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Everything posted by Shalmanese
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You could try reverse engineering the Cambells formua and then making it with higher quality ingredients. To me, it sounds like a veloute sauce.
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I love making coca-cola chicken with just chicken wings. The sauce gets all thick from the gelatine. The next day, I take the left over sauce, scrape off all the fat and then use it as a base for noodles with some left over chicken and some green vegtables.
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And what better thing to try out on your new Weber kettle than a Wagyu brisket? I spoke to the guy at the farmers market and he said he could arrange for a whole, untrimmed brisket. If anyone is interested, I could phone up and ask for pricing. Shalmanese - who has no barbeque and desperately want's to get invited to one...
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You mean Quenelles? Theres an eGCI lesson that mentions them here
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Me or Grub?
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Australian dining and food in the media
Shalmanese replied to a topic in Australia & New Zealand: Dining
NYT -
What about Homer's Space-Age Out-of-This-World Moon Waffles * Ingredients + One bag caramel cubes + Waffle mix + One bottle Liquid Smoke + One stick butter * Directions + Empty bag of caramels onto waffle iron. + Add generous portion of waffle batter. + Add one bottle of Liquid Smoke. + Cook until burnt. + Wrap waffle around a stick of butter. + Serve on a toothpick.
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Whoo, boy, lets dig into the archives here... This was at a dinner party I held last christmas. A big extravaganza event involving lots of fiddly cooking just for the sheer hell of it. The dish in the picture was roast leg of lamb atop a bed of grilled summer vegtables (zuchinni, eggplant, bell peppers and tomato I think) with a lamb demi-glace and rosmary infused olive oil. There are a few technical flaws with the dish that didn't affect the taste but hampered the presentation. At the last minute, without really planning to, I deglazed the roasting pan with my demi-glace. As a result, the demi-glace was rather thin and had... bits floating in it. I should have really strained it. Secondly, the massive oil slick on the side looked very unappealing and from the shot, it looks like it's leaking out of the lamb. The plate should have also been wiped. But most glaringly, the meat looks like... well... tubes and guts and innards. It looks like some kind of offal. The camera turned the most subtle shade of pink into some ghastly hospital gray. I was very ashamed of this picture afterwards. The dish tasted fantastic though. I think this was meant to be braised short ribs... It just looks like someone shit in a pot. Meat should not look shiny... ever. Another braised dish, looks like dog food liberally sprinkled with bright orange bits. All of these tasted fantastic and some of them actually looked fantastic in person, it's just the camera can do stange things sometimes.
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Yesterday, I decided to spoil myself and make up a lunch (almost) entirely from the farmers market: A 350gm (3/4lb) Wagyu Sirloin from the wagyu seller sprinkled with a little maldon sea salt (not from the market), a chunk of organic, sourdough baguette from the bread man with a nice chunk of sharp buffalo cheese from the cheese guy. A salad of radishes, cucmbers and apples from the produce girl and the apple dude respectively, dressed very simply with a little cider vinegar (not from the market) and some lime tree honey from the honey man. A big tall glass of lemonade made from lemons from the lemon, orange & avacado family and some fresh strawberries from the strawberry guy. All of it bought, cooked and eaten within an hour. Yum! It was nice being able to build an entire menu like that from scratch.
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I don't know about indistinguishable since I've never had proper Kobe but the Wagyu I get is noticably less marbled and less finely marbled that pics of Kobe I've seen on the web/tv. It's still amazingly good though and it's spoilt me for any other type of steak.
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We make birds eye chilli oil at home all the time. Just stick a bowl of peanut oil in the microwave with a dozen or so chillies and zap on high for 3 minutes and then let stand for an hour or so and strain. It doesn't have the green taste of a fresh chilli but it's remarkably good and much easier to use. It's excellent in a dipping sauce. Otherwise, fresh chillies can be either sundried or stored in the freezer to prolong shelf life.
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Is it just me or is anyone else uncomfortable with the words budget and sushi being used in the same sentence?
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It seems to me like you could parcook the meat, make them in batches and freeze them and then cook them individually in a toaster oven every morning for perfectly fresh sausage rolls. I don't know if your heart would thank you though .
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Whatever you do, don't set up an IV drip of duck fat. It's hard to keep it liquid since the tubing tends to cool it down and it clogs in the pipes.
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Apart from trichinosis in pork and salmonella in chicken, there are very few bugs that can live on the inside of fresh muscle tissue. Generally, bugs are confined to the surface of the meat. If you make the conditions on the outside hostile enough, you kill all of the bugs.
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Well, originally curing was done to preserve meat over the winter months but now, we just mainly do it because it tastes good. Curing removes a large part of the moisture and adds in compounds like sodium nitrate which make it a hostile place for bacteria to live. This keeps the meat safe to eat for a longer amount of time.
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That looks gorgeous. How did it taste?
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We have an electronic pressure cooker and it works very well. It looks like a rice cooker on steroids and it can keep a constant pressure without needing to vent. I don't know if you can get them in the US, we got ours from China.
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Sorbet: Tips, Techniques, Troubleshooting, and Recipes
Shalmanese replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
But sucrose has a molecular weight for 342 while salt has a molecular weight of 58.5 so shouldn't that mean a given weight of salt should be over 10 times more effective at lowering the freezing point than a given weight of sugar? -
Why would it be? As long as the outside is seared and the meat isn't rotten it should be perfectly safe.
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Huh? That doesn't make sense at all. When the margin on food is 5% and the margin on booze is 50%, then it's highly disingenuous to be talking about sales volumes. What matters is the percentage profit being brought in from each and most high end restaurants DO make significant amounts of their profit from the booze.
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Man, if I'd known there were eG members passing through I would've shouted you a drink! The Russian Imperial stout is also amazing -- the espresso of beers. I have had a couple of clunkers (whatever their light beer is, and some seasonal one with pumpkin, I think) but overall you can't go wrong, and the wedges are fantastic. Anyone else from out of town should make time to drop in. ← Maybe next time . The dining was pretty mediocre though. A friend recommended the Chairman Yip and it was a mess. I heard the waters edge/watermark are both pretty good but sadly, did not get a chance to go.
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Gyoza from this years Chinese New Year feast.
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I was just in Canberra and the Wig and Pen in the city makes the most amazing Porter. A nice strong cocoa taste with just a hint of tobacco in the aftertaste. mmm...
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Another question, if your steaming, why not steam in the microwave? The microwave seems like the perfect mechanism for steaming because it can penetrate food and steam from the inside. This means you achieve higher temperatures and use less water and take less time. So more nutrients are preserved, the enzymes are destroyed faster and the food in general deterioates far less. Apart from the inherent prejudice that the west seems to have against microwaves for anything other than TV dinners, why not use the microwave?