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Peter the eater

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Posts posted by Peter the eater

  1. Wow, the recent posts here have been outstanding. You all are to be congratulated! We had a birthday party in the backyard for my two year old twins yesterday. Some of the food got photographed. . .

    white wine sangria for big people and lemonade for little people:

    gallery_42214_4635_88220.jpg

    some nori rolls with avocado, carrot, red pepper, wasabi from powder

    and home-made pickled ginger (because I read what was in the grocery store's product):

    gallery_42214_4635_127688.jpg

    pulled pork sandwiches:

    gallery_42214_4635_111253.jpg

    cantaloupe wrapped in proscuitto salami:

    gallery_42214_4635_17029.jpg

    steamed littleneck clams with cracked black pepper and olive oil (on escarole from my garden):

    gallery_42214_4635_19223.jpg

    and of course chocolate and vanilla cupcakes:

    gallery_42214_4635_149076.jpg

    There was much rejoicing.

  2. Kent, your commentary is fascinating and the images stellar! I'm nominating you to do another eG foodblog from Shanghai when you get settled there.

    I have seen quite a bit of rural Texas but nothing south of Dallas, so now I'm hankering to get back and see the Gulf coast first hand. What kind of seafood came off those boats?

  3. 842580529_11fb2a2210.jpg

    LMF, this picture set off a major Pavlovian response for me. I love a lamb shoulder whole or in chop form. Those morels look very appealing - where they fresh? I have only ever seen them dry in the stores. One day I'd love to go foraging for them, under experienced supervision. If I tried on my own I would probably wind up hallucinating or in a coma.

  4. I can't believe I have never seen this thread before. I pick up weird stuff almost every weekend at yard sales - I take the kids while wife plays soccer. This way I get to make unilateral decisions.

    Here's some recent finds:

    gallery_42214_4635_74195.jpg

    That's two marble rounds for $0.50, a folding steel steamer for $0.25, and a $1 aluminium segmented pan. Plus an old wood plane for me and a xylophone for the kids.

    Total spent = $4.75

  5. Peter: I'm headed to Mabou (SW CBI), then up to Cheticamp, around the trail to Neils Harbour, and down to Sydney.

    I'm looking for no-frills seafood.  Ambiance need not apply; rather, I want butter and lobster dripping down my face.  Put away the candelabra and pass the clawcrackers.  That's what I'm looking for.

    You have the right attitude!

    Mabou - there's an excellent bakery on the main drag where we always stop, but no seafood.

    Baddeck - many options, "Baddeck Lobster Suppers" on Ross St. is good.

    There's a good spot right by the Margaree Harbour bridge, can't think of the name.

    Cheticamp has several seafood and Acadian restaurants, I like "The Seafood Stop" and "Le Gabriel".

    Pretty sure there's just the one place in Neil's Harbour (near the lighthouse) I stop there when bicycling around the Cabot Trail. You are allowed to eat anything when traveling by pedal power.

    There are several options in Ingonish, which you'll go through. I think the best place is the crab/lobster roll shack near the foot of the ski hill looking over the river and marshes. You get your food from the girl in the window and then you sit at a picnic table and admire the view.

    Sydney's a problem for me - you'd expect the biggest city on the island could offer something great. Anything decent never seems to stay open for very long. When we are there (every other month or so) we buy the ingredients and take it back to the farm just out of town.

    Hope that helps - every year a few new places show up and a few disappear so I say keep your eyes open as you go.

    And don't forget to post a report here when you get back!

  6. Anyone else as excited about the release of the last book as I am?

    I want to create a dessert to mark the (historic) occassion, but I'm stuck!

    I could do something typically English, like the treacle tart harry loves, but I'm looking for something with a little more va va voom IYKWIM?

    Does anyone have any ideas?

    Never read the books, love the films.

    Best I can do is . . .

    Malfoy's Mille Feuilles

    godspeed, Mahona

  7. I am in Halifax for the summer and constantly eye the catfish in the market, mainly due to its low, low price.  I'll admit I've been dubious, but maybe I'll give it a try.

    I read about some seafood enthusiasts somewhere (I don't think it was on eGullet, but I believe they are in the UK, I could be wrong) and their mission was to systematically scour all available seafood outlets for the best value items. That means: what has great taste and nutrition, but is really affordable? What is the best kept secret?

    I am always amazed when good stuff is so cheap and lesser stuff is so pricey. Around here I would say the great deals include pork tenderloin and farmed Atlantic salmon. But beef tenderloin - forget it, it is woefully overpriced and under aged.

    Chicken used to be the food of kings, lobsters were used to fertilize Nova Scotia potato crops, and so on.

    The "sea catfish" was definitely a new treat - it was moist and sweet. I recommend it to anyone who likes haddock or halibut or the like. I bet it would be lovely in a batter with fries, too.

    But like the monkfish, maybe you ought not to image google it before you dig in.

  8. oh and we went fishing a few days ago and this is what we caught: trout and "sunnies"

    gallery_44829_4875_37146.jpg

    Hi SheenaGreena:

    This travelogue is a very enjoyable read, I love your "respectfully casual tone". Every one of your posts has words and/or pictures of food I have never seen before. I think I need more guk in my life, and it behooves me to mention that bucket of pigs feet - wow!

    Okay, I am no ichthyologist but I would bet dollars to donuts you have there in your sink three juvenile Largemouth bass and three Green or possibly Pumpkinseed sunfish. Plus an unusual scouring pad. Do your trout there go by any other names?

  9. So many good dinners here, very inspiring.

    Tonight we had something different (for us) since my twin children turned two years old. We had a surf and turf: beef ribs and sea catfish (aka seawolf, wolf eel, Atlantic cat) Never had the fish before, it was very nice, white and sweet like haddock. I probably went for it based more on price than reputation. It was $11/kilogram and I have never met anyone who has bought, ordered, coked or otherwise eaten it.

    And until I taste otherwise I believe pork to be the better rib, beating beef for price and taste.

    gallery_42214_4635_87209.jpg

    gallery_42214_4635_57238.jpg

    those are button mushrooms with sharp cheddar, young poatoes and grilled bread.

    the fish was done in a foil pouch built up as follows:

    gallery_42214_4635_55513.jpg

    gallery_42214_4635_182627.jpg

    gallery_42214_4635_226361.jpg

    the oranges were dominant, spinach and yellow zuke and red onion looked and tasted well enough. Probably didn't need soy sauce and olive oil in the pouch, but cracked black pepper made it happen for me.

    The kids were not too into it, favouring the strawberry dessert (no pic) We are having a real more kid-friendly birthday deal in 10 days or so. I predict I will photograph and post more food at that time.

  10. gallery_28660_4849_18195.jpg

    Its the Bunnykins bowl for grown-up cat lovers! (the infamous Royal Dalton bowl for kids who are rewarded by seeing the bunnies on the bottom of the bowl if they eat all their food)

    That's a delicious looking leek pie.

    I'm very much looking forward to your coffee roasting segment. I'm sorry but I couldn't wait and roasted 100 grams last night in the aluminum popcorn maker. I seem to have quite a blend of beans ranging from "still slightly green" to "black like a space shuttle tile".

  11. Cape Breton (N.S.) Lobster Boil

    I spend lots of time in Cape Breton and have to taste the oysters, they always seem to be from Prince Edward Island. Were they as good as they look?

  12. At Philadelphia's Reading Terminal Market leg on the bone can be obtained at US$4.99/pound, which is pretty much the same price as Peter the Eater cites for eastern Canada.

    The popularity of shanks has, unfortunately, driven up its price.

    But I'm a lover of fatty cuts, so shoulder is less expensive than leg, and breast even cheaper. I love the fatty cuts so much that about a month ago I asked one of the butchers at the Reading Terminal Market to save me the trimmings from when he frenches rib chops, which he usually puts into the grinder. He sold me a two pounds, which included the ends from the breast riblets with a little bit of bone, for what worked out to be US$1.80/pound. They were yummy, after marination in yogurt, then highly seasoned before indirect grilling.

    Spot on Bob.

    As far as I'm concerned, flavour rules. Unless you are in a rush and need medium rare lamb for your dinner party or whatever, take some time and coax the best out of that "cheaper cut". Shanks are good, shoulders even better.

  13. Jessica, I'd love to see your store front photo complete with Puerto Rican cyclists and everything else ambient that contributes to the tone of your place.

    For a while a few years back my wife embraced kick boxing in a big way. I went along for a bring-your-friend night and loved it too. I tried to find her a used "slam man" but instead wound up with a basic heavy bag which we still use. I got quite good at wrapping her fists - maybe you could post a pic a la "Rocky I" showing how this skill helps you in the kitchen.

  14. Here in the heart of pig country one cannot find lamb in most of the food stores and supermarkets. The one store that has a few pieces of lamb on display charges an exorbitant amount for it.  Their prices are on a par with finest Black Angus Beef.

    Can anybody explain this?  Surely, the law of supply and demand should mean that lamb should be the lowest priced meat.

    Around here (Eastern Canada) local lamb is better and a little bit cheaper than the frozen Kiwi (NZ) stuff. Fresh legs, shanks and shoulders are all around 10 - 12 $CAD per kilogram. Loins and racks etc. are a lot more. Stuff from nearby would be even better priced if it were not for the coyotes - this invasive species has been a very big reason the market is still small.

  15. Hi Jessica, cool store, full of whimsy!

    Yesterday I bought a 2lb bag of green coffee beans from Just Us! Coffee Roasters Co-op while in Wolfville (Nova Scotia). I have never roasted at home and I am eager to darken these little Bolivians. I think now I will watch and see how you do it - I may use my hand crank stove top aluminum popcorn maker although the skillet method looks like a good way to start too. I do not have a hot air corn popper but . . . could this be an excuse to get another kitchen gizmo? And is it true I have to wait a day after roasting to grind and brew?

  16. http://www.supersizedmeals.com/food/articl...led_Ostrich_Egg

    Okay I love deviled eggs, but this makes me queazy

    That awesome!! And a bit revolting. Thanks for sharing.

    I once had a dream that I made and ate a giant scotch egg, but I hadn't considered it could be an ostrich egg. I figured it was a giant chicken from HG Wells' "Food of the Gods".

    I've always wanted to make a basket of spicy wings but use big turkey wings instead of chicken, now I'm thinking Ostrich!

    I believe there is a large version of a scotch egg on pimp that snack

    Now there's a show that speaks to me!

    (PS I liked your old avatar)

    the one where I'm digging for gold and snacks?

    Ya-hun

  17. I took the actual shells out along with the siphons (they were big and chewy) before mixing in the noodles a tiny bit of light cream. The taste was very good but their was still some residual grittiness - like getting a bit of sand in your food. I never have this problem with mussels, there must be a trick to it.

    I emailed the clam vendor's ask the chef and promptly got this reply:

    Fresh steamer clams can be placed in a bowl of salted water (sea water) with a tablespoon of cornmeal. The clams take in the cornmeal and spit out sand. This method takes about 2 to 3 hours.

    So pleased was I more Q's were sent:

    Where did my steamer clams come from? Local aquaculture?

    Our clams come from Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia.

    What about those black siphons - do people usually eat them?

    You may eat the siphons. If you are not accustomed to eating them...try them....they kind of taste like chewy scallops.

    Does the cornmeal trick work on your mussels too?

    Mussels should not contain grit as they are suspended by strings as they grow.

    Wow, I wish I could get vendors like that here. That Mackerel looked good too btw.

    Thanks - You probably can - these guys sell online a lot here

  18. http://www.supersizedmeals.com/food/articl...led_Ostrich_Egg

    Okay I love deviled eggs, but this makes me queazy

    That awesome!! And a bit revolting. Thanks for sharing.

    I once had a dream that I made and ate a giant scotch egg, but I hadn't considered it could be an ostrich egg. I figured it was a giant chicken from HG Wells' "Food of the Gods".

    I've always wanted to make a basket of spicy wings but use big turkey wings instead of chicken, now I'm thinking Ostrich!

    I believe there is a large version of a scotch egg on pimp that snack

    Now there's a show that speaks to me!

    (PS I liked your old avatar)

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