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AAQuesada

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Everything posted by AAQuesada

  1. When I hear fruit salad dressing, I think of the old fashioned boiled dressing like this one from Gisslen. If you've never tried it, the fruit salad dressing is really pretty good. http://netcookingtalk.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2579 In a more modern direction I made a burnt honey lillet dressing for some Tuscan melons I had, which was more or less a caramelized honey gastrique with lillet in place of the vinegar.
  2. @ JAZ Try Trader Joe's if there is one convenient to you, they carry low and full fat greek yogurt, at least around here
  3. AAQuesada

    Bison Burgers

    From Ideas in Food, on doctoring up burgers: their suggestion was butter and onion juice. The onion juice seems to bump up the savory-ness
  4. AAQuesada

    Warm Mayonnaise

    Hah! i must be tired, lol, I thought this was going to be a molecular gastronomy post about warm mayo?!
  5. LOL that sounds suspiciously progressive to me! No pepper or cumin or powdered chile belong in guacamole. a bit of onion, maybe garlic, fresh chile in in the M&P Add avocado, smash, salt. eat, lime juice, green salsa are acceptable stir-ins
  6. AAQuesada

    Ground Beef Tacos

    I call it knorr, but my mom really uses the Wyler brand of chicken MSG
  7. AAQuesada

    Ground Beef Tacos

    Whole peeled tomatoes.. usually Hunt's. They are hand crushed, not cut for that rustic texture. Actually I lied she uses the Wyler chicken Boullion powder, not the cubes so she has more control. She also uses it to adjust salt/ and savoryness. She has a really good (and critical) palate, even though she doesn't cook much any more. S&P does go in TT Serranos are diced seeds n all usually like 9 per pound to stem off total destruction when we were younger. The proceedure was just saute grnd beef, but don't brown. Add tomatoes, chile, water sprinkle boullion TT add green onions and simmer. Adding Cilantro off the heat. From memory I think it was 1 small can WPT, 1 can of water 3,4 green onions, 9 chile serrano (or guero the yellow mexican chile is really good here but milder) per pound or two of meat. Oh and 1 bunch cilantro ruff chop Off the top of my head anyway..It's a bit liquidy that first day even reduced, but chilled and reheated the meat absorbs the juice.
  8. AAQuesada

    Ground Beef Tacos

    We had ground beef taco's even though my mom is from Mexico. But no powdered spices, the ground beef was braised in had crushed WPT serranos, green onion (whole and removed later), water and knorr, reduced until just a tiny bit saucy and finished with cilantro. Yum!
  9. I can def tell the difference using grey salt vs. kosher salt in things like braises and soups. Unless you are looking for it's easy to miss, it is def a background note. I don't want it to taste 'salty' just make the dish 10% better, ideally the guest wouldn't know. I love grey salt to season steaks as well. I think it's a matter of finding the right spot to use your salt. Specialty salts aren't great ll purpose in the way kosher is. Some of the japanese salts are nice for finishing raw fish with some yuzu zest. Its fun to play with but it's not a big deal to use diamond crystal for everything.
  10. I'm running through culinary courses at my local community college because 1) It isn't a financial strain and isn't particularly time consuming (I can take one weekday off without upsetting my employer); 2) It is a very well-regarded culinary program. CSN? That is a good school, one of my mentor's was big in growing that program.
  11. There are a lot of great community college programs out there that won't cost you much and give you a great base of education. But if you are blessed to have 80k to spend on a hobby, The big schools are nice.
  12. Thanks for the recommendation! I'll check it out that is a new one by me.
  13. I would have never thought of that! What do you use for the spray bottle?
  14. I totally agree with violetfox on this one. Personally I'd go with the German Pinot Noir or Spätburgunder. Shouldn't be to hard to find something in your price range.
  15. I really like Wuthrich European Style Butter which I can sometimes get as Surfas locally. I think it's from Wisconsin. Buerre Echire is great but expensive if you're using a lot for pastry I wish we could get their double cream out here. Kerry gold great for some things especially on home made toast but the flavor is a little assertive for me for things like scrambled eggs.
  16. I'll have to stop by and check it out, I usually go to north to santa monica (wed and Sat) Do you know what type of strawberries they have? I like roasting red beets in a low oven overnight (roasing pan, covered) until they look black on the outside like lumps of charcoal. You can peel them and they do stay firm and it concentrates the flavor nicely.
  17. Are you being difficult on purpose? These are taken almost directly from textbooks. I guess for home cooking these definitions don't matter so much but in a restaurant these basic techniques are the grammar of the kitchen you need to know the rules before you can break them effectively. Ok but even by those definitions you aren't poaching the liquid anymore than your are roasting your oven. I think this is a grammatical rather than scientific question. If that's not clear I give up!
  18. No the liquid is at poaching temperature. Simmering and Poaching happen at different temperatures. Wet Cooking Poaching: To cook gently in in liquid that is hot but not bubbling about 160 to 180 Simmer: To cook in liquid that is bubbling gently about 185 to 205 Boil: To cook in liquid that is bubbling rapidly at about 212 *sea lvl, normal pressure ect. If you want to use the terms differently that is up to you!
  19. I respect him tremendously, his show on food network was a revelation for me and really inspired me in my love of cooking. I remember thinking 'who is this pompous guy doing a show on salt for 30 minutes'. Well I learned a lot and his passion really came through. On top of that I still think his Dean and Deluca Cookbook is great, still holds up well today with great tips and recipes that work and full of flavor. As for the newsletter, it really is mostly buying tips and promotions. The guy does have a great palate, but then so do I! Is it worth it? just depends if you want some primo Olive oil fresh from around the world and want a source for top quality ingredients. He's your man. If you are looking for Saveur: great articles and recipes look somewhere else.
  20. I've never thought of "poaching" as a description of a liquid. Can you "poach" a soup? You aren't going to poach a soup, but you can poach the veg (ie cook them in a liquid that is between 160 and 180 degrees) Or you could say I want to cook that stock at poaching temp overnight so it remains clear. Does this make sense?
  21. No. Poaching, Simmering and Boiling are all descriptors of liquid in regards to the temperature of that liquid. Just like slow roast, roast in a moderate oven and high heat roast are all descriptors of ranges of oven temperature.
  22. The short answer is because it's simmering.(creating bubbles that ripple the surface) Bubbling isn't in and of itself boiling. (Bubbles that violently break the surface) For example when you are doing Thomas Keller-esq Big Pot Blanching. You want the water 'at a boil' or a 'rolling boil' Otherwise it's not hot enough.
  23. yup we were talking about poaching vs braising just the other day
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