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eG Foodblog: Chris Hennes (2012) - Chocolate, Tamales, Modernism, etc.


Chris Hennes

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Chris, I have a couple of pasta racks but had problems with both - sometimes I'm a total klutz.

So I got one of these at KMart - in fact, I was in the store when they had one of the special discount announcements and when I got to checkout, the price was reduced by $2.00.

I don't use it for anything except pasta and other foods and keep it in one of the XXL Ziplock storage bags between uses.

It folds flat and is sturdy enough to hang several batches of pasta and sheets of fruit leather for final drying after coming out of the dehydrator.

"There are, it has been said, two types of people in the world. There are those who say: this glass is half full. And then there are those who say: this glass is half empty. The world belongs, however, to those who can look at the glass and say: What's up with this glass? Excuse me? Excuse me? This is my glass? I don't think so. My glass was full! And it was a bigger glass!" Terry Pratchett

 

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And the drained onions: no browning, and still relatively intact. They tasted like... onion butter. Plenty of onion flavor, but also very buttery (of course).

Drained onions.jpg

Chris, to me those onions just cry for mushroom duxelle and maybe a little drop of balsemic vinegar to fill an omlette or a crepe.

My mouth waters!

"Commit random acts of senseless kindness"

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Chris, when making baked lasagne dishes, I have always found it the most convenient to make the pasta as I was going along: First I'd portion the dough and kind-of "pre-roll" each portion, meaning that I'd do the whole folding and re-rolling thing until I got something I thought was ready for thinning, then I'd set that aside and do the next portion, and so on. After that, I'd just get my mise all set up with the baking dish, the ingredients and a sheet pan lined with tea towels all near a big pot of boiling water and a big bowl of ice water. Then it's simple to roll out one portion of pasta to the desired thickness, blanch in the boiling water, shock in the ice water, fish it out and put it on the tea towels to blot, cut it to size, put it in the baking dish, top with ingredients, now back to thinning the second portion of pasta. And so on. This can also be helpful if, after doing the process with one portion of pasta, you decide that you rolled it too thin or too thick -- because you can adjust the machine for the next portion.

This eliminates the hassle of having to find someplace to hand a zillion sheets of lasagna, and I anyway don't think fresh pasta particularly benefits from drying anyway.

--

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Damn, slkinsey, now somebody tells me that! That's a great idea, one that obviously never occurred to me. In fact, I cover the fresh pasta with damp towels while I am doing the rest of the stuff, so your way makes much, much more sense—thanks.

Edited by Chris Hennes
Corrected tea towels: "damp" not "damn" (log)

Chris Hennes
Director of Operations
chennes@egullet.org

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With the xantham added, it was different. As I passed through the rollers repeatedly it just became crumbly.

Sorry Mark I was wondering if you could clarify. Pasta dough that becomes more crumbly the more you knead it does not sound like a good thing. To my mind, crumbly pasta dough won't come together. Perhaps you meant to say the opposite?

Not really. The dough was weird. It only came together so much, and then remained the same, still being considerably crumbly. I learned to accept it, and just roll it thinner in spite of it being crumbly, and it worked out great. For my normal pasta dough (flour + eggs + salt), had I let it stay that crumbly before thinning it out, it would have been a disaster. With xantham, it was OK. Weird stuff.

I think the issue is that the xantham makes it very non-stick. So the dough want to crumble instead of stick together, in spite of the gluten being well developed. A light hand about excessive folding and rerolling, and it goes well.

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Of course, it's too late for any good advice for today's lasagne. Here's my pasta-cooking station:

1 of 14 - Cooking pasta.jpg

And my assembly station:

2 of 14 - Assembly station.jpg

Since this lasagna has a lot of pasta in direct contact with the baking dish, I start by buttering the dish:

3 of 14 - Buttered dish.jpg

Then Bugialli suggests a thin layer of Bolognese to start: I think the point is that it makes the lasagne easier to get out of the pan, but don't quote me on that:

4 of 14 - Bolognese 1.jpg

Then the first pasta layer goes in, coming up and over the sides of the dish:

5 of 14 - First pasta layer.jpg

A thin layer of cheese:

6 of 14 - First cheese layer.jpg

Pasta:

7 of 14 - Second pasta layer.jpg

Bechamel (balsamella, I guess I ought to say):

8 of 14 - First bechamel layer.jpg

9 of 14 - Spread out.jpg

More pasta:

10 of 14 - Third pasta layer.jpg

Full meat layer:

11 of 14 - Second meat layer.jpg

Etc. etc. etc. Continue until you run out of pan or pasta (I ran out of pan, I'm making a small one here). The last layer should be either cheese or bechamel, and should be a spinach pasta layer. Mine was bechamel:

12 of 14 - Final bechamel layer.jpg

Final pasta layer:

13 of 14 - Final pasta layer.jpg

And finally, closed up:

14 of 14 - Wrapped.jpg

This bakes for only about a half hour, so it's in the fridge now.

Chris Hennes
Director of Operations
chennes@egullet.org

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Interesting that it's all kind of "sealed up" in a hermetic pasta chamber. This will presumably not allow for any escaping steam unless you cut vent holes in the top layer. Is this according to the recipe? Or do you normally do it this way? Also, is it supposed to be nude pasta on the top? I've always finished with a layer of ragu and grated parmigiano. Seems like naked pasta on top could dry out, get hard/crispy and interfere with slicing.

--

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Interesting that it's all kind of "sealed up" in a hermetic pasta chamber. This will presumably not allow for any escaping steam unless you cut vent holes in the top layer. Is this according to the recipe? Or do you normally do it this way? Also, is it supposed to be nude pasta on the top? I've always finished with a layer of ragu and grated parmigiano. Seems like naked pasta on top could dry out, get hard/crispy and interfere with slicing.

This is according to the recipe: no steam vents. I've never really thought about it, but I've never had a problem. And yes, it's nude pasta on top: the top and sides get toasted and crunchy. And it's a very firm lasagna because there are so many layers of pasta with such thin layers of filling, so the crispness doesn't really interfere with slicing.

Chris Hennes
Director of Operations
chennes@egullet.org

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Strange, that's the second time in a couple of days I've seen the 'fold the bottom lasagne sheets over the top' technique having never seen it before - which makes really good sense (Saw it on a tv program, but he did put a final thin layer of sauce on top I think). I'm a fan of the more compact lasagne.

I love animals.

They are delicious.

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I'm making a green bean fricassee to go with it, and the recipe calls for soaking the green beans in cold water for 30 minutes before cooking them: does anyone know what that's about?

Sounds like something one would do with beans that are not "snappy" to rehydrate them.

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Yeah, we'll see. I haven't tried the MC recipe in lasagne yet.

For those of you who compost, what do you use in your kitchen to hold the scraps? This is my compost bucket, next to my cutting board:

Compost container.jpg

What, you don't pocket mulch?

Sorry, obscure simpsons quote..

Great blog by the way - loving the mix of molecular gastronomy (Hate that term really though!), mexican food which I know nothing about and the realism of occasional burgers and eating leftovers!

I love animals.

They are delicious.

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OK, here's the lasagne straight out of the oven:

1 of 2 - Baked lasagne.jpg

And served with a side of fricassee green beans (which I thought wound up a touch overcooked, but were delicious):

2 of 2 - Plated lasagna.jpg

That's 13 total layers of pasta in the finished dish. It's a shame that in the photo you can't make out the alternating layers of yellow and green pasta: it's a neat look.

Chris Hennes
Director of Operations
chennes@egullet.org

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The lasagna looks quite nice, but I'm not sure if I like the pasta layer on top. I normally top my lasagna with a layer of bechamel sprinkled with Parmesan. The Parmesan gets nicely golden and crusty and the bechamel acts as a "base" for it. Still I think I'll have to try it this way once too...

Do you fell that the pasta sheet on the side help with lifting the lasagne out of the pan? Or is there another reason for those?

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The lasagna looks quite nice, but I'm not sure if I like the pasta layer on top. I normally top my lasagna with a layer of bechamel sprinkled with Parmesan. The Parmesan gets nicely golden and crusty and the bechamel acts as a "base" for it. Still I think I'll have to try it this way once too...

Do you fell that the pasta sheet on the side help with lifting the lasagne out of the pan? Or is there another reason for those?

I could take or leave the bare pasta on top, but I do like having the structural support on the sides: it's easier to plate, and it stands upright more easily once there. The side sheets give it a little integrity that normally you don't have. I could see making the lasagna exactly like this, though, and then adding a layer of bechamel on the top: that might be interesting to try next time.

Chris Hennes
Director of Operations
chennes@egullet.org

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