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shelora

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Posts posted by shelora

  1. I would like to find preserved lemons either in Victoria or Nanaimo. Any suggestions?

    Hi Brenda,

    Welcome back.

    The Persian/ Mediterranean food stores in Victoria carry preserved/dried limes and sometimes call them lemons.

    I'm confused about what they are really. The ones I've seen at Seven Valleys and Blair Mart, are small and dry and brown. I've used them in Persian dishes, damn good.

    I've had other versions though, in restaurants, where they are still lemon yellow after being preserved in salt. After rinsing numerous times, only the peel - removed of the pith - finely chopped was used.

    Sometimes McLean's in Nanaimo will surprise with unusual ingredients. If he doesn't have them, he may know somebody who does.

    Best of luck

    S

  2. They are made by http://www.ashbournebiscuits.co.uk/wheatwafers.html

    I'm sure people who import UK food to Canada have them, if you do a search, or contact the makers. Very tasty, and fairly common.

    Thankyou Jackal10. I have sleuthed and turned up no one bringing in this product in Canada - so far. Alas, the Ashbourne biscuit site does not have email only a phone number.

    Oh, Episure :wub: What a beautiful photo.

    QUOTE(shelora @ Jul 25 2005, 01:32 PM)

    And yes Pan, I do think that blackened fish qualifies. I never thought about its provenance until now, but it is an old dish right, not something that was created in the 1980's?

    It's a dish created by Paul Prudhomme in the late 70s or early 80s. The technique was unknown to the Cajun tradition.

    Thanks for clarifying.

  3. I'm lucky to be invited to an open-bar reception, where I can drink as much as I want of any of the tequillas on this list: http://www.rosamexicano.com/menus/dc.beverage.html. The problem with these receptions is that after a handful of shots of straight spirits it becomes difficult to taste the differences. And no, it doesn't not seem like good form to use spitoons.

    So the question is, which three to four should I absolutely try?

    I'm gob-smacked at the list. Its amazing that a restaurant would be so generous to say drink as much as you want.

    I think a few rules need to be applied for you to glean some sort of knowledge from the experience.

    Keep in mind that good tequila deserves to be enjoyed, sipped, enjoy the aroma - DO NOT SHOOT IT BACK. Don't ask for a full shot. I might go from silvers to resposados to anejos or settle with one style, silvers for example. If the restaurant has any concern for liquor costs, they won't be serving full shots in the first place. This sort of offer -open bar - could turn ugly real fast. I'd go early and leave early.

    I also don't think that the most expensive tequilas are necessarily the best.

  4. Calling all you Mexican food historians out there.

    Okay, leche quemada. Its one of the most popular ice cream flavours in Mexico right? Does anyone have any information on how this very unusual flavour sensation came about. Has it existed for a long time or is it a fairly recent thing?

    s

  5. creme brulee

    Guiness, or any beer made with black malt

    Charcoal biscuits (e.g. Millers Damsel)

    high roast coffee

    Onions on Tarka Dhal and other indian dishes

    Many thanks, jackal10. I'm very intrigued with the Millers Damsel charcoal biscuits and am trying to track them down. Anyone know of a source in North America - preferably Canada - that sells them?

    And yes Pan, I do think that blackened fish qualifies. I never thought about its provenance until now, but it is an old dish right, not something that was created in the 1980's?

  6. My interest is in, not anythng new and trendy, but classic dishes created either out of a mistake or necessity.

    For example, the most popular ice cream in Mexico is leche quemada - burnt milk ice cream.

    Another example, is a Oaxacan mole, chichilo negro, a very earthy beef stew made from numerous ingredients burnt to black - including tortillas and chile seeds.

    This afternoon I found out about a regional Puglia dish made from burnt wheat. The flour is literally black. The wheat fields are burned after harvest and the kernels collected.

    Does anyone out there know of other world cuisines that use burnt ingredients to create amazing dishes.

    And toast doesn't cut it.

    S

  7. Thanks Esperanza, I couldn't connect with the url you sent - I'm curious about the photo - but the information on how much is grown in Mexico is excellent. The potatoes do taste different than the Kennebecs we get up here in Canada. Not that I am addicted to fries here - maybe five times a year - but I'm curious to find out the potato variety - maybe I can even smuggle some back next time I'm in Mexico.

    Now: I am dying of curiosity about what wood-fired crocodile tastes like. Please don't tell me chicken.

    You know I hate to disappoint so I'll say it tasted like rattle snake!

  8. I won't be back in Oaxaca until December. I've seen stunning metates for sale in Teotitlan and at the abastos in Oaxaca. I'm certain I can find out the source. I hope you can wait until then, if not, do let me know, I may be able to obtain info from a more immediate source. Or at least put you in touch with someone there who can help.

    Shelora

  9. My experience with potatoes is so limited in Mexico, but your findings are fascinating to me. Is there any way of finding out where the potatoes are coming from? U.S.? Chile? Peru? Canada? Mexico?

    Everytime I'm in Mexico, I insanely crave papas fritas. I simply must have them. I find they taste so different, so much better than what I get up here, which are normally Kennebec potatoes.

    I find Papas fritas in Mexico the best ever - meaty never mealy and always cooked perfectly.

    Perhaps the frying potato used there is different from what you are buying? Or for me, it could be a case of absence makes the heart or the palate grow fonder?

    Case in point - On a jungle trip in Ecuador, it was all I could think about were fried potatoes, something I couldn't possibly obtain. I had to suffice on canned sardines for a week and smoked- on-the-nightly-fire crocodile.

    s

  10. For those of you interested, I'm in relentless pursuit of fish taco greatness tomorrow in The Globe 7 section.

    Your obedient servant,

    Jamie

    I have a table available in August. Fish tacos, baja-style. Corn tortillas with three different salsas, fresh crema, shredded cabbage and radishes.

    s

  11. At home, I roast eggplants either whole or halved, right on the oven rack - its kinda lazy I know.

    Potatoes, the same thing. If I were to slice them, I would use a well-oiled baking sheet. Using a rack on top of the baking sheet makes total sense, much like grilling them.

    I'll try it next time.

    I always roast duck - in a roasting pan - on a rack, to save the skin from sticking to the bottom of the pan. That crispy skin is too precious to waste.

  12. I worked in a restaurant where we froze any ricotta we couldn't use. It didn't seem to make a difference in the recipes we made. Personally I'm not a big proponent of freezing food, but it could offer you a way out of cooking the ricotta right away.

  13. .. the anchos and pasilla are dried chiles, right? Do you reconstitute them in water for a while, rip out all their hot innards? or how?

    Right on all counts.

    After you reconstitute them in hot water, - or a warm bath of tequila and orange juice - until pliable, not mushy, carefully slit them on the side and remove the seeds and inner veins. Some people do this the other way around - removing the seeds and inner veins before soaking. I think it depends how dry the chiles are. If they are brittle dry, soaking first is best. With those chile pasilla de Oaxaca, they can be blisteringly hot. If this is the case - your hands will be burning, clue#1 - I was taught to rinse the chilies a few times in cold water.

    Pat dry the chilie before stuffing.

    they have this one that is a stuffed chipotle -- dried, but softened, filled with crab meat. It's really sweet, and nice, not at all hot. Sounds a little like what you're talking about with the dried chiles.

    I had a similar experience in D.F. last December. I was treated to an appetizer of chilitos. Three stuffed reconstituted chile chipotles, stuffed with chicken and walnuts with ahint of piloncillo. They were served with a sweetened crema - thin in consistency. The chilies had also been thinly batter fried adding to the dish's richness. It was excellent and rich, but not greasy. I'd never had anything like it before - I love that about Mexico. It reminded me about the dish chiles en nogada. Kind of like a forerunner to the big daddy.

    As to your walnut question, I have been told that walnuts are indigenous to Mexico. I'm sure other posters here will have something to add to that enquiry.

  14. My favourite chile rellenos are those made from the smoke chile pasilla of Oaxaca.

    Filled with cheese, like montery jack or muenster, battered and fried.

    Anchos work well too, teamed up with a cinnamon scented tomato caldo.

    With no batter, I prefer the fresh poblano, roasted, peeled and then stuffed with a cooked spinach mixture of sauteed onions, raisins and pinenuts. Put a dollop of goat cheese in the middle, more stuffing around that. Then heat in the oven. This is a contemporary recipe taught to me by chef Roberto Santibanez. And those vegetarians love it.

    Should I bring something to drink?

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