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Shalmanese

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Posts posted by Shalmanese

  1. Nope. Salting the water you boil potatoes in makes very little difference to taste.

    huh? Whenever I boil potatos, I salt the water until it tastes like the sea and my potatos come out perfectly seasoned with no need for salt afterwards.

  2. I generally prefer steaming potatos to boiling them because they're easier to cook, more tolerant to overcooking, don't become waterlogged and dont require a colander. However, I can't salt steamed potatos as they are cooking but I can with boiled ones.

    I just had a random thought that I could brine them overnight the day before and that way, I would have perfectly salted steamed potatos. Has anyone tried this? For every day, it might be a bit involved but I was thinking for, say a dinner party, that extra step might just make my life a bit easier.

  3. Thanks Shalmanese

    I have been drinking a lot of Riesling of late, particularly from 2005 Eden and to a lesser extent Clare valley. Looks like being a bumper vintage.

    I love young Riesling and especially the 'battery-acid' dry styles. Perfect with spicy food particularly at the height of summer.

    Riesling has always been my go-to cooking wine but I've been drinking a lot of it lately as well. I've been going through some Cookathama Riesling atm. Not fabulous but great for the price. It was really battery acid dry and I was really struggling to pair it with foods until I discovered that it works fabulously with spicy asian foods.

    Apart from that, I'm having a mini-love affair with NZ Sav Blancs. They just seem to have a much crisper, more defined flavour that I love. I've been trying to track down a bottle of "Omaka Springs" (2004 Sav Blanc) in Australia but I've had no luck, you wouldn't be able to help me would you?

  4. Desperate Meals?

    Once upon a midnight dreary, working till my eyes were bleary,

    I stumbled through the kitchen door.

    While I rustled, stomach rumbling, muttering, cursing, swearing grumbling,

    the goal, to sate my inner carnivore.

    Here is something, something in my freezer door,

    only this and nothing more.

    Ah discovered meat of porcine, ground to a convenient portion,

    a scant half block upon my door.

    Eagerly I searched the tomes of wisdom, sages from the cooking canon,

    but from my books was only sorrow, sorrow that I must endure.

    For perfect partner to my porcine,

    was not in my pantry anymore.

    The tomes all said "pork with mango", the taste will make you want to tango,

    alas no mango hanging from my pantry door.

    I spied my eyes on fruit of kiwi, the goal is pork that's sweet and chewy,

    surely this works even more.

    The dinner shall be Pork and Kiwi,

    twill be this and nothing more.

    Presently my soul grew stronger, hesitating then no longer,

    in the bowl the both were poured.

    Middle stem was tough fibrous, pick it out and in the rubbish,

    and do make sure the meat is thawed.

    Unappetizing in appearance,

    it looked like that and nothing more.

    Deep into the darkness peering, I feared the meal as unappealing,

    while looking at refrigerator door.

    Sauce of chilli, salt and pepper,

    add you this and nothing more.

    "But more?", This I whispered and an echo murmured back the word,

    "No more!" Merely this and nothing more.

    Back into the bowl a mixing, now I have all of my fixings,

    "please taste good" I did implore.

    Mould it so you have a patty, heat the pan with something fatty,

    it makes sure sticking is no more.

    Let my heart be still a moment,

    this food indeed I must explore.

    Once the pan is hot and smoking, the windows open or you'll be choking,

    add the patty, do nothing more.

    60 seconds wait no touching, the surface of the meat is crusting,

    wait this long and not a second more.

    Flip the meat and season carefully,

    flipped and seasoned, nothing more.

    Once the middle pink not showing, on the plate, it will be going,

    a side of salad, nothing more.

    Peering with some trepidation, a prayer of mindless recitation,

    "please god let this dish taste better than those before!"

    The memories of past abominations,

    all chanting to me "Make no more!"

    The meal quickly I did devour, I watched my tastebuds begin to flower,

    the taste I simply did adore.

    The sweet and meaty flavours contrasted, to make a meal I wish had lasted,

    all the night and forevermore.

    For Pork and Kiwi is divine in flavour,

    here and now and forever more.

    Fortune smiled upon my combo, as unlikely as it was to conjure,

    something my fevered imagination drifted ashore.

    The contrast made the dish compelling, each flavour note was telling,

    both fruit and meat yet not as before.

    The fortune of an unlikely combo,

    twas good fate and nothing more.

    So now my eyelids are all bleary, writing poems doth make me weary,

    as I fumble, stumble to the door.

    Silently, I curse my project, so hard to make it perfect,

    there's only so many words that end in "oor".

    I bid adieu to all you readers,

    read this far and nothing more.

    --Shalmanese

  5. 12lb is very easy to cook as long as you add them in batches. Fill the pot 3/4 full first and let it cook for 20 minutes and it should have shrunk to only 1/4 of the pot, then continue adding until it's all in there. In the end, it should only be 1/4 of the original volume.

  6. I feel that I am at a conundrum at this point. Instead of thinking only in the hear and now, I started thinking about the future. I know what I “want” to do...as far as the business is concerned...now the feasibility of what I want to do sets in.

    Burgers...no problem...They will be of great quality, fresh and never frozen. That is something I can do now and sustain in the future.

    Condiments: total quality, now and in the future.

    Buns....well I would like to make my own buns. I like the way they taste, I like the appearance, the weight...the whole nine...(no pun intended) . But...and there is always a but. I would have to train someone to make these buns, They have to be made every day because there aren’t any preservatives, there is also a space and equipment limitation at this point.

    I figured that this is something that can be added later on in the game. I feel that it is best to improve on a great product than to take something away.

    Milkshakes...The sky is the limit. Hand dipped, Quality ingredients,  Something that can be done great at the outset and can be improved upon.

    Onion rings. Big thick onion rings, Fresh...no frozen...nuff said. 

    Now for the fries....This is where my the dream clashed with reality. My stand will be roughly 14x9. Even though I will have a fryer...unless I can figure something out there is no possible way that I will be able to

    1.store potatoes

    2. wash potatoes

    3.soak potatoes  (leave soaking in fridge will require a bigger refrigerator...maybe)

    4 fry the fries letting them drain

    5 then frying them again when ordered.

    Right now, it is not looking good for fresh cut fries....but I am still fighting to figure out the fry dilemma.  Not giving up....so don’t freak.

    My only issue is how is this sustainable “if” I get bigger

    Compared to the fries...everything else is a walk in the park.

    I think that you should focus on first doing one thing really really well and the rest just okay to start off with. The key is to have a hook so people can go "Hey, have you checked out the No 9? They have awesome X". Having GREAT burgers and ok fries will get you say, 100 customers a day, having great burgers AND great fries might get you 140 customers and having great burgers AND great fries AND great milkshakes might get you 160 customers. From what I understand, the competition there is rather sparse and amatuer so as long as it's not offensively bad, nobodys going to avoid your place merely because you have merely adequate fries.

    The other thing is that you should be afraid of overextending yourself to start off with. If your forced to cut back on the quality of your food, due to time or labour constraints, then it's worse than if you just started off worse. I know I would get pretty pissed off if I went around for a week telling people how awesome the fries are at No 9 and then go the next time with friends and find out they replaced them with Sysco chips or to find out theyre now twice as expensive since you underestimated the labour costs. OTOH, going for a great burger and then suddenly finding phenomenal fries for the same price as the previously okay fries would be something that would make my day.

    It sounds like your on a good thing with your burger. My vote is to start off with the burgers, and then gradually build up everything else from there.

  7. What health risks? Unless you happen to be wiping the stove while it's on and your wearing a metal bracelet, I haven't heard any credible evidence that these things are dangerous.

    But if these things are absolutely even heating, then you need to ask why do you even need or want to use copper pans on them? You don't need the superior heat conducting properties of copper.

    Anyway, what I would like to see is a 5 burner stove, 4 of which are seriously grunty gas burners an one induction hob in the middle. Seems to me that would be my dream stove.

  8. Hello everyone, my first post here but I have been busy reading up on many of the forums on this board while awaiting my registration. I dare say i will be a regular.

    I am the principal at WineStar and was buoyed by some of the nice comments people have made about our company in this thread. Thank you.

    In regards to the initial query, WineStar and other reputable online wine retailers will have a heat policy. Our policy stipulates that we reserve the right to hold wine in the event of extreme heat at either origin, destination or at any point during the journey. The customer (always being right and all  :raz:  ) always has the ability to overrule the policy and request immediate dispatch but by and large the policy is appreciated and adhered to by all.

    Happy Wining!

    Welcome to the boards Star! hope you enjoy your stay. I remember reading the profile of your company in the SMH and was very impressed by your dedication. What are you drinking at the moment?

  9. One italian restaurant I go to has a nice practise where the specials are written on 3 or 4 blackboards at the start of the night. When your seated, they prop the specials board right next to your table and then take it away again once you've ordered. It's a nice touch.

  10. This is a direct challenge/dare for Shalmanese... don't know why I"m picking on him, but I am... :biggrin:

    Dude, can you whiz thru a sydney dining guide and pick out what you think are 'good' chinese restaurants???

    Ugh, sorry PCL, I don't own a copy of the dining guide (or any dining guide for that matter). I only eat out maybe 1/2 a dozen times a year. I generally find when I go out that I either end up extremely disappointed with my meal or extremely poor, often both :(.

  11. For me, milkshakes just taste better in styrofoam. Of course, they taste best in a thick glass cup but the scratching of the straw on the styrofoam surface and the chewing off the lip of the cup after your done. I just can't imagine a milkshake in plastic, it seems wrong.

  12. I'm actually more of a fast person. Theres something fun about the controlled chaos where you know everything is just teetering on the edge of of getting out of control and you have to take care of 5 things at once. But every move you make is controlled and perfect and you manage to bang something out that tastes incredible. It's a huge adrenaline rush.

    Then again, theres also something soothing about making a huge batch of chicken stock and taking the time to slow down and get everything right.

  13. I was thinking specifically of sambuca, and more specifically sambuca with coffee beans. Igniting it does change the flavor, and it seems to me it changed the alcohol content as well. I don't feel quite the kick I used to or the more lasting effects, which is fine by me.

    Sambuca is different because it's such a high proof liquor that your actually cold flambeing it. This means your burning off liquid ethanol which would obviously reduce the alcohol content compared to the unflamed sambucca. Additionally, you would also slightly heat up the drink and possibly also introduce new flavour combos (plus it looks cool to throw a flaming shot into your mouth).

    However, with lower proof alcohols, it is impossible to flambe them cold. You need to heat them and vaporise the alcohol before it will flame. In this case, since it is already vapour, it's essentially out of the dish anyway and flambe does nothing to remove further alcohol from the dish.

  14. There are a number of recipes for "cocktail" sorbets out there.  I've found several on www.epicurious.com, for instance.  You just have to make sure that your ice cream maker bowl is really, really cold and then finish it in the freezer, with occasional stirring.

    I make a margarita sorbet that freezes perfectly...

    I tried looking on the internet until I found this. Then I just curled up in the corner wishing for the bad, bad man to go away.

  15. Inspired by the Jello Shots thread, it seems to me that many classic cocktails would work well in sorbet form. A Mojito as a lime-mint-rum sorbet, a pina colada, a margarita etc. However, sorbets are finicky things when sugar and alcohol come together so I was hoping that people had recipes that had the right consistancy.

    Is it possible? Is it tasty?

  16. I don't actually get how this works. If the alcohol is on fire, then it's above the pan which means it's already out of the dish. Unless the flambe is heating the top layer of the pan to a microscopic degree or a significant amount of ethanol ends up recondensing into the dish, then flambeing should have no effect on the level of alcohol.

    My guess is that it's done for:

    a) Cheap Theatrical Effect

    b) In order to form a whole host of new flavour chemicals via maillard on the surface due to the high heat.

  17. It works.

    I carefully measured 1 quart (4 cups) of water into a heavy sauce pan. I added 1 tablespoon of kosher salt. (My scale isn't accurate enough to get a weight.) The saltiness was about what my last batch of gumbo was, a level that I could remember the taste. . . almost too salty to eat comfortably. (It was made with smoked turkey carcasses that had been liberally seasoned so I had little control. It was ok over unsalted white rice if you like salty food, which I do.)

    I measured 1/2 cup of regular long grain white rice into cheese cloth and tied it up, leaving plenty of room for the rice to expand.

    I simmered for 1 hour with the lid on.

    I removed the rice "bag" with tongs and allowed it to drain thoroughly. The rice was put in a colander to deal with later.

    Pouring the water from the sauce pan back into the measuring cup, I had to add 2 cups of water to bring the liquid back to where it started. That is half the liquid that the rice absorbed and carried away with maybe some little bit lost to steam. The final result was that the restored 1 quart of liquid has a salt level that is now pleasant and about what I aim for in soups and such.

    Boy, do I wish I had a hydrometer. But, the starch from the rice might have messed up the readings.

    The rice is a bit mushy and a little salty but will make some fine "fritters" . . . or something like that.

    Yes, the rice will absorb the salt, thats established. What isn't established is will it not absorb all the other flavours of the soup? If it does, then it's no better than just diluting the soup.

  18. A really old-fashioned way to "cure" a too salty soup or stock, before adding water to dilute it, is to suspend a muslin bag filled with raw rice in the liquid.

    The rice will take up quite a bit of the liquid but leave most of the flavor behind and then water can be added to reduce the concentration of salt. 

    The ratio of rice to total liquid is 1/2 cup of rice for each quart of liquid. 

    I have used this method successfully several times - I do use the rice - I generally freeze it and use it in vegetable and meat/poultry recipes that require cooked rice but am careful not to use any seasoning until the end of the cooking process.

    I was so intrigued by this I had to test it. So I brought 1L (1.05 quarts) of water up to a boil:

    water1.jpg

    Added 20gm of iodized table salt which made it a 2% salt solution. This was just barely offensively oversalted to my tastes:

    water2.jpg

    I got 1/2 a cup of rice and a clean, porous cloth (I don't have any muslin):

    water3.jpg

    Wrapped it up:

    water4.jpg

    And let it simmer in the water for 30 minutes.

    This is the end result:

    water5.jpg

    The one on the left is the simmered one, the one on the right is the pre-simmer. To make sure temperature was not a factor, both were put in the microwave until boiling, then allowed to cool for about 3 mins. I enlisted the help of my brother for a single blind tasting.

    And the results...

    Unfortunately, the rice seemed to have no effect whatsoever. If anything, the riced one was slightly saltier that the pre-rice one and there was a bit of a ricey flavour as well. One possible explanation is that some water boiled off the riced one which would make the salt more concentrated. Another is that the rice actually does the reverse an absorbs more water than salt. Since I neglected to weigh the rice bundle beforehand, it was impossible for me to determine how much water it had absorbed so I cannot tell which theory is correct but I did note that, when tasting the rice, it seemed a bit less salty than the water.

    Of course, if I read andie right, it seems as if he's saying that it's not that the rice absorbs LOTS of salt, it's that it absorbs not much of anything else. In that case, it is still plausible that this might work but I'm not prepared to waste 1L of chicken stock finding out. I'm just going to note, however, that rice dishes that involve cooking the rice in a flavourful liquid usually does have the rice become fairly flavourful in it's own right.

    Incientally, this is an EXCELLENT way to cook rice. The grains came out delightfully fluffy and with an excellent chew and no chance whatsoever of burning it.

  19. I was served brocollini at a restaurant a month ago and can't believe I overlooked a vegtable as delicious as this for so long. Just rapily fried in some garlic oil with some salt and pepper and hot sauce and it' fantastic. I've been using it in everything now.

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