Steve Irby
-
Posts
541 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Store
Help Articles
Posts posted by Steve Irby
-
-
Another pretty simple lunch with grilled salmon served on a Panera bagel with a quick coleslaw. I decided to punch it up a little (actually a lot) with a tapenade/aioli/mayo mix of salt cured capers, preserved lemons, garlic, castelvetrano olives, EVOO, and mayo. I cured the lemons for about 10 days after salting and vacuum sealing.
The start of the lemons early last week
On a compression tangent trying to squeeze a little flavor out of a pretty bland Aldi $1.00 cantaloupe.
- 8
- 1
-
-
Homemade hot link on a baguette from Craft Bakery served with a heirloom tomato. A really tasty and simple lunch. The sausage was a lot hotter than what I normally make. I think the cayenne that I used must have had a much higher heat unit. I just about burned up my neighbors palate with the links that I gave her!
- 6
- 1
-
Oven roasted chicken thighs with Dixie Lilly yellow rice blend. The Perdue thighs came in a family pack from BJ's and were obviously culls from a mechanical processing line. The smallest were two bites with half a bone. They may have been small and mangled but they sure tasted good! They were marinated in a mix of fresh squeezed lemon and orange juice, crushed garlic and a roasted pepper seasoned salt. The pan drippings were reduced along with heavy cream and campari tomatoes then blitzed with a stick blender to create a medium bodied sauce.
- 9
- 2
-
It's been a pretty wet week or two on the gulf coast. Less soggy today so dinner came off the grill tonight. Dinner was nice, fatty pork steaks that I trimmed off of a butt that were marinated in olive oil, meyer lemon juice, rosemary, garlic and S&P with grilled potatoes. The potatoes were parboiled then quartered and slipped into the leftover marinade with the addition of butter prior to grilling.
- 14
- 5
-
-
On 7/10/2022 at 8:50 AM, heidih said:
So sorry for my lack of clarity. Your shrimp fest I am all in. I was referring to the dessert when you said struggling for two days with a chocolate apricot torte recipe that I've been eying for about 41 years.
Whoops! The recipe was from a small dessert collection published by Consumers Guide. It was probably a stocking stuffer from my sister and the recipes that I've tried over the years have been very good. I had a few hiccups with this recipe that I know how to correct (more gelatin for apricot filling, finer grind of nuts for cake) but the chocolate filling has me stumped. The filling went grainy or seized during the assembly phase and would not flow or spread.
What I was shooting for
Filling direction
My ugly but tasty dessert!
The silver lining - Creme Brulee from the leftover egg yolks. Silky smooth.
- 9
- 1
- 3
-
3 hours ago, heidih said:
Seriously dude - what prep - where originated - and status?
Not exactly sure of the question but the shrimp were prepped last week in conjunction with another meal for company. A trip to the seafood market yielded two pounds of headless Royal Reds and two pounds of large, brown headless shrimp. Twenty four of the brown shrimp were shelled and deveined (leaving tail segment intact) to become grilled shrimp skewers (4x6 shrimp) as an appetizer. Twenty of the cleaned and deveined shrimp were leftover and were vacuumed bagged in my JVR Vac100 and frozen.
The mise en place for dinner started on friday with the wife buying some really nice pencil asparagus at Aldi's which were washed, trimmed and prepped for the microwave. Shrimp were defrosted and put on standby. Pasta cooked and put on standby. After trip to prehab for wifes knee replacement (scheduled 7/12) dogs ate half of pasta and remainder into fridge.
Saturday dinner service as described above with copious amounts of butter and garlic providing joint lubricant and anti-oxidant protection as per the Ortho's request. It's been awhile since I baked so we had some overnight white with more butter with the meal.
The status is happy dogs, happy wife, and happy cook.
- 10
- 1
-
Easy peasy supper tonight. Pencil asparagus nuked for 1.25 minutes then tossed with a butter/lemon juice emulsion, some leftover pasta and butterflied shrimp that I prepped the day before. The quick prep was particularly appreciated after struggling for two days with a chocolate apricot torte recipe that I've been eying for about 41 years.
- 12
- 2
-
@Duvel very nice photography showing the progression of dinner! That first photo is great with the juxtaposition of the well used cutting boards, an Apple computer and Charlottes Web. It reminds me of the meals with my Mom. Decades later it ain't the meals it's the memories.
- 7
- 1
-
@Heidi the Royal Reds are wild caught from the Gulf of Mexico or east coast of Florida. Here's a link you may find interresting. https://eatalabamaseafood.com/articles/story/royal-red-shrimp-alabamas-gulf-coast
- 1
-
@Duvel We usually leave them in the brine for two or three days before eating but sometimes as long as two weeks. Royal reds are $8/lb for 10/12 count headless shrimp so you can stack 'em high on the bun!
- 3
- 1
-
-
-
We've had a stalled front for the past few days so it's not been the best grill tending weather. I smoked these not-so-baby back ribs on my weber gas grill and Smokai generator with apple pellets. The ribs are cooked over indirect heat using one of the three burners. Temps stay around 250F with a cooking time of ~7 hrs.
- 18
- 2
-
My better half bought two pork butts for me to cook for a KyDerby party that were a little on the large side. I portioned (poached) seven pork steaks for the freezer prior to smoking the pork on my weber grill. For the past couple of years I've smoke the butts for the 6-8 hours (internal temp ~ 150) then overnight in the oven at 225F. The finish temp is usually around 205 but this time 215F. Here's a few photo's out of the oven and "pulling".
The pork was well received (no leftovers😢) so I grilled two pork steaks for supper tonight with a few supplements resulting in a mixed grill of pork steaks, deboned chicken thighs, eggplant, zucchini and brussel sprouts.
- 17
- 4
-
-
Lunch was a quick East meets West Soup. The soup base was a rich chicken stock with chili paste and bamboo shoots in sesame oil over rice. The greens were BJ's Super Salad Mix with the addition of sliced mushrooms. I had a few leftover grilled baby back ribs that were added along with pickled eggs. We love Bubbies Kosher Dill Pickles and I'll add boiled eggs to the brine as the pickles are eaten. The briny eggs were really tasty in the soup.
- 10
- 2
-
-
-
I'm not sure what to call this dish other than pretty darn tasty. The base is chicken stock and coconut milk with the addition of spring onions, baby bello mushrooms, spinach and leftover Calrose Botan rice. I finished the dish with bamboo sprouts in chili sesame oil, chili sa-te paste and a squeeze of key limes.
- 14
- 3
-
-
-
Chamber Vacuum Sealers, 2014–
in Kitchen Consumer
Posted
ARY recommends 10w non detergent hydraulic oil. There's a lot of brands available to fulfill that requirement. What your looking for is pure mineral oil without additives. The Lubriplate oil is 10W ISO 32 non detergent mineral available from Motion Industries for ~$15.00 if you have a store locally. I have a JVR Industries Vac100 that uses 5W ISO 22 mineral oil. JVR was nice enough to include a quart of oil with the delivery of the machine. They have it available for ~$6/qt or $27/gal. They also carry other brands and ISO numbers for commercial machines at very competitive prices.
I've had the JVR Vac100 for 6 months and will do a review in the next few weeks. As a spoiler alert I'm really glad that I bought the JVR unit rather than the VP-215. High performance with a countertop footprint smaller than the VP-112.