Objective Foodie
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Posts posted by Objective Foodie
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19 hours ago, Lancelot said:
Very interesting to see a BC wine in the line up. Hope it showed well. I'll be visiting them tomorrow.
It was good. It's great to see Canadian wines appear more often in wine lists. Very difficult to guess blind though, most of us thought it was a fresher style of Syrah from Australia.
I hope you enjoyed your visit!
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Lunch by Pol Roger at the Cherwell Boathouse in Oxford.
- Heritage tomato salad with parma ham and croutons
- Rack of lamb, fine beans, caramelised onion purée and confit potatoes (similar to those from QCH)
- Poached Peaches, peach sorbet, pistachio and sponge
And all the wines served blind as per the tradition in out wine club. The Ridge, the Climens and the Alión were outstanding.
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On 5/4/2021 at 11:20 PM, Duvel said:
Nice ! The chicken is done SV before searing ?Ahh ... and more importantly: which wine ? 😊
Oops! Sorry for the late reply!
Yes, the chicken was done sous vide, primarily to ensure that the filling was properly sealed off by the meat. Then, dried and seared for a minute on high heat.
Hehe, it was a special occasion so we opened a bottle of Werlitsch Ex Vero II from 2006, a blend of Chardonnay and Sauvignon Blanc from Styria. His wines age incredibly well.
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Here is our recipe for a lentil stew that we often make. The vegetarian version is as good as the original. As any stew, it improves with time in the fridge.
Lentils
Yields 6 servings
1 large onions
1 large carrots
2 medium tomatoes
1 red pepper
500g of green lentils
1.5 litres of water (for better results: beef stock)
1.5 tbsp of Spanish paprika
2 bay leaves
1 tbsp of salt
1 head of garlic chopped in half
Pepper75g pancetta
50g of beef bone marrow (optional)
100g of smoked chorizo (Asturian)Method
1. Rinse the vegetable, peel onions and carrots.
2. Cut 10% of veg, chop into 1cm thick pieces and set aside.
3. Sauté the 90% left (whole, without chopping) in a pressure cooker with some olive oil until some browning is achieved.
4. Put 1 tbsp of oil on a tray, add chopped vegetables, lardons and bone marrow.
- Roast at 220C with convection until some charring can be seen on the vegetables.
- Mix if needed while roasting
- Half way through the cooking process, add chopped chorizo (1cm thick slices)
5. Add water and spices.
6. Once it boils, add lentils.
7. Close the pressure cooker and cook under max pressure for 10min
8. Turn off hob. Let cool down and release the pressure
9. Remove boiled vegetables from the cooker, blend them and return resulting purée to the cooker
10. Add half of the roasted veg/pancetta into the mix
11. Mix and adjust salt.
12. Plate and use rest of roasted veg and pancetta to decorate as a topping.
Vegetarian version
Replace meat by:
* 1 tbsp of miso paste
* Double the amount of veg.Change method with:
* Roast all veg before cooking lentils. Then add 50% of them to the pot and cook with the lentils. Reserve the other half and chop into dices.
* Add in and mix the chopped veg once the lentils are cooked.
* Correct seasoning at the end. It might need more since there is no cured meat.- 2
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Wine books
in Wine
The Wines of Germany by Anne Krebiehl MW is very good if you are into Riesling or Spätburgunder (a very affordable way to drink Old World Pinot). I find that GG (Grosses Gewächs) wines by the VDP producers are extraordinary good value and highly underrated.
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7 hours ago, weinoo said:
Now you're just teasing. What I would give for a cassoulet from St. John.
Hehe! It was a real treat after months in lockdown in the UK.
Glad to see that you could enjoy a day out in NYC! And that Bründlmayer is delicious
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1 hour ago, weinoo said:
But - do you have a recipe for those crepes?
We used a recipe from Georges Blanc, here's him making them on video. Apparently it was his grandmother's invention. The recipe is in French though
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14 hours ago, jmacnaughtan said:
Great sauce! Although I've never seen it cooked separately from the chicken 🤔
It's delicious! We used some roast chicken leftovers, so very fast to make.
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Also, for a restaurant with 3 stars from Michelin we expected more consistency in the tarts. Photos in Google's reviews show an incredibly large variability. Some fully set, some clearly undercooked.
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We have tried following the original recipe from Pacaud. Beating the eggs for 30min is clearly wrong, about 4 to 5min gives good results (or until the eggs quadruple in volume).
The temperature of the chocolate sabayon is crucial for it to set at the correct consistency, closer to 70C it will resemble a crème anglaise, 75C a soft flan.
After a couple of iterations we got very good results:
We really couldn't find any decently written recipes, so we added ours to our blog.
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On 3/20/2021 at 11:24 PM, Shelby said:
Would you be willing to give directions for the pickled fennel?
On 3/21/2021 at 6:48 PM, kayb said:Back from a week on the road, catching up on this thread. Absolutely gorgeous meals, y'all. @Objective Foodie, I too would like that recipe/technique for pickled fennel, should you wish to share it.
We are sorry for the delay! It's a simple recipe for a quick pickle, based on a recipe from J. Weissman.
Ingredients:
1 cucumber
1 fennel with its leaves
360g apple cider vinegar
180g water
15g salt
15g white sugar
Optional: dill, garlic
Method:
Cut the cucumber into 1cm slices. Cut the fennel on a mandolin (2-3mm slices). Combine both in a jar. Bring to boil the vinegar and water. Dissolve the salt and sugar in the liquids. Pour the liquid over the vegetables. Cover and cool down. Ready to eat in 2-3h. It can be stored in the fridge for weeks.
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47 minutes ago, gfweb said:
Looks tasty.
Fried chicken or chicken patty?
Fried chicken, Nashville style, bathed in spiced oil. Mouthwateringly good!
16 minutes ago, weinoo said:Imagine how good it might be without the fennel?!
Haha! The fennel was pickled too. It gives a hint of aniseed that works well.
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Dinner 2021
in Cooking
Posted
This was popularised in Spain by Casa Julián (see Matías Gorrotxategi's video making them) to accompany their famous steak. The peppers are quickly sautéed in olive oil and then left to braise/caramelise in the preserving liquid they come with.
José Andrés has another video/recipe, following a slightly different procedure too.