

    Customer : I say, this artichoke thing, what is it exactly?

    Waiter : Me no know, but me find out.

    *waiter trundles off to annoy chefs; is threatened with stabbing if he wanders behind the pass; picks up artichoke after first picking up ginger by mistake; trundles back to table*

    Waiter : This artichoke, it grow in ground, give plenty gas, yes.

    I exaggerate, of course. Sometimes the waiters actually achieve adequacy in their work, although I've learned more abusive phrases in french than I ever thought possible.

    Anyway, I digress; the only dish we have on the main menu that uses them is one of pan-fried sea bream with sauteed artichokes, morels and ceps - it seems to shift fairly decently.

  14. Dave:  You'd love the Compass Box Eleuthera then.  I believe the blend is 60% 12 yr old Caol Ila and 40% Clynelish (forget the age).  Great, great blend.  Attractive packaging too.

    I hate vatted malts with a passion; although other people are perfectly free to enjoy them, I'd much rather have a single malt.

    You might like to try the Signatory's unchillfiltered Caol Ila. It's pale, very pale, but tastes like vanilla ice-cream and smoked haddock, mixed with cigar ash. Really good.

    Clynelish is an interesting malt too; if you can get a hold of it, try and track down a Rare Malts bottling of its sister distillery, Brora. I think it's bottled as a 23 year old. Fabolously complex, and you'd swear it was an Islay malt, not highland. Unfortunately it's getting rarer, and consequently more expensive; I believe it retails for nearly GBP100 these days.

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