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menuinprogress

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Posts posted by menuinprogress

  1. FrogPrincesse-- Do I see this correctly, is this like a egg yolk burrata?

    Paul - It's an egg poached in plastic wrap, aka Arzak egg.

    I also thought of burrata at first :-) Anyway, it looks great!

  2. Did I just see smoked bay scallop custard up there? Let me check ... yeah, I did.

    That just blew my mind, menuinprogress. I'd be interested in hearing a little bit more about how you went about creating it.

    It is pretty much the same technique as making a sweet custard - but without sugar. We've been experimenting with different combinations/ratios of eggs, milk, and fish stock for the custard base. They have all been good, but with different textures to the custard depending on the egg to liquid ratio.

  3. IMG_4171.JPG

    Using up stuff from the garden in a "Thai" steak salad. Lebanese zucchini worked really well in the role we would normally use cucumber in. The beef was tri-tip from our farmers' market.

  4. Lamb's quarters (wild spinach) and Campari tomato salad, with cow's milk ricotta cheese, garlic scapes and crispy lemon zest.

    Salade parisienne with sauce moutarde.

    Those both look fantastic!

  5. Aside from the chorizo we typically get here in San Diego, the only kind I have much experience with are the bolitas they sell in carnicerias in Oaxaca.

    The Oaxacan variety is darker, and the strings of small chorizo balls are very characteristic:

    Chorizo.jpg

    We've had reasonably good success replicating the style at home:

    IMG_8251.jpg

    Still not as good as the orignal, though...

    • Like 2
  6. Menuinprogress, How did you cook your potatoes? Just sauted with onions and peppers? I'd like to try your Basque method with halibut.

    The potato cooking technique was improvised based on something I saw in a video of making Pil-Pil. I put some butter in a pan over medium heat, put in sliced potatoes and onions, added some white wine, covered the pan and turned it down to low until the pan was dry and the onions had caramelized a bit. The came out very nicely.

  7. Sea Bass al Pil-Pil

    IMG_1831.JPG

    I've been wanting to do Pil-Pil for a while now. Pil-Pil is a Basque technique where fish (traditionally salt cod) is cooked in oil and then the cooking oil is emulsified into a sauce by swirling the fish around in it.

    Instead of using salt cod, we used fresh Baja corvina sea bass. I was worried that it would fall apart, but it held up fairly well and was very soft and moist. The sauce, which got some extra flavor from a quick stock made from the fish trimmings, was fantastic.

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