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kayb

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Everything posted by kayb

  1. Nuts on Clark at Midway has always been my Chicago mainstay. After coming into Midway like a hot grounder into shortstop (the only kind of landing I have EVER had there), I'm generally not in the notion for anything heavy to eat. And there are plenty of bars. In Baltimore, O'Brycki's in the main departure area has a wonderful crab cake. I think I remember reading their only remaining in-town restaurant had closed, leaving the airport their only outpost. In Houston Hobby, Pappadeux, which apparently is a regional seafood chain, is pretty good. I like their Mexican ceviche. In Atlanta, Paschal's, in C Concourse and in the main departure lounge is a fine, fine place for a down-home Southern breakfast. Those folks can make some biscuits and sausage gravy....
  2. All you can do is all you can do.
  3. I once had 12 pounds of Wright's bacon in the freezer. Kroger and some other store ran consecutive sales, and I had coupons. Stocked up. I also stocked up the last time Aldi had the small knockwurst, which I like to pickle in chunks with quail eggs. I think I have eight pounds in the freezer.
  4. Why, why, WHY do people think it's necessary to heavily batter and fry okra to the point of being bulletproof? Sigh. Barbecue looks good, though. For that Texas stuff, anyway.
  5. Oh....my....that lechon!
  6. kayb

    Dinner 2017 (Part 6)

    Prayers for your safety and minimal damage. Stay dry and safe!
  7. Road food payoff: A No. 10 can full of tamales. Stripped of shuck, and ready for application of cheap grocery store chili. The final product, sans Saltines, which I added moments later. And the remaining 2 dozen and 9 bagged up and waiting for the freezer. For those who are not familiar, Delta tamales are a different creature from Mexican tamales. The seasonings are quite different, for one thing; salt, pepper, red pepper. No garlic, no onion, no cumin, etc. The masa is very thin, the filling-to-masa ratio is probably 4:1. They're boiled instead of steamed. And sometimes you find them wrapped in foil or waxed paper instead of corn shucks. Some folks prefer chopped onions on top of theirs; I don't care for raw onion, so I don't. And always, always, cheap no-beans grocery store chili, and Saltines. And a cold Co'Cola. One of the multitude of reasons I would live nowhere else.
  8. Eeek! Well, at this stage in my life, I'd just about as soon have 'em fried as raw.
  9. Oh....my. What a marvelous dinner. Puts me in mind of the Catbird Seat in Nashville. I'm about ready to go back there.
  10. Welcome to the forums, and I'll be anxious to hear of your results on the noodles!
  11. I looked and didn't see an appropriate topic for this post, so I made one. "Road Food," of course, was made famous by Jane and Michael Stern on public radio, but we've all been out on business or pleasure travel and happened up on marvelous food in the most unlikely of places. Here's a place to post same, and I'll start off with my stop this morning. I had been on a business trip that took me to LA -- that would be Lower Arkansas -- and spent last night in Monticello, in the southeastern quadrant of the state. I commend to you, by the way, the Trotter House BnB there, where they fed me breakfast that would have sufficed for me and a friend. I set out withh a couple of stops planned, but no real schedule, and decided on a whim I wanted tamales to bring home. So I betook myself east and south to Lake Village, in the far southeastern corner, to Rhoda's Famous Hot Tamales and Pies. And they are, in fact. Famous, that is. At least in the Mid-South, where people might grant you could get good tamales across the Mississippi River in Greenville, MS, but if you want pie, you need to cross the bridge and go to Rhoda's. I pulled in about 10:30 a.m. Miss Rhoda's daughter, who has taken over most of the cooking duties, was slinging pots and pans in the kitchen, and dishing up cabbage cooked with ham, sweet potatoes and fried chicken for the day's lunch. She stopped to fish me three dozen tamales out of a massive pot on the stove, and pack them in their cooking liquid in a No. 10 can that had probably held that day's sweet potatoes. Meanwhile, her mother, Ms. Rhoda herownself, hollered at me from around the corner, where she and a gentleman friend were tying tamales, three to a bundle, with strips of corn shuck. "Where you from, baby?" I'm from Jonesboro. "Whooo, that's a long way. You come all the way down here to get some of Rhoda's tamales?" Well, sort of. I was in Monticello on business, and while I was that close, I wasn't going to miss getting tamales to take home. Can't get good tamales in Jonesboro. "Honey, I know dat's right. Y'all got them Meskin tamales up there." (I did not promise this post would be politically correct. Sorry.) We visited for a few minutes, all the while Ms. Rhoda's gnarled and bent fingers flying as she'd pluck up three tamales, stack them in a pyramid, grab a length of husk, slide it beneath the stack, and cinch it not-too-tight. Tamales went in a pot on the floor. We had gotten through people we both knew up and down the Delta when Ms. Rhoda's daughter called me back to the other side of the room. "Baby, I got yo' tamales." And in fact, she did, foil over the top of the can, the whole things wrapped in a few pages of the Chicot County Advertiser. Forty bucks, and well worth it. "What kind of pie you got today?" I asked hopefully. "Lemme look." She pulled open the oven door. "Lessee, I got pecan, chess and egg custard. I got apple and peach. I got coconut cream. Won't be ready for about 15-20 minutes." Sadly, I didn't think I had 15-20 minutes, nor did I need to bring home an entire pie. Had I had, I would have been faced with the Hobson's choice of chess or pecan or coconut cream. My tamales, still in the can, are in the fridge. Tomorrow, I'll parcel them out, wrap them in plastic wrap, and freeze them. Then I'll go to the grocery store and get cans of cheap no-beans canned chili and boxes of Saltine crackers, and be sure I have plenty of cheddar cheese to grate for the top, and we will binge on tamales. And I will wish I had egg custard pie.
  12. I should have taken a pic. Stayed at a B&B in a small town in South Arkansas last night, and got up to a breakfast that would have satisfied three truck drivers. French toast, fried him, yogurt with fruit, coffee. And the rooms in this BnB, in a lovely old turn-of-the-century house with air conditioning that works REAL well, are $75 a night. I skippped lunch, and, so far, dinner. Still cruisin' on that breakfast.
  13. On a work related road trip today and had lunch in a sandwich shop on the town square in the small town of Warren, AR. Discovered something I think may be lifechanging in the sandwich realm. Ordered the turkey parmesan sandwich, which boasted decent deli smoked turkey, cheese, tomato, lettuce, and avocado. What elevated it was that the bread, a nice sourdough, been liberally buttered and SPRINKLED HEAVILY WITH GRATED PARMESAN BEFORE GRILLING. Dear sweet Baby Jesus, that was marvelous.
  14. Six Instant Pots. That's damn impressive. I'm fond of mine, but have no wish for another.
  15. @chefmd writes: "A trip to V. Sattui tasting room resulted in purchasing these two very aromatic dry wines. Drinking at 10 AM is very wrong. Tasting wine at 10 AM is very different. It is also 1 PM east coast time. " In whose world is drinking at 10 a.m. very wrong? Certainly not mine. It is, after all, five o'clock somewhere.
  16. kayb

    Dinner 2017 (Part 6)

    I have no clue if they actually use mayo in Mexico. That's just a holdover from the tomato pies of my childhood.
  17. It was perfect. Had a little bit of chew, not mushy, but very tender. I always err on the side of going more time instead of less with pot roasts, shoulder roasts and the like; I'd rather have them fall-apart tender than not.
  18. kayb

    Dinner 2017 (Part 6)

    Oh, my God. I perfected this thing this summer. It's habit-forming four ears of corn, kernels cut off and cobs scraped Assortment of tomatoes, sliced if regular tomatoes, cut in half if cherries or grapes; about 2-3 pounds' worth Olive oil and sea salt A cup of plain greek yogurt about 1 tsp. smoked paprika about 1/2 tsp cumin about 1 cup grated cotija cheese 1/2 cup mayonnaise (preferably Hellman's, unless you're one of those Miracle Whip peeps) 1/2 cup grated co-jack cheese Your favorite pie crust Sliced or half the tomatoes (I generally use a combo), drizzle with olive oil, sprinkle with sea salt, and roast at 325F for an hour or so, until a lot of the moisture is gone. Stir together the corn and milk scraped from cobs, yogurt, spices and cotija cheese. Set aside. Stir together the mayo and grated co-jack. Set aside. Par-bake pie crust, using weights, for 10 minutes, or just don't use one (I generally don't). In a nine-inch deep dish pie pan, or in crust, layer corn/yogurt mixture with tomatoes, winding up with tomatoes. Top tomatoes with mayo-cheese mixture. Bake at 350F for 20 minutes or so, or until topping is browned. Let cool a bit before eating. Serve warm or at room temp. Good the next day, but needs to be warmed to take the chill off. Roasting the tomatoes is the key. Whole thing gets too soggy, otherwise. This was yesterday's. It's gone now.
  19. Dinner yesterday included three of four dishes made at least partially in the Instant Pot: Carnitas, using the recipe in Hip Pressure Cooking, here. I used the 7-pound pork shoulder roast I'd picked up at Aldi, cut it into six big chunks, marinated in dry rub overnight in the fridge, browned and added water, cooked for 90 minutes manual and NPR'd. Perfect shredding texture. Damn near filled up my six quart pot. Refried beans. Sauteed a finely minced onion and some garlic in the pot; added a one-pound bag of Rancho Gordo cranberry beans and six cups of water, along with about a teaspoon of smoked paprika and a half-teaspoon of cumin. Cooked on the "beans" setting, upping the time to 45 minutes. Added a teaspoon and a half of salt, mashed with a potato masher, transferred to a skilled and cooked down. Just damn near perfect. And Mexican rice. I forget the link for the recipe, and it doesn't matter, because it wasn't very good. No matter. There was plenty of everything else. I have more than a pound of carnitas and lots of beans left. We pretty much decimated the tomato/street corn pie.
  20. kayb

    Dinner 2017 (Part 6)

    Labor Day dinner a day early yesterday was, for whatever reason, Mexican themed: Tacos al pastor from carnitas; tomato and street corn pie, refried beans, rice. Washed down with a (not shown) Negra Modelo and a wedge of lime. Followed by abject misery of having eaten too much, and a nap.
  21. Yes, it does. On my list of things to do today. I've been stuck on Rose Levy Beranbaum's potato bread of late, but I think I may try the milk bread someone posted, and I saved the recipe for, recently.
  22. There are no words for the depth of my envy. But I am going to the Gulf and NOLA the end of October. There will be oysters, yes, there will. And seafood at every meal. And breakfast at Brennan's, which is worth the price of travel to NOLA.
  23. Wow. Bathrooms with entertainment.
  24. kayb

    Dinner 2017 (Part 6)

    Just read it. Thanks. Will have to try next weekend.
  25. OK, disregard question on the dinner thread. Glad you liked it!
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