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blue_dolphin

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  1. blue_dolphin

    Breakfast 2022

    @Ann_T, those biscuits are killing me - I'd love to try one! @Kim Shook, I swear those berries are an excuse to charge a premium price for under-ripe berries 🙃 Gyeranbap with roasted seaweed and capers from Korean American. This is an egg fried in toasted sesame oil and soy sauce served over rice with roasted seaweed and capers. Tasty and quick.
  2. I saw the Sasso birds in Wild Fork
  3. A new month brings some new Kindle deals. Some of these have been offered before but they're all books that I own, have cooked from and think are pretty good. David Lebovitz's My Paris Kitchen: Recipes and Stories (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) is $2.99 Leela Punyaratabandhu's Bangkok: Recipes and Stories from the Heart of Thailand (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) is $2.99 Sheldon Simeon's Cook Real Hawai'i: A Cookbook (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) is $2.99 Anissa Helou's Feast: Food of the Islamic World (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) is $1.99 Nik Sharma's The Flavor Equation: The Science of Great Cooking Explained in More Than 100 Essential Recipes (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) is $2.99 José Andrés' Vegetables Unleashed: A Cookbook (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) is $2.99 Laurie Colwin's More Home Cooking: A Writer Returns to the Kitchen (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) is $1.99 and like all her books, it is a delightful read Alice Water's Chez Panisse Vegetables (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) is $1.99 I sprang for this one: James Hoffmann's The World Atlas of Coffee: From beans to brewing - coffees explored, explained and enjoyed (eG-friendly Amazon.com link) is $1.99
  4. blue_dolphin

    Bacon Jam

    I’m pretending I didn’t see that!
  5. blue_dolphin

    Lunch 2022

    Gochugaru shrimp with roasted seaweed grits from Eric Kim's Korean American brings some Korean flavors to a southern staple. I used Jimmy Red grits from Marsh Hen Mill instead of the quick-cooking grits called for but otherwise followed the recipe.
  6. Thanks! Cathy's book shows both the rope and thumb-poke methods for forming the bagels. Her results look similar in geometry with both methods but the thumb-poke certainly gives you more leeway in how wide you stretch the hole. Here's a video:
  7. I recently purchased Cathy Barrow's new book, Bagels, Schmears and a Nice Piece of Fish and decided to try my hand at bagels. Cathy has the timing all worked out for an evening mix and shape, O/N rise in the fridge with bagels ready to bake in the AM. Seems like there's a lot that can go wrong with bagels but amazingly, they came out OK. I subbed one cup of rye flour into the New York bagel recipe in the book. Next time, I'll try pumpernickel. Also made the lox schmear from the book to go along with:
  8. OK. I've been thinking about using my Ninja Creami to make a Pacojet recipe for chicken liver paté. For some reason, it brings to mind Dan Aykroid's old Bass-o-matic sketch from SNL 🙃 but I think now is the time!
  9. blue_dolphin

    Breakfast 2022

    A little of both, I think. Radishes are about 2.5 - 2.75 inches in diameter. The sourdough loaf was a small-ish one.
  10. blue_dolphin

    Breakfast 2022

    Three toasts from Eric Kim's Korean American for a colorful start to a cloudy morning: Gochujang buttered radish toast, Roasted seaweed avocado toast and Soft scrambled egg toast.
  11. blue_dolphin

    Breakfast 2022

    Dutch baby with leftover gochujang salmon from Everyday Korean. This is one of several variations this book has for a one-egg, single-serving Dutch baby baked in a little 6-inch cast iron skillet. The photos in the book look like this, with the salmon piled after baking but the instructions say to add the salmon to the batter before pouring it into the pan. Apparently, I'm more of a visual than literal recipe-follower 🙃
  12. I saw them in the store earlier in the week. I'll pick one up and give it the Judy bird treatment.
  13. My most recent purchases: The end books are both new releases. The Magic of Tinned Fish came out last year and Summer Kitchens is from 2020. Author Kathy Barrow did a Zoom bagel demo (link available here on NowServingLA's event recordings page) and I liked that her recipes make 6 bagels, which seems fairly approachable, and I liked her process of mixing and shaping the dough in the evening followed by an overnight rise in the fridge then boiling and baking in the AM. I've enjoyed Eric Kim's writing in various places so I decided to spring for his book.
  14. blue_dolphin

    Lunch 2022

    I got the wild caught, skin-on sockeye filets and thought they were pretty good. I don't know how they generally cut them but all the packs in the case were 24 oz and had 3 pieces, so about 8 oz each. All were thinner (.75 inch at the thick end) and closer to the tail than the thick slices shown in the featured photo for this item on the website. I also got grouper as I rarely see that around here. Packed in 6 oz pieces. I used one for a grilled grouper sandwich the other day and it was excellent. I noticed you gave a favorable mention to the mahi mahi so I'll try that next time and try some shrimp.
  15. blue_dolphin

    Lunch 2022

    Roasted salmon with gochujang mayo from Everyday Korean with sugar snaps and Massa Organics brown rice. Quick, easy and flavorful. Salmon from Wild Fork. The gochujang mayo has mayo, oyster sauce, gochujang, fresh garlic and ginger.
  16. The salmon was nice but didn’t lend appreciable flavor to the rice. I'm with you on crispy skin and would cook separately if I make it again.
  17. I've never had an actual Cinnabon and the size is part of the reason. When I was working at UCLA, there was a Cinnabon-like place called TJ Cinnamons right around the corner from our building and whoever was in charge of getting meeting treats often picked up a tray of the little one-bite buns. They were so sweet that one bite was plenty for me.
  18. Grains for Every Season: Baked Wild Rice with Salmon, Artichokes and Leeks p 303. The rice and vegetables alone are a very good dish. The flavors go very well with the salmon although I think it would be easier to cook the salmon on its own to better control doneness. The header notes say, "This dish is a stunner..." I can't say that my result reaches that level but I enjoyed it. The bottom is wild rice, leeks cut into long strips and artichoke hearts (the recipe calls for canned, I used TJ's frozen) tossed with Italian salad dressing (I used leftover preserved kumquat vinaigrette), grated Parmigiano-Reggiano, heavy cream or crème fraîche, and parsley and mint leaves. After baking that for 45 min, it gets sprinkled with more Parm and a salmon filet and returned to the oven to cook the salmon. The recipe says to use the 10 min/inch of thickness as a guide for cooking the salmon and then says to let it rest 10 min out of the oven, tented with foil. Since the salmon goes atop the hot rice, that cooking + resting time resulted in overcooked salmon, at least in my hands. I had an 8oz piece of salmon so I made a half recipe and baked it in the CSO. I should have lowered the shelf at the beginning as the veg were too close to the upper element and the top layer of veg & rice got a bit more brown than I would have preferred. I did lower it when I added the salmon.
  19. Also not @heidih, but yes, it is possible! I use the recipe from James Beard's American Cookery. Like @Kim Shook's recipe, it starts with raw nuts so they toast right in the hot sugar mixture for the best flavor. You also need to take the sugar up to the hard crack stage to avoid any stickiness. Beard says 300F. He also advocates pouring onto a warmed marble slab or baking sheets. This prevents it from setting too fast and gives you time to spread, flip and stretch the brittle so it’s wafer-thin between the nuts. Finally, he cautions that brittle draws moisture so it’s important to store in airtight containers.
  20. blue_dolphin

    Breakfast 2022

    Grilled grouper sando with avocado and kimchi mayo
  21. I paid a visit to the Wild Fork store this afternoon. I was impressed at the variety and thought the prices seemed generally OK. They had chicken hearts but no livers. There are rabbits on the website but none in the store. Otherwise, all kinds of stuff. Ground bison, elk, venison, wild boar, yak, ostrich, etc. Beef sweetbreads and good looking marrow bones. Good selection of veal, including veal osso buco. The only goat was unfortunately the usual bone-in chunks. I liked the way the pieces of fish are individually wrapped so I don't have to thaw a whole package to get one piece. I was intrigued by this bagged ground beef frozen in individual bits so you can just take out what you need. I was looking at a Marcella Hazan recipe for chicken liver pasta sauce that calls for 1/4 lb ground beef. Of course, I can go buy a small amount at Whole Foods when I get the livers but since I'm often barbering recipes down to one or two servings, I can imagine this product being handy. Unfortunately, they didn't have ground pork packed the same way. I bought salmon and grouper filets, hot Italian sausage, chorizo, a bag of frozen, diced tomatillos that I thought might be handy and some frozen spinach just because I needed some. I'll have to comb through posts here to see what people like.
  22. I'm back with an update on the "Damrosch" buckwheat crust that I shared above. It's on p 83 of Grains for Every Season. The header notes suggest using it for a quiche but I wasn't particularly thrilled. The buckwheat groats still had a nice toasty flavor but they got much softer from the custard than they did with the honey pie filling. As I mentioned, I decided to try sprinkling on a thin layer of grated parm after baking. While it didn't seal out the moisture, the buckwheat retained more texture than without and it added a nice layer of umami flavor. I would definitely recommend this step. Here's the buckwheat "crust" before the pre-bake step: After the pre-bake, I sprinkled on the parm and put it back in the oven for a few minutes to kind of tack it down. Here it is after that step and before filling:
  23. That's correct. You are draining and pressing off that vinegary liquid but not rinsing. The first time I made it, I was convinced it would be too much but I ended up liking it a lot. Tangy but creamier than feta.
  24. Here’s a paraphrase of the Nopalito recipe. It’s a good book and I recommend it. It calls for quite a lot of vinegar. I like the tang but I’m sure you could reduce it to suit your preferences. Heat 3/4 gallon milk to 170 F, stirring frequently. Add 1.25 cups of white vinegar. Stir gently with a wooden spoon for 2 min then remove from heat and let stand 20 min. Pour the milk into a cheese cloth-lined strainer (I use a nut milk bag) and let most of the liquid drain. Then gather up the cheesecloth and squeeze out the remaining liquid. Return the cheesecloth wrapped cheese to the strainer and set over a bowl with a weight on top of the cheese for ~ 1 hr to cool. Then unwrap and work in 3 t kosher salt (I use less), re-wrap, return to strainer with weight and refrigerate 8 hrs - overnight. The estimated yield is 3 cups.
  25. Not at this time. Once I pay off the mortgage (Oct 2024, counting down!) I'd like to reface the kitchen cabinets and convert the adjacent, wider closet that used to house the laundry before a previous owner moved it out to the garage, into a wet bar with an ice maker and wine fridge. That would be the time to address that closet, maybe opening them up and treating it as one space like you mentioned doing.
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