Recently: 2008 Clos St Thomas, from the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon. Excellent red - a bit smoky, but soft, fruity, low tannins, without being sweet. Also, Ould Thaleb, a quite good Moroccan rosé (really!)
Nope So my marinade was soy sauce, chinkiang vinegar, and potato starch, with a bit of cooking oil, all mixed up at once, as I've always done and always see recipes for. I suppose I could consciously drain it next time. As for coating in starch, do you mean before it hits the wok, or as part of the marinade as I did?
So the other day I bought one of those Thai grills/charcoal wok stoves, for getting serious damn heat outdoors when stir frying. Loaded it up with hot charcoal tonight and sure enough it got HOT. So hot that when I added my marinaded chicken cubes, a portion of chicken literally exploded out of the wok and headed straight for me, burning my arm in the process. What didn't hit my arm travelled a good 5 feet or so. I guess maybe the chicken was too wet? Is one not supposed to marinade meat when dealing with such high temperatures? I imagine it still wasn't as hot as a commercial wok range, but then also I'm using a 14" wok, as opposed to a much larger one typical for such a high-heat application. Basically, I got this grill in part to get searing heat and super wok hei, which I achieved...so how do I prevent further injury?
It depends a lot on the country. In Iranian and Turkish cooking it's used a lot, but I don't really remember celery making much of an appearance growing up eating lots of Iraqi food, or in the countless times I've been to Lebanon. It exists of course, but it never struck me as common.
Thank you! There are lots of results for that. Although a lot of them seem to be in Canada. I assume it's damn difficult to have meat shipped from Canada to the US?
So I was in Sweden recently and was exposed to the wonders of smoked reindeer heart and smoked reindeer rump. I think it's my new favorite meat. Are there any online/mail-order sources in the US that sell it? Maybe in...Minnesota, or Alaska, or something?
Nah, the Zeer Oude was picked up for me at an airport in the low countries in the last year, as was my Corenwijn. It's pretty much brand new. The only problem with the ZO is the crappy 35% ABV. Even the Corenwijn is under 40. I haven't done a side by side tasting of the ZO with the Corenwijn, they seem pretty similar though.
It seems my pop-up bar is kicking into life again, and I dislike juicing dozens of lemons and limes in a hand press. It seems the two best rated commercial-style presses (on Amazon, at least) are the OrangeX Olympus and similar, and the Hamilton Beach 932 - the latter stands out as it appears to be the highly-rated only rack-and-pinion system. I just got back from Turkey, where on very street corner, someone is squeezing oranges, and they all have rack-and-pinion presses. Is that setup really better than the OrangeX lever type? Is there a decent one for less than the very high cost of the Hamilton Beach?