Jump to content

dcarch

participating member
  • Posts

    4,686
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by dcarch

  1. Anyone with a high school physics can tell you that there is no electricity passing thru the steak in the first photo. I have done this when I was a kid (Warning, don't you try this, you can be killed!!!): Stick a nail in each end of a hot dog, wire up the nails and plug into an outlet. The hot dog will be cooked in no time. dcarch
  2. Hair dryer is not a reliable long lasting heating device. An inexpensive convection oven would work better. The PID controller can take over the convection oven's thermostat if you set the thermostat at the highest. Why world you need to control humidity? You always want the air the driest. To dry air at lower temperature, you need to have a refrigeration cycle to dry the air and then reheat the air to accelerate the dehydration. dcarch
  3. Thanks guys. Went to Fairway, they had geese. $4.00 a lb. I figured, considering skin, fat, bones, head, neck, wings, giblets, feet, --- It probably came to $25.00 a lb. Oh well, once a year. :-) dcarch
  4. Modified Golden Sand Shrimp? dcarch
  5. It seems to me that the entire population of France are slow eaters. dcarch
  6. Anyone know where you can buy a whole goose in NYC and outter boroughs? Thanks. I see so many of them in parks, but not in stores. :-) dcarch
  7. You got it! Fletcherism! Very good! Hahaa! dcarch
  8. There is actually a name for the practice of eating slow. Any one know? I will keep you in suspense. I will tell you tomorrow. dcarch :-)
  9. dcarch

    Dinner! 2011

    The past week or so’s cooking by everyone has been totally spectacular, and truly awe inspiring. Such as: Nickrey’s dazzling food! mm84321’s and Mjx’s fowl play. djyee100’s Gkoong Ohb Woon Sen. Panaderia Canadiense’s Mangrove shrimp in wasabi-tomato sauce Rico’s Carbonara Keith_W’s wings Hassouni’s chili patrickamory’s chicken soup Panaderia Canadiense’s turkey breast djyee100’s winter salad mgaretz’s sous vide steak - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -------------------------------------------------------------------- A few times I have been asked by people to suggest ideas for their dishes for entering in the Master Chef TV show competition. This was one contestant's dish: baked beans, coleslaw, and pulled pork sandwich. To me, IMHO, Ifrom the few shows I have watched I didn't think this dish stood a chance. Too “humble”? It is not that it was not delicious; I would think that every other would be delicious. All contestants would be entering with T&T recipes. It seems to me that the dish must be beyond delicious, it must be outstanding, unique and most importantly, camera ready, after all, it's show business. Using this person's original ideas, I just suggested some modifications: Pulled pork - sous vided pulled pork instead of stewed pulled pork to get that juicy tenderness, and then quick BBQed to get that caramelized flavor. Sandwich - puff pastry instead of bread. Baked beans - used black beans instead of pinto/navy beans, added a touch of black garlic sweetness and a few drops of white truffle oil. Coleslaw - basic recipe, except only the cabbage was presented, all the other ingredients were blended into "coleslaw dressing". Cabbage was first quick blenched in concentrated chicken soup, but still crispy, then pickled in the dressing. Garnished with crispy coleslaw deep fried in bacon fat. dcarch
  10. Why is it necessary to de-vein shrimps? What do you think you are eating when you eat raw oysters and clams? dcarch
  11. Very few people have kitchen knives sharp enough to score tough pork skin. Invest in a surgical scalpel and some scalpel blades. They are very inexpensive on eBay. You will find a big difference. I bought some a few years back, 100 blades + blade holder, $8.00. The first blade is still sharp. I should have enough blades for 400 years of pork belly making. :-) dcarch
  12. Sounds like you will need a filter that has activated charcoal in it and a reverse osmosis filter. dcarch
  13. Serveral points: 1. Ceramic blade is brittle, but almost as hard as diamond, a ceramic scraper will remain sharp a long long time. 2. You cannot create a burr on a carbide scraper. Carbide is also extremely tough, only diamond tools can work on carbide. A carbide scraper will also last extremely long. 3. A microscope slide cover is about 1" x 1", but not a slide blank. dcarch picture shows my many carbide scrapers, including the first 3 from the left, which are custom made carbide scrapers. This picture shows the mirror shine a glass microscope slide blank can put on wood. The scratches were made by sandpaper.
  14. I will pay high price for cooking lessons for information I cannot get from youtube, from Googling, from the hundreds of cooking shows, or from eG Forums. dcarch
  15. In any case, I would not try to cook any low temperature food using a regular thermostat. They are highly inaccurate. dcarch
  16. Do you use a computer fan for something like this? Can they run off regular wall current if they are spliced into a power cord? Most computer fans are 5VDC or 12VDC. They cannot run on 110VAC. dcarch
  17. A steel woodworker's scraper gets dull at some point, then you will need to create the burr again, as was said. A carbide blade lasts for much longer (50 times longer?) There is another trick; you can buy microscope glass blank slices and use them as scrapers. It will give your wood a mirror smooth finish. dcarch
  18. Compressive strength is closely related to hardness. There are many kinds of bamboo. Young bamboo and mature bamboo are different. dcarch For steels, hardness is approximately proportional to tensile strength. This is the first time I've heard it compared to compressive. Can you think of materials that can take a lot of compressive force that are not hard? dcarch
  19. "-----the LeeValley scraper is an ideal tool, but difficult to master. it works extremely well on figured wood. but you have to know how to keep it flat and create that thin burr. videos might help ---" Get carbide planner knife blades on eBay. They are sharp, long lasting, and give you a very flat surface because they are very long. dcarch
  20. Compressive strength is closely related to hardness. There are many kinds of bamboo. Young bamboo and mature bamboo are different. dcarch
  21. "-----bamboo has a higher tensile strength than many alloys of steel, and a higher compressive strength than many mixtures of concrete. It even has a higher strength to weight ratio than graphite." Imagine what it can do to knives. dcarch
  22. Amazing blog so far. Everything. A very well equipped kitchen. Thank you! A small unimportant suggestion for your cutting board: I also have a white plastic cutting board which gets yellow after a while. It does not bother me and it is not a health issue, but if I invite friends over for dinner, I do the following: I lay a layer of paper towel on top, pour some bleach to wet the towel and cover the towel with plastic bag overnight. The next day the board will be completely pristine white. dcarch
  23. Don't they sell pre-sliced bagels? dcarch
  24. dcarch

    Dinner! 2011

    Dejah – I love beef tendons. Your ground turkey dish sounds very delicious, and healthy too. Blether – Wow! Amazing Cornish pasties. Rico – I like the way you serve lobster risotto, simple but graceful. Kayb – Every thing is grilled to perfection on that burger plate. Scottyboy – Overwhelmingly elegant plate design. Very much recalls the art of Ikebana. Jmahl – Wonderful clams. Keith_W – great plating for the salmon dish Mjx - lovely braised venison. -------------------------------------------------------------- - - The freak snow storm here in NY knocked down trees, power has been out here for many days. Halloween was basically cancelled. No street lights. No trick or treaters, Still trying to keep up with the Halloween spirit, t’is the season for strange foods: Indian bitter melon, sautéed in tomato sauce Octopus in pepper bacon sauce with pickled pacaya encurtida. Roasted pepper with tilapia. Home made bread dcarch
×
×
  • Create New...