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Posts posted by Peter the eater
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Here are the hot peppers and tomatoes from my greenhouse. After sorting and washing, I'm making a base hot sauce with:
- 5 lbs yellow tomatoes
- 1/2 lb habaneros
- 3 medium onions
- 2 bulbs garlic
- 1/4 cup olive oil
From this primal sauce I can mess around with other fruits and veg to see what I like. I've added no acid, no sweet and no salt. I suppose I could find a few small jars and can the best results for Christmas gifts.
Does anyone have good advice/links for canning hot sauce? I can't imagine any life form thriving in my concoction -- maybe I should add vinegar to the base sauce.
- 5 lbs yellow tomatoes
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So the habaneros are going well with mangoes and apricots . . .
I've got a bumper crop of hot peppers including habaneros, and a basket of peaches from the market. I'm all salsa-ed out from the tomatoes and considering a hot sauce. Vinegar, garlic, onion, maybe some citrus.
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Is there a way to save them without losing the great colors they have right now?
I wonder if a blanch-and-freeze would work.
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Is there a way to save them without losing the great colors they have right now?
You could try doing a Herbe Salée. The traditional Acadian way involves filling a mason jar with alternating layers of herbs and salt. Some plants take to this treatment better than others but in the end you get a preserved flavour and colour combo, albeit a salty one.
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Culinary Delights From Prospect Communities
Neighbours of mine down the Bay Road have described some wonderful foodstuffs here which are both local and traditional.
A sampling:
Apple Cider (Acadian)Cut up 7 pounds of apples and place in an earthen crock. Cover with a gallon of cold water and let stand covered with muslin for 10 days, stirring each day. When fermentation ceases, strain and return the juice to the crock. Then add 3 pounds of sugar, stirring until the sugar dissolves. Leave for 7 days, stirring daily. Skim and pour into a wooden keg and cork. In 6 months, it will be ready.
Blueberry Biscuits (Mi'kmaq style)Boil a large quantity of blueberries for 3 to 4 hours. Compress them into disc-shaped cakes and let them dry in the sun. The Mi'kmaq stored these in birch-bark boxes as part of winter provisions.
Eels (Fried)Skin and clean 3/4 pound eels. Cut into desired lengths and place in a pan with salted water to cover. Parboil 8 to 10 minutes. Drain and wipe dry. Roll lightly in seasoned flour and fry in a small amount of fat to a nice brown.
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I would enjoy that meal very much. Reminded me of the cattails we ate on canoe trips in Algonquin Park, Ontario.
I've got a weird little book from the 1970's that explains how to forage here in Nova Scotia, but I can't find it. I think its got a section on milkweed.
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Chicken Barbecued
There’s nothing terribly regional about a barbecued chicken -- it’s a widespread phenomenon. This bird belongs here because it hatched, grew and got processed on the family farm in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. I used the large BBQ shallow and round with lump hardwood charcoal. The chicken got rinsed, spatchcocked and lightly oiled.
The supporting cast of new potatoes, chioggia beets, tiny tim tomatoes and scarlet runner beans are all from my garden.
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No, but I would like to know what advantage/effect there might be on the final product. Is this about speed?
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I like the actor but have no opinion on the food personality.
Why Goop? Is Olive Oil her middle name (like the Popeye chick) and GOOP are her initials?
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Earlier this summer I did a set of design drawings for a 40' houseboat. I learned that when you choose to live on a boat, every inch and every watt counts. This particular barge/boat relies heavily on photovoltaic cells and storage batteries so the appliances are all 12V, including the 2' x 2' x 5' fridge/freezer. My point is, there are innovative and efficient appliances out there for the RV and marine people.
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Which is best?
The main choices are:
Side by side
Freezer on top
Freezer on bottom
Freezer on bottom, French door refrigerator
My ideal home kitchen has a full upright freezer on the left and the same-sized fridge on the right. The kind of pair you'd need a six-foot wingspan to open. Fifty cubic feet total, with no stairs, no icy drawers, no trip to the out building or cellar.
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The regular Kraft dinner box say 4 tbl of margarine...
My box says 50ml of butter or margarine, which is almost 3 1/2 tablespoons to the 225g of pasta. For me, one tablespoon is enough and four is over the top.
I've had substandard experiences with Kraft M&C products that deviate from the original. I'm encouraged to revisit and give the CC Explosion a shot.
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My greenhouse is busting with peppers. My plan is to eat as many fresh as possible, freeze lots of small hot ones, dry a few, and make a ton of hot sauce with the rest. Last year I grew too many mild peppers and wound up pickling them without eventually eating them.
So to answer your question about storing dried peppers, I think I've got enough to tie and hang for a rista. Never made one before, but it would look great in my kitchen. I've also tried the Ronco Dehydrator on peppers with no good results.
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Slap Chop.
Only thing wrong with the slap chop is the commercials.
Does it work?
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Never met a pepper I didn't like. In my world green bells are the most common and cheapest, as a result they suffer from over-exposure.
Cooked > raw.
Has anyone heard them called "mangoes"? I spent some time in Indiana where people called them mangoes or green mangoes, as opposed to mango fruit. How localized is this phenomena?
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Great question.
Hmmm, rosemary wafting from the oven makes me weak in the knees.
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You haven't read McGee's chapter on skank? For shame.
ETA: It's a five second rule. No wonder you're confused.
The Ten Second Rule is Metric.
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Chocoholic Candy Lady
Dessert Girl
Kill Ed Lady
Mother Hubbard Gourmet
The Meat Cook
Salad Woman
Wholesale
Salad Lady Too
The Mimic aka The Assimilator
The Tweaker
Meat Queen
The Hoover Lady
The Gravy Maker
I love it. Sounds like a Tarantino cast of superheroes, pornstars, and psychos – throw in a few appliances.
American Red Beers?
in Beer
Posted
How about North American reds? The big seller in Canada is Rickard's Red, not too bad. Even better is my fave Irish Red from Garrison's -- so malty and colourful.