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slkinsey

eGullet Society staff emeritus
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Posts posted by slkinsey

  1. ...when we say all American we mean from every corner of the United States...

    If there is one thing that I think drags down the overall quality of NYC barbecue (which, it must be said, has made huge strides in the past few years) it's that so many of the places seem to be trying to be all things to all people, and produce radically different styles of barbecue. It's not the case, as some people think, that Texas open pit barbecue joints cook only beef, and so on. But it is the case that they don't make Eastern Carolina style whole hog. Similarly, barbecue joints in Eastern Carolina may be cooking brisket, but they aren't making mesquite smoked Texas-style brisket. What we see in the City is that even the best multi-style barbecue places really only excel in one style, and their other offerings tend to be substantially less successful. Similarly, the best places that have opened in the past few years seem to be geared towards making one style of barbecue, or rather have one approach to making barbecue. Hill Country is an excellent example of this approach... note that they do not offer pulled pork.

  2. I wouldn't think that the taste would be different if you cook pasta covered or uncovered. I prefer to cook pasta in the largest volume of water practical (many people cook pasta in far to little water -- I consider 10 quarts to be about minimum for a pound of pasta). As a result, my pasta pot (this one, with a strainer insert) is usually filled close to the top. If I were to leave it covered throughout the pasta cooking process with the burner on full, it would foam over soon after coming back to the boil due to the starch released into the water.

  3. Anyway, what I'm looking for [is]...advice as to how to adapt large volume punch recipes such as those in JT to single servings.

    Why in God's name would you want to do that, Sam? Be a sport and have some folks over!

    Good point. When are you free? :wink:

  4. Yea, I'm with markk on this one. A lot of these things we cook uncovered we would either like to reduce (e.g., tomato sauce), might suffer from being covered (e.g., stocks), need more attention than a cover can provide (e.g., custard), would like to be at a rolling boil and therefore don't benefit much from a cover (e.g., potatoes), might overboil and foam over (e.g., pasta) and so on. The things we cook covered are only covered because we would like to have a steamy environment and would like to actively discourage evaporation (e.g., rice and braising). Anything that is primarily liquid and will be actively bubbling is not something I would tend to cover as I was cooking it.

    I often use some combination of covering and not-covering, primarily for heat-retention purposes. For example, when I cook pasta I always put the lid back on the pasta pot until the water comes back to a full boil.

  5. So, lately some Batavia arrak has been showing up again in NYC stores. It's been Batavia-Arrack van Oosten. A few bottles have come my way lately, and I'm looking for some ideas.

    Anyone who has read Jerry Thomas's book will know that Batavia arrack is featured prominently in the punch recipes. For example, we have the Arrack Punch. JT's recipe for three tumblers of puch goes something like this:

    Quote

     

    Take 2 wine-glasses of Batavia Arrack (old).

    3 wine-glasses of Jamaica rum.

    Sweeten to taste with loaf-sugar dissolved in hot water.

    Lemons and limes are also matter of palate, but two lemons are enough for the above quantity ; put then an equal quantity of water—i.e., not five but six glasses to allow for the lemon juice, and you have three very pretty tumblers of punch.

     

    So, it's 6:3:2:1 water to Jamaica rum to Batavia arrack to lemon juice, sweetened to taste. Leaving out the water, you could do something like this for a single serving:

    Quote

     

    1.5 oz : Jamaica rum

    1.0 oz : Batavia arrack

    0.5 oz : fresh lemon juice

    0.5 oz : demerara 2:1 simpla syrup (or more?)

    1.0 oz : water

    Shake with plenty of cracked ice (which should add more water) and strain into a rocks glass containing one large lump of ice.

     

    Anyway, what I'm looking for are good recipes for Batavia arrack, and secondarily advice as to how to adapt large volume punch recipes such as those in JT to single servings.

  6. Don't remember where I bought it. A lot of Haus Alpenz importa (Zirbenz Stone Pine Liqueur of the Alps, Batavia Arrack van Oosten, Rothman & Winter Orchard Apricot Liqueur and Crème de Violette, etc.) are starting to show up in NYC liquor stores lately. Recently I snagged some of their crème de violette, which is quite nice. They sell for a bit less than 25 bucks a bottle, I'd say.

  7. I recently acquired a bottle of Rothman & Winter Orchard Apricot Liqueur. It's an interesting product and I decided to taste-test it alongside Marie Brizard's Apry, which has long been considered the flagship apricot brandy.

    First impressions were that R&W's Orchard Apricot smells a lot more like a just-opened container of dried apricots. It's a light, cleaner, "fresh" aroma. Apry, by contrast, had a richer, more complex nose that was less obviously "apricot." In addition, Apry has a considerable almond-like component in the nose (apricot kernel?).

    Tasted along, the R&W product, again, has a light, fresh flavor very evocative of dried apricots. That said, I found the impression a little one-note, without a lot of backbone and complexity, which made me wonder how it would hold up in a cocktail. As predicted, Apry was richer, fuller and had a more substantial mouthfeel, but was less reminiscent of dried apricots. The kernel flavor was also quite apparent. Interestingly, Apry had a slight bite and seemed "hotter" compared to Orchard Apricot. Perhaps this is because Apry is 60 proof compared to only 48 for Orchard Apricot? I believe it was Eric who said that Orchard Apricot isn't as sweet as Apry. I can't say that this was my reaction. Or rather, it may have been the case that Apry's more intense and rich flavors compensated for a higher brix All in all, I didn't have the impression that Apry had any more "sweetness per flavor" compared to Orchard Apricot.

    Rothman & Winter says that "Orchard Apricot Liqueur combines juice from the seasonal harvest of Austria’s famed Klosterneuberger apricots (known locally as "Marillen") with an eau-de-vie produced from this same fruit." I wonder if this is an eau de vie made from distilled fermented apricot juice, or whether apricot flesh is macerated in neutral spirits which are then redistilled. Regardless, Orchard Apricot has a fresh, "juicy" character similar to other stabilized-fruit-juice-and-booze products such as Hypnotiq -- although I should hasten to add that R&W's products are much higher in quality. I was a little disappointed that it didn't have a more apparent eau de vie character (more on this below), and I didn't detect any evidence that apricot kernels were used in producing the eau de vie R&W uses in Orchard Apricot. Rather, it presented the light, uncomplicated, fresh "juicy" flavors and aromas of apricot.

    Marie Brizard says that "the apricots selected by Marie Brizard come from Africa and the Rousillon region of France. After distillation and maceration, the 'spirit' is blended with the finest Cognac to produce a smooth and velvety liqueur." The label also indicates that caramel coloring is added. It's not entirely clear from this whether MB macerates the apricots in neutral spirits and then redistills the infused liquid, making a kind of eau de vie, or whether the infused liquid is used as-is. Regardless, the almond-like flavors and aromas suggest that apricot kernels may be part of MB's process, whereas they and not part of R&W's process. Unlike Orchard Apricot, Apry does not include apricot juice. Apry uses Cognac (more on this below), which undoubtedly contributes to Apry's richness and overall fuller flavor.

    I suppose the most simple comparison between the two of them would be to say that Orchard Apricot is more like fruit juice whereas Apry is more like a fruit preserve. The former has a light flavor of fresh fruit, while the latter has a concentrated flavor of transformed fruit.

    We decided to give the two apricot liqueurs a go in a cocktail, and chose the Barnum (Was Right) Cocktail: 2 ounces Tanqueray; 1 ounce Apry or Orchard Apricot; 1/2 ounce fresh lemon juice; 1 short dash Angostura bitters; shake/strain. Both liqueurs came through quite nicely, and the two drinks appeared to have approximately the same level of sweetness. The version with Apry was noticably more colored. Interestingly, dilution with other ingredients really opened up Apry's fruit flavors, although the kernel flavor was apparent and the Apry cocktail was noticably richer. The version with Orchard Apricot was overall lighter and more delicate with a more subtle flavoring, while retaining the fresh character that sets R&W's product apart. Overall, my friends preferred the Apry cocktail. I enjoyed them both, and thought the Orchard Apricot cocktail was a nice change of pace. With a product this subtly flavored, however, it's going to be difficult to use in cocktails so that its flavor makes an impact but it doesn't overly sweeten the drink. I can see it being useful as an aromatic float, perhaps (Alchemist used to make me a drink that more or less consisted of a egg white gin sour with a bit of damson and/or sloe gin floated on top -- something like that sounds like a possibility for Orchard Apricot).

    With respect to R&W's eau de vie and MB's Cognac (remember I said "more on this below)... a lot depends on how much they're using. Just because they say they're using eau de vie and Cognac doesn't mean that 100% of the liquor has to be eau de vie and Cognac. Indeed, I would be surprised if this were the case. Something like 51% would be what I would expect, and there have been "XXXXX-based liqueurs" sold in the US that have had a substantially lower percentage of the claimed base spirit. I should add, however, that using only a percentage of eau de vie or cognac isn't necessarily a bad thing. The manufacturers add enough of the product to contribute the flavors, aromas, etc. they want. Some manufacturers only claim to be made with "French vodka" or "the finest Cognac" or whatever for image and marketing purposes only, but I don't believe that is the case for either R&W or MB.

  8. For reasons of schedule, I often have to shop at the 74th Street Fairway during peak after-work hours. Knowing what you want and where those things are located, and having a good game plan as to a single path that takes you everywhere you need to go is crucial. Usually for me: hard left into the vegetable aisle, then up to dairy for milk, butter and eggs, then bread, take a ticket for the appetizing line and buy coffee and cheese while waiting for my number to come up, then straight across to the North side, stopping for olive oil and/or vinegar on the way, then it's meat and/or fish, then into one of the Northernmost two aisles to get on line for a register. If I'm going upstairs to the organic section, I just walk down the express line chute to the front of the store and take the stairs. I never use a cart.

  9. Not to mention that, although some people defend the utility of having everyone tacitly agree to pretend the critic is anonymous, most everyone agrees that it's virtually impossible to both remain anonymous and attain sufficient dining experience/maintain enough dining experiences in a given locale to have anything worthwhile to say as a critic. The idea that real, actual anonymity is "crucial" to a food critic's work seems laughable. Certainly, around NYC some of the food critics who have done the very best have turned out to be the least anonymous (e.g., David Rosengarten).

  10. Kreuz is fairly expensive, especially considering where it is. For another frame of reference, Goode Company, which is arguably the best place in Houston, albeit not as good as Kreuz charges 7.95 for brisket, the flagship meat of Texas barbecue. Hill Country charges a bit more than double for lean brisket, and around 2 1/3 times more for fatty brisket. How large are the sides at Hill Country? At Goode it's 6.25 for a quart, which I assume is right around the size of Hill Country's "Feed Yer Family" portions selling at 14 to 16 bucks. Most likely, a dinner at Hill Country would come out approximately double what a dinner at Goode Company would cost, if not more.

  11. And let's not forget the Ducasse/Psaltis trick of making a clam chowder base out of pureed clams. I think they used razor clams for the puree, probably as much for the color as the flavor (I've done this using pureed quahogs for the base, and while it was delicious, the color was a bit murky).

  12. I have owned any number of siphons over the years. My advice is that you don't want to go less expensive than the baseline iSi, but rather you want to go more expensive -- more to the point, you want glass.

    My experience is that, after 6 months or so, the metal soda siphons start to smell like "old canteen" and nothing you can do to them will get rid of that slightly musty smell and taste in the water.

  13. B. more importantly, the following is a recipe for the Bramble put forth by the Bombay Sapphire company that at least implies to be Bradsell's, it uses muddled blackberries:

    http://prnewswire.co.uk/cgi/news/release?id=10270

    Sorry, but it strikes me that everything about that recipe suggests that it is either a "custom variation" for Bombay (note that it is called the "Brambled Bombay" rather than a "bombay Bramble") or simply a bad, misquoted adaptation. Honestly, that recipe is a mess: not only does the "instructions" section call for ingredients not on the ingredient list (soda and lemonaid) but it also specifies that all the ingredients be shaken together rather than the cremé de mûre being added to the top.

  14. Cross-pollinated from over here:

    well, the important thing is that we all agree fresh fruit is better when available...

    Hmmm... Well, not really.

    A well made liqueur or Eau de Vie can capture more of a fruit (and especially a spice or herb)'s essence than simple muddling.

    That's like saying fresh fruit is always better than jam.

    Hmm. I'm not sure I agree with that first statement. I don't think one could argue that a spectacular kirschwasser has more of the "essense of cherries" than fresh cherry juice, or that the highest quality crème de pêche has more of the "essence of peaches" than peach puree, or that a wonderful calvados pays d'auge has more of the "essense of apples" than cresh apple cider (I could continue with examples of tender herbs, etc.). Rather, what these things do is capture a certain slice of the ingredient's essense, and to a greater or lesser extent, transform them (eau de vie is a good example of this). Only perhaps with ingredients like Cointreau versus muddled orange peel do I think the alcoholic version is better at presenting the essense of the ingredient.

    Now, as to your second statement: I agree. Fresh fruit is not always better. Sometimes we want the once-or-more-removed presence of an eau de vie, aged fruit brandy or crème liqueur. I'd rather have Apry than muddled fresh apricots, for example. But that doesn't mean that Apry has captured more of the apricot than muddling would.

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