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chefdg

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Posts posted by chefdg

  1. Come on...there are so many more...

    "...I like my sugar with coffee and cream"

    &

    "If you try to knock me you'll get rocked, I'll stir fry you in my WOK"

    Peace,

    Ore

    I was actually singing those two in my head when I scroled down and read them. Let's not forget that time honored lyric "we got the bottle, you got the cup, come on everybody lets get FFFFF". Even though they are talking more about drink than food.

  2. It sounds strange but one of my favorite summer salads is watermelon and red onion with watercress and pinenuts. Soak the thin-sliced red onion in ice water for a least 1/2 hr. before using in the salad to take some of the bite away. A simple red wine vinaigrette is all you need if all the ingredients are impecably fresh.

  3. Mop if you are cooking over a low flame, or on a rack well above an open flame. The best mopped food I have eaten is marinated boneless/skinnless chicken thighs, tightly packed on skewers and cooked for 1 hr. over a medium flame (charcoal or wood). Mop the chick with a nice mango barbecue sauce.

  4. I'm surprised there are not more responses to this thread.

    Grilled pizza is the best, try spreading the dough with pesto (after it has been lightly grilled on each side) and top it with fresh slices of tomato, cheese (sharp) grilled peppers (roasted on the grill, peeled and seeded, sliced) and grilled onions (what ever is in season) and topped with more cheese (rich). The credit for this excellent creation goes to a chef I worked for in Cruso N.C. :cool:

  5. I worked for a Chef once who cooked almost everything sous vide. You can cook the brisket medium yet tender this way, keep the water at about 130 degrees. It will take about 7 hours but is a glimpse into the sous vide world.

  6. then again i use it like a condiment too, not an ingredient.

    Use ghee as a condiment? Like a spread? Dip?

    To me, ghee has one purpose that follows its form; to be able to handle the high temperatures that are necessary in the cooking of Indian food. Ghee is highly clarified butter (unsalted) with a very high smoke point.

    If its nutty its wrong, nutty is beurre noir or black butter, French not Indian.

  7. I have always used briquets for both smoking with a water smoker and for grilling, but am interested in understanding the why and how of using chunk charcoal and wood chunks for grilling and smoking. Why would you choose one over the other for each cooking process?

    I think that chunk charcoal and wood chunks are great for grilling, probably would lean more toward wood, just make sure it is a hard wood. You want high, constant heat with low smoke.

    Smoking is a completely different animal, I'm sure there is some thread about it. Hickory chips are probably the most popular choice. I like to use dried herb branches; rosemary, basil, fennel ect.

  8. Pretty sure salt = salt = sodium chloride = NaCl

    Focusing on the wrong detail.

    Different salt will have a varying volume when measured. The point is that salt needs to be measured by its weight.

  9. My first thought is that the amount of whites did not allow for the electric mixer you were using to do the job right. I picture the machine spinning fast in a bowl and the whites desperately trying to hold on to the attachments. If this wasn't the case (or in addition to), maybe you didn't have prestine, clean tools (not to imply that you are not clean :smile: ). Any fat at all will hender the whites from stiffining. Try it again with a wire wisk, just keep a steady stroke as if you are milking a cow. Stiff peeks hold firm when you pull the wisk up but be careful not to over-whip.

  10. Nice mental image on the "dribble it in for a lay-up" remark. After giving your disregard for the gum-ball of a chickchicken that you ate at one of your hero's restaurants serious consideration. I have concluded that what you don't like is the wings, thighs, and drummies :smile: . All dark meat :blink: . You see, busboy, the white meat (breasts) is what needs the added moisture---the seasoning is a bonus --- its a whole osmosis/presure/penatrateability (is that a word) thing.

    ---Don't blame brines they have been around as long as food.

  11. always brine your shrimp.  not for long, but let 'em sit in a bath of salt water.

    Shrimp live in a bath of water and salt. No need to brine them, just don't over-cook them, you know what Emirel say's? "They got those built in thermometers". :laugh:

  12. But let me add that going out for tapas is more than a way of eating, it is a way of socialize, yes, you eat small portions or small plates, but something that is probably lost outside Spain is to go from one bar to another having their different specialities, ie having tortilla at this one and bravas at the other... Every region has it's own specialities and every city has it's own rute of tapas.

    Bravo!

    Tapas means "to top" or "on top of". It was/is small plates with food on them to put on top of your wine glass to keep the bugs out. All the while, as you sit back with a friend, loved one, book, animal, cigarette, magazine; anything that makes for a nice time to talk or relax. Something that we could all learn from the Spanish.

    The food is what ever the H#$# you want it to be. Roll a piece of american cheese up in some bologne and its a tapa.

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