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jmacnaughtan

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Posts posted by jmacnaughtan

  1. I have to confess that I hate standing around skimming stock.  I've learned to just bring the bones/flesh/skin to the boil, dump out the water and rinse the pieces well enough to just leave the pot on a simmer.  The result doesn't seem to suffer...

  2. I don't know what a glaze is.  Cost is not a concern.  How much less expensive could a glaze be?

     

    A glaze makes cakes nice and shiny, while a ganache can often have a dull, matte finish.  Chocolate glazes don't always use chocolate (rather a combination of cocoa powder, sugar, water, glucose, gelatin and dairy), so are generally pretty cheap.  They also have the advantage of freezing well.

     

    I much prefer using glazes on cakes because the layer tends to be thinner, it's shinier, more attractive, and easier to work with because it's more fluid.  You can also work with a wider range of colours and flavours.

     

    If it helps, this cake uses a chocolate glaze I picked up from one of Francisco Migoya's books.

  3. As should be. I enjoy watching people try to figure out a way to eat something obviously meant to be finger food without touching it. Makes me glad I'm an uncouth slob who can just enjoy food without caring what people I don't even know think about how I choose to go about it.

     

     

    I don't know about that.  It takes real skill to eat prawns with both cutlery and elegance ;)

  4. I always do half and half- half the sugar will help stabilize the yolk (probably) and the other half helps stop milk from sticking and scorching on the bottom of the pan.  

     

    If you're using starch in your crémeux, then it's a good idea to mix it with sugar, add a little cold liquid, then add the egg yolks.  It helps avoid lumps.

    • Like 1
  5. Yeah, I don't tend to share restaurant dishes- unless it's with my better half.  Then it's OK.

     

    But for other people, I subscribe to the philosophy that if you want to try something, you should order it.  I wouldn't share a beer or a glass of wine, so why a main course?

    • Like 1
  6. Enjoying the fact that a team of people are cooking for me.  A wide variety of wine.  A good atmosphere, and occasionally the chance to dine (well) in the sun.

     

    And service.  I love great service, when the waiters are invisible until you need them and your glass is always full.

  7. I haven't had casu marzu, but the fromages forts they do in the remote regions of France are a little... different.

     

    The worst I had was cachat from Provence: refermented cheese ends with garlic, rosemary and salt.  The texture of peanut butter and a flavour that lingers for days.

     

    I think it was in Brittany that I tried a cheese refermented in local beer.  Interesting, but I wouldn't try it again.  Also, I find the custom in the Nord Pas de Calais pretty exotic, where you dip pungent maroilles cheese on toast into your breakfast coffee or hot chocolate.  Just the thought of that film of smelly grease that forms makes me queasy.

     

    ETA: syntax

    • Like 1
  8. I have not eaten balut.  Still, it seems to me that eating balut is (conceptually) not that different from eating ortolans in France.  Yet there seems to be less "revulsion" (so to speak) about ortolans - I wonder if it is because it is FRENCH cuisine.....

    Here's one article describing the "covering the head" ritual (all sorts of speculations as to WHY...) and descriptions of the gradual eating of the bird, the internal organs (ALL of them), the head dangling from one's lips, the crunching of the bones...

     

    There's actually quite a lot of revulsion about eating ortolan.  However, this may be trumped by the illegal cachet associated with it.

     

    Conceptually, it is pretty different.  You're eating, essentially, a roasted adult bird, one that is small enough to eat whole in the same way that some fish are eaten whole.  But when you ask people to eat what appears to be a nice, safe, friendly boiled egg and they open it to find a bird foetus, it's a shock.

     

    Also, why are you so worked up about French cuisine?

     

    ETA: proper syntax

  9. Whole dried fish in northern Russia, as a beer snack.

     

    Also monkfish liver, veal head, pig ear and foot, beef muzzle salad, lamb testicle...

     

    The worst out of those was the liver- it has the texture of foie gras and the flavour of mackerel.  Really offputting.

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