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Everything posted by blue_dolphin
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Six Seasons: A New Way with Vegetables and On Vegetables: Modern Recipes for the Home Kitchen are both recent releases on my radar screen. Hmmmm... what to do???
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You are wiser than I am with your purchases - I rarely make desserts so I suspect this will mostly be fantasy reading for me. Not that there's anything wrong with that !
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The Kindle version of Irvin Lin's Marbled, Swirled, and Layered: 150 Recipes and Variations for Artful Bars, Cookies, Pies, Cakes, and More is currently $2.99. The usual disclaimer: this is the price I paid today, Amazon Prime member in the US. I've been eying his recipe for white chocolate brownies with strawberry balsamic swirl (found online here) but haven't given it a try yet.
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Finally got around to trying the Pressure Cooker Spicy Pork Shoulder that appeared in the NY Times when they ran an Instant Pot article back in January. Per the recipe, the pork gets rubbed with a mixture of seasonings and marinated for 1-24 hrs and then seared before pressure cooking. This was very flavorful but I'm not sure how much the extra steps added and the leftover pork will be less adaptable for other uses than when I cook it with just garlic and smoked salt. That said, I very much like the idea of tossing the cooked pork with pan juices and sauce and broiling to produce nice crispy bits. This was very flavorful but I'm not sure how much the extra steps added and the leftover pork will be less adaptable for other uses than when I cook it with just garlic and smoked salt.
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Your Daily Sweets: What Are You Making and Baking? (2017 – )
blue_dolphin replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
Thank you, @andiesenji! This was very, very helpful. I'm pretty good at substituting when I know the original ingredient but I was very much in the dark with this one! -
I almost went for Huckleberry, but a lot of people in the Amazon review were complaining about errors. I'll be curious what you think.
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Your Daily Sweets: What Are You Making and Baking? (2017 – )
blue_dolphin replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
I didn't find any malted brown flour. I went ahead with whole wheat flour (Bob's Red Mill). There may be something missing but it seemed fine to me. The batter seemed very wet and heavy to me with the brown sugar first dissolved in the butter, coffee, maple syrup mixture. Adding the beaten eggs and coffee extract resulted in a good sized pitcher of liquid to be added to the flour and nuts. But it worked. Baking time was ~ 40 min in my oven w/convection vs the 75 min time in the recipe. Yes, I think it would still be good. I don't plan to use it for the loaves I froze unless I decide to give them to someone with a sweet tooth. I'm not an icing fan either but wanted to try it. I ended up leaving most of it on my plate but from the small amount of icing I ate, I can tell that it adds both sweetness and additional coffee flavor so the espresso syrup that @andiesenji mentioned might be a nice substitute. A member of the cookbook club I've been following added some chopped chocolate to the batter, skipped the frosting and gave that a good review. She also said she thought slices might be nice toasted with butter but didn't actually try that. -
Your Daily Sweets: What Are You Making and Baking? (2017 – )
blue_dolphin replied to a topic in Pastry & Baking
This is the espresso walnut loaf cake with burnt butter & coffee icing from Diana Henry's Simple. Nice coffee flavor. Recipe available online here. I baked this up in four 5 3/4 in x 3 1/4 in foil baby loaf pans instead of one 9 x 5 in pan. Two went into the freezer w/o icing. After tasting a slice, I found icing a bit much so I thinned it down with a little more coffee to make a thinner glaze for the second loaf. Had to add a little melted bitter chocolate to re-emulsify when it threatened to break. Oops! -
Two dishes from Diana Henry's Simple. Pork tenderloin, cooked sous vide and seared, is standing in for chops in the recipe with a mustard & caper cream sauce served with baby potatoes with watercress & garlic cream. These two are perhaps not a perfect pairing - not sure I needed two dishes with cream sauces on one plate. Still, it was an enjoyable Sunday supper.
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Turkish Pasta with feta, yogurt and dill from Diana Henry's Simple. I found the sweetness of the caramelized onions a little challenging to balance in this dish. If I try again, I'll add some nice fresh green beans and a few grilled shrimp to make it a more balanced one dish meal.
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My take on the recipe for crab & peas with casarecce from Diana Henry's Simple with farfalle standing in for a pasta shape missing from my pantry. Very quick and easy. I liked using fresh sugar snap peas, English peas and pea shoots all together in one dish. Nice contrast of textures with crisp sugar snaps, toothsome pasta and tender crab but even with extra lemon juice, I found it lacking in flavor contrast. Maybe I under seasoned but I prefer to bursts of salty ingredients over using more salt alone so I added slivers of preserved lemon peel and a bit of feta cheese. Both are nice although the preserved lemon suits the dish a bit better and is what I will add next time.
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Food52 put up a group of London articles this week, Food52 Travel Guide, including one on the Borough Market that @Chris Hennes mentioned above. No specific "cheap eats" section but there are also 2 interactive maps of the city that may be useful if you're looking for something in a specific area. One map includes all the places mentioned in the group of London articles and the other one has recommendations from the Food52 community.
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Iraqi herb "butnig" - what is it?
blue_dolphin replied to a topic in Middle East & Africa: Cooking & Baking
I have Stachys byzantina (aka lamb's ear) growing in my garden and I've never thought to eat it either. Now the Micromeria fruticose and Mentha longifolia mentioned earlier in the thread sound like they could be pleasant herbs to cook with. -
Kind of a repeat of the Cod with a crab & herb crust I made recently from Diana Henry's Simple. I had some cod that I'd targeted for another dish but wasn't in the mood for that so I mixed up a bit more of the crab-bread crumb topping and cooked up the orzo with lemon & parsley, also from Simple. I roasted some broccolini in the same pan as the fish and dinner was served.
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Nice excerpt from the book in the New York Times. It's on salt: The Single Most Important Ingredient
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Nice to read more good things about Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat, as mentioned by @Anna N over here in this thread. I have or have read most of the other mentioned books and I agree none are perfectly suited to be the single key resource to truly teach a novice cook. My copy of Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat should arrive today and I'm looking forward to diving in.
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I am no expert, especially concerning fried things but not long ago, I tried a recipe for Rice-Crusted Catfish from Vivian Howard's Deep Run Roots. It uses long-grain rice ground in a spice mill or blender plus cornmeal, salt, cayenne and paprika as the breading. The fish gets soaked in buttermilk before dredging in the breading and then refrigerated for an hour before frying. In the header notes she describes it as a "shatteringly crisp exterior without the clunky cake-y feeling of a traditional breading," and that's the result I got. If you don't have the book, you can find the recipe on Google books by googling Rice-Crusted Catfish Vivian Howard
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I prefer a fork: 1. Place pie in the middle of the table 2. Give everyone a fork (or spoon for @liuzhou) 3. Eat pie!
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A HOT coffee eggnog......it's the hot temperature of the coffee and visions of scrambling that I'm not loving.
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I've done my own breakfast smoothie time and I doubt my concoctions would sound remotely appealing to anyone else! I'm very relieved that there are no post-hatch chicken parts involved in the chicken latte I applaud you for finding a quick and nutritious breakfast that you enjoy but there is nothing in the remainder of the description that appeals to me. Aside from the fresh hot coffee, which I will take on the side. Black, please.
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A dinner from Diana Henry's Simple. Cod with a crab & herb crust, roast potatoes with chili, mint & preserved lemon, and broccoli with harissa & cilantro gremolata. Loved the fish and the crème fraîche watercress sauce with shallot and capers. Love the potatoes. The broccoli with harissa isn't a good pairing with this - plain broccoli, asparagus or sugar snap peas would be better. However, I made the harissa dish this AM with roasted broccolini and wanted to compare with steamed while I still had the harissa butter and gremolata. I much prefer the roasted broccolini over steamed in this dish.
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I was curious to try the broccoli with harissa & cilantro gremolata from Diana Henry's Simple and also on a mission to clean out the fridge, leading me to assemble a rather massive breakfast. I used roasted broccolini and the spears cooked up more quickly than I expected but I liked the crispy bits with this dish. I thought some eggs would be good, then from the fridge, I reheated leftover potatoes from the huevos rotos (also from Simple) and some leftover black beans. No need for lunch today!