Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

Dinner! 2007


rarerollingobject

Recommended Posts

Shaya, those hearts are just too cute for words.

Bruce, thanks for the compliments.

GTO, I was recently on an airline flight and saw this for sale in the onboard magazine.  I am almost inclined.  But I was wondering if it would be a good investment...people might think that I am starting to go a little nuts, if that was set up in my kitchen.

http://www.hammacher.com/publish/73033.asp...ative=658794741

I think that little studio is an absolute gem! I created a thread all about it a while back but it got deleted because it wasn't "relevant". Buy it! Buy it now!

Please take a quick look at my stuff.

Flickr foods

Blood Sugar

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Shaya, those hearts are just too cute for words.

Bruce, thanks for the compliments.

GTO, I was recently on an airline flight and saw this for sale in the onboard magazine.  I am almost inclined.  But I was wondering if it would be a good investment...people might think that I am starting to go a little nuts, if that was set up in my kitchen.

http://www.hammacher.com/publish/73033.asp...ative=658794741

I think that little studio is an absolute gem! I created a thread all about it a while back but it got deleted because it wasn't "relevant". Buy it! Buy it now!

I showed my bf and then mentioned that it would an excellent birthday gift for me in a couple of months!

Marcia, you are totally right, I think that next time, I may try adding a little cocoa powder to it, I think that would really bring it to a different taste level. I really liked the sauce too, however, I am not sure it turned out right, since the only rum I had was captain morgans spiced rum, I didn't have enough of the meyers dark rum that I thought I had alot of.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Shaya, welcome back! Gorgeous as usual, as well as charming. There is a string of skillful photography on this page, including Ann's, Chryz's, and Peter Green's stunning glossy jet-black squid ink strands. (PG, look for Hathor's posts when she gets back to NYC. I think she has the same tablecloth.)

Shalmanese, of course you have a following! Great Southern dinner, sort of like another one appearing in a different location in Seattle some time soon. Have you found yourself cooking differently since you've moved to the States?

Edited by Pontormo (log)

"Viciousness in the kitchen.

The potatoes hiss." --Sylvia Plath

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi girlie!  As you'll see, I just sent you a message about this....but I'll post it here so everyone can have the benefit of your input & wisdom!  :smile:  I always think it might be tough (i haven't tried cooking it).  By tough I mean "not tender" but could be difficult as well.  How'd you cook it and how was it?

By the way, for a "first time" it looks like you've got it down great!

I did the skate out of Bourdains Les Halles cook book- it was to be Skate Grenobloise but we had no bread so it was sans croute (is that the right word?)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Okay, I filled in the details. Your turn, Hathor. :wink:

P.S. Everyone's Valentine's dinners are just lovely!

Huh? What did I miss? :huh:

GTO, I was recently on an airline flight and saw this for sale in the onboard magazine. I am almost inclined. But I was wondering if it would be a good investment...people might think that I am starting to go a little nuts, if that was set up in my kitchen.

http://www.hammacher.com/publish/73033.asp...ative=658794741

I think that little studio is an absolute gem! I created a thread all about it a while back but it got deleted because it wasn't "relevant". Buy it! Buy it now!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

long-time lurker here. i'm happy to finally contribute some pictures to this wonderful thread (even though it DID take me nearly an hour to figure out the picture-posting :wacko: ). i don't know how often i will post, but i'm happy to finally leave lurker-dom. all the pictures i see here are amazing, as always--just lovely.

so here's what i made on valentine's day.

a simple salad with parm-reg shavings and pomegranate seeds

<img src="http://forums.egullet.org/uploads/1171607687/gallery_26530_4238_2253.jpg"/>

filets with a wine-mushroom sauce, cheesy polenta and steamed french green beans

<img src="http://forums.egullet.org/uploads/1171607687/gallery_26530_4238_79786.jpg"/>

espresso creme brulee

<img src="http://forums.egullet.org/uploads/1171607687/gallery_26530_4238_113284.jpg"/>

"i dream of cherry pies, candy bars and chocolate chip cookies." -talking heads

Link to comment
Share on other sites

icy cold here and a f*&$#!g flat tire and frozen drivers door this morning(thanks to my knight in dented armour, johnnybird, he got the tire inflated enough to get to where he could fill it with air then follow me to the garage so they could check it).

luckily i had started soaking some great northern beans last night. got up early to make his lunch and breakfast and simmer the beans till tender. when i got home i mixed up a batch of baked beans and popped them in the oven. about an hour before serving i'm going to drape the top with some duck bacon. there is some raisin brown bread steaming as i type - both recipes from my great grandmother's receipt book to my grandmother. i have some mixed greens about to go on....

really old style food for dinner tonight

Nothing is better than frying in lard.

Nothing.  Do not quote me on this.

 

Linda Ellerbee

Take Big Bites

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Welcome, shoutsandmurmurs, that dinner looks really great.

Wendy, I've been enviously eyeing your cocktails for months, thinking just HOW FAR my sweetie and I have fallen from that lifestyle since having kids. So tonight hubbie broke out his new martini shaker and made us some raspberry martinis. I even managed to drain my whole glass, a small miracle these days. :smile: Just to show how life has changed, though, I left the background in place - note the crayolas, coloring pages, buzz lightyear cocktail napkin and little guy eating his appetizer of avocado with fleur de sel.

gallery_41870_2503_24448.jpg

Then dinner, finally we were both home at a decent hour and ready to eat this moussaka that I had made earlier in the week. It was wonderful.

Moussaka with Greens with Roasted Red Peppers

gallery_41870_2503_74696.jpg

gallery_41870_2503_44429.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Welcome, shoutsandmurmurs, that dinner looks really great.

Wendy, I've been enviously eyeing your cocktails for months, thinking just HOW FAR my sweetie and I have fallen from that lifestyle since having kids.  So tonight hubbie broke out his new martini shaker and made us some raspberry martinis.  I even managed to drain my whole glass, a small miracle these days.  :smile:  Just to show how life has changed, though, I left the background in place - note the crayolas, coloring pages, buzz lightyear cocktail napkin and little guy eating his appetizer of avocado with fleur de sel.

gallery_41870_2503_24448.jpg

Then dinner, finally we were both home at a decent hour and ready to eat this moussaka that I had made earlier in the week.  It was wonderful. 

Moussaka with Greens with Roasted Red Peppers

gallery_41870_2503_74696.jpg

gallery_41870_2503_44429.jpg

yeah!!!! great job getting that cocktail in, it is such a nice way to start an evening isn't it?? :smile:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Doddie was so kind to share her Chicken Adobo recipe with me, so I gave it a shot:

Chicken_Adobo_11.jpg

I loved it! Many thanks for the recipe again. IMHO it's an instant classic!

edit: spelling

Beutiful Adobo Chris! I am so proud of you. :biggrin:

Doddie aka Domestic Goddess

"Nobody loves pork more than a Filipino"

eGFoodblog: Adobo and Fried Chicken in Korea

The dark side... my own blog: A Box of Jalapenos

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Braised pork chop with mustard cream sauce. I served it with a baked potato and broccoli which I didn't photograph.

gallery_6080_205_29106.jpg

Marlene

Practice. Do it over. Get it right.

Mostly, I want people to be as happy eating my food as I am cooking it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Beutiful Adobo Chris! I am so proud of you. :biggrin:

Even though I still haven't made the longganiza, would you care to share your adobo recipe, too? I have a craving for it, but I haven't liked any of the recipes I've used in the past. Yours looks yummy! Or at least Chris' version of yours looks yummy!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Here is the recipe Rona... hope others would like it too.

Chicken Adobo

Ingredients:

1 whole chicken, cut into serving sizes

1/3 cup soy sauce

2/3 cup white vinegar

1 head garlic, minced

1 beef boullion cube or chicken cube (if you don't have this, add a 1/2 tbsp salt)

6 peppercorns

2 bay leaves

2 tsp. vegetable oil

1. In a large bowl or container marinate the chicken with all of the ingredients except the vegetable oil. Let the chicken marinate in the fridge for over an hour.

2. In a large wok, add the chicken and marinade and turn up the heat. Let the chicken boil in the marinade for 10 minutes then add 1 cup of water. Turn the the heat and let it simmer for 20-25 minutes.

3. Thoroughly drain the chicken, leave the marinade mixture in the wok.

4. In another pan, add the oil and heat it. Add the drained chicken and fry until the pieces are golden brown. Drain the chicken and add back to the marinade in the wok. *

5. Turn the heat up again and simmer the chicken pieces until the sauce thickens up. Serve over cooked rice or fried garlic rice.

*You can cut up potatoes in wedges or cubes and fry these too. Add the potatoes with the chicken in the wok to simmer it together until the sauce thickens up

Garlic Fried Rice

leftover oil from frying the adobo chicken

2-3 tbsp minced garlic

4-5cups of cold cooked rice

1. In the pan where you fried the adobo chicken, add the minced garlic and cook over medium heat until golden brown.

2. Add the cold rice and stir, mash and mix in thoroughly with the garlic and oil.

3. Continue stirring and mixing until the rice becomes a uniform golden brown color and the garlic has been thoroughly mixed uniformly throughout the pan.

4. Serve hot with the adobo.

Edited by Domestic Goddess (log)

Doddie aka Domestic Goddess

"Nobody loves pork more than a Filipino"

eGFoodblog: Adobo and Fried Chicken in Korea

The dark side... my own blog: A Box of Jalapenos

Link to comment
Share on other sites

tonight we started with Tarleton's Resurrection

392671182_d2272eb775.jpg

then duck confit, steamed broccoli and potatoes pan fried in duck fat

392671183_b07d6da7eb.jpg

Nice looking duck confit! i bought duck on the way home last night, too, but kind of wish I had let it marinate overnight, instead of just a few hours. Will try and post a pic later after I upload.

shoutsandmurmers: your filet makes my mouth water!

Shaya: I like the look of your moussaka, too!

As usual, lovely dinners everyone!

52 martinis blog

@52martinis

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Pontormo, prasantrin and Doddie, thanks for the kind feedback :wub:

Let's pimp this some more, hehe ... I took some pics while cooking the dish and but them on my pictorial blog.

I just, literally, put mine in the fridge to marinate. I was going to have it for dinner, but since it's already almost seven, I'll wait until tomorrow to cook it.

Chris--you made the full marinade recipe but only used 4 drumsticks? I have two boneless leg/thigh combos, and I wasn't sure how much marinade to use, so I used just under 1/2 of the original recipe. Maybe I'll go back and add the rest--the sauce is the best part, after all!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Today I made Greek style gigantes plaki ("giant" beans in olive oil and tomato). The dish exists in Turkey as well, but though the beans are available here, most people from outside Istanbul or Izmir don't seem to be aware of them. In Greece it's a fairly common dish, but here in Istanbul it's mainly a dish of the "tavernas" or "meyhanes" (which were mostly run by non-Muslims until the 50s or so). The cooked beans are huge, over an inch in length. After soaking a pound of the beans overnight and cooking at a bare simmer till nearly done, they go into a baking dish. Add salt, tomato puree (or 3/4 of small can of tomato paste thinned in a cup of water), a cup or two of chopped tomatoes (I used canned today), parsley, 4 medium cloves of garlic, two chopped onions and about half a c up of olive oil. (If it's to be used as a meze, make it richer with a cup of oil. Cubed carrots can go into it as well, as can Celeriac greens (and some of the root if you like).

Here they are ready to go into the oven.

gallery_38081_3012_76194.jpgNow after cooking for around an hour, adding water as necessary. I cook them in the same stove I use to heat the house. :)

gallery_38081_3012_95130.jpg

And a close-up view of the first serving.

gallery_38081_3012_8539.jpg

Fortunately a summer visitor from the States was kind enough to leave me a bottle of "Beano." So I can still go on a date tonight... :cool:

"Los Angeles is the only city in the world where there are two separate lines at holy communion. One line is for the regular body of Christ. One line is for the fat-free body of Christ. Our Lady of Malibu Beach serves a great free-range body of Christ over angel-hair pasta."

-Lea de Laria

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Chryz, I am so glad you made the pictorial tutorial. I was gonna make one but you saved me from it. Maraming salamat!

Sazji - those beans are calling my name... drool... it's not fair making me hungry at 12:30 am

Doddie aka Domestic Goddess

"Nobody loves pork more than a Filipino"

eGFoodblog: Adobo and Fried Chicken in Korea

The dark side... my own blog: A Box of Jalapenos

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Nishia: goat butter? Why do use it? What does it taste like? Melt temp? Burn? Where do you get it?

I've used goat milk...for making soap, but I've never even seen goat butter. Sorry, too many questions!

We got the goat butter at Whole Foods a while back because it sounded interesting, and mainly used it on toast. It's a lot more flavorful than regular butter made from cow milk/cream, and very white in color. It's got a bit of the gamey flavor like you'd have in fresh goat cheese, but it's subtle. I have no idea about the smoke point, but it melts nicely on warm toast!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Chris--you made the full marinade recipe but only used 4 drumsticks?  I have two boneless leg/thigh combos, and I wasn't sure how much marinade to use, so I used just under 1/2 of the original recipe.  Maybe I'll go back and add the rest--the sauce is the best part, after all!

I didn't gave it much thought. It's braising and a certain amount of liquid is necessary after all. I had some sauce left over, but that's okay ... it's in any case better than to have too little sauce or even worse too little braising liquid!

Chryz, I am so glad you made the pictorial tutorial. I was gonna make one but you saved me from it. Maraming salamat!

You made me google for "Maraming salamat!". Proper reply: your're welcome :laugh:

Christian Z. aka ChryZ

[ 1337 3475 - LEET EATS ] Blog

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Nice looking duck confit!  i bought duck on the way home last night, too, but kind of wish I had let it marinate overnight, instead of just a few hours.  Will try and post a pic later after I upload. 

I made this confit :wub: I put it up back in early december and this is the first time we've raided the crock! It was quite good- usually I can't wait and we eat it just after a month, the flavor and texture were much nicer with the extra aging

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wow, y'all! These are some fantastic meals that you are making. I actually have two egullet sessions open so that I can look and respond at the same time!

Marlene - it always occurs to me that were we to have an egullet progressive dinner, you would have to be in charge of the meat. I am always ready for a roast when I see your beef or lamb

Nishla - that chicken skin was amazing. It is really sad that there is no one in my 'real' life that would understand a dish of chicken skin on the table :laugh: !

And your scallops are gorgeous!

Doddie - I like the idea of the crab and ham salad! I make a country ham and crab dish and I think the two flavors are perfect together. Would you mind sharing the recipe?

Judith - our dinner out was not as good as everyone cooked here, either. We went retro - a 'cool' new place called "Piano Bar" - supposed to be a rat pack kinda vibe - we had steaks, Caesar's, lobster, etc. very, very ordinary :hmmm: .

Dianne - your potato gallette is absolutely fantastic looking! And the crosini is just drool inducing!

Shaya - ooooh, time to dig out the Beard Pastistio recipe - that looked wonderful! What is the pasta you used. I usually use ziti, but I like the looks of that!

Shal - so glad to see your food. That roast pork and the greens were truly tasty looking! Thanks for sharing that!

Mr. Kim is on a diet, so I won't be cooking much for awhile, but I will continue to enjoy y'all's meals vicariously!

Kim

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So on Valentine's we had Steamed Dungeness Crab and Emeril's Hasselback potatoes...doesn't this crab look menancing?

DSCN2135.jpg

Last night, my bf doctored up a box of Zatarans Gumbo with some extra veggies and spices and added chicken and sausage:

DSCN2137.jpg

We have our monthly dinner club tonight, with the theme being Steakhouse. I just got through making 12 fairly large crab cakes...I am sure that the pictures from tonight will be great. I'll be sure to share if they are.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
×
×
  • Create New...