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Oxtail, with red wine shallot garlic etc plus 1.5 hours in the pressure cooker, then liquid reduced to sauce. Sweet rice, cooked in beef stock I had in the refrigerator, it was either thrown out the stock or use it. Squash, braised in chicken stock, I'm trying this cutting method hence the weirdo slicing.
![]() Romaine, grapefruit, strawberries, almonds. We're not getting great strawberries, in the dead of winter, but soak 'em in simple syrup for awhile. Dressing is some grapefruit vinaigrette I also found in the refrigerator. I don't know how long ago I made that dressing - months? Doesn't go bad, apparently. Spruced it up with a fresh hit of grapefruit juice and balsamic white vinegar. ![]() |
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I doubt I'm cooking that day. Funny you should mention the meatballs because she just made those as well with the lasagna. I bet we can talk her into making those again. Especially since we are working on her car.
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![]() One of my basics. Pork Tenderloin with Mustard Cream Sauce. Served with roasted potatoes & steamed asparagus (not shown). Ian Edit: And a bottle of 2001 Carruades de Lafite . . . Second Edit: No copper pans were used . . .
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'87 Carrera Cab ----- “Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.” A. Einstein ----- Last edited by imcarthur; 03-19-2011 at 04:08 PM.. |
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Looks good, but what's the next course? We aren't midgets here!
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1989 3.2 Carrera coupe; 1988 Westy Vanagon, Zetec; 1986 E28 M30; 1994 W124; 2004 S211 What? Uh . . . “he” and “him”? |
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Two chicken breasts with rosemary, garlic powder, black and red pepper flakes.
Just went in the oven. ![]()
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-Tom '73 911T MFI - in process of being restored '73 911T MFI - bare bones '87 924S - Keep's the Porsche DNA in my system while the 911 is down. aka "Wolf boy" |
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First effort at meatloaf. I guess it is actually a bacon wrapped roudale.
Aluminum foil, then half-cooked bacon, meat (beef, pork, turkey, and panchetta, with bread crumbs, egg, Italian herbs, and cayenne), then spinach, more meat, finally a core of aromatic (garlic, scallions, shallots, toasted almonds). Rolled tightly in the foil, baked at 400F to 140F internal, then unwrap the foil to crisp the bacon at 475F. ![]() Served with a topping of fresh pesto and more toasted almonds. ![]() The reason for this is that my wife and I are having a meatloaf throwdown with the kids as judge. I can't win with a straight meatloaf, she has that nailed, so I'm trying to do something fancy. I tested this on the kids tonight. They thought it was "okay", but would have voted for mom. |
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AutoBahned
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wow - that looks Heart Healthy!
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It's going to be worse, maybe - I was all focused on the mechanical aspects (layering, rolling, crisping) that I failed to actually make the meat moist, tender, and juicy. So I need to figure out how to do that but still have enough structure to hold together. I can't use as soft a mixture as in a traditional pan-baked meatloaf (which will be my competition). Probably will try less lean meat (e.g. less turkey) and more fatty meat (or just cut in some fatback). Or, for a healthier alternative, I could also cool, congeal and cube some very gelatinous stock.
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1989 3.2 Carrera coupe; 1988 Westy Vanagon, Zetec; 1986 E28 M30; 1994 W124; 2004 S211 What? Uh . . . “he” and “him”? |
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I'm thinking you meant to call that a roulade...
![]() Anyway, with kids as the judges, I think you're screwed if you try anything exotic. My suggestion would be to find a standard meatloaf recipe and try to perfect it. Make it in a pan... You don't want to use too much meat, or mix it/pack it too thoroughly, as either will render it hard as a rock. You want some sort of sauce on top... kids like ketchup, although I tend to favor something a little more complex. Just don't make it too weird for them... Some TV chef recipes: Meatloaf… meatloaf recipes from chefs on TV | What's Cooking on TV EDIT: I'd suggest one of the last three recipes. Use good, fresh ingredients. Make your own breadcrumbs, etc. Good luck, JR Last edited by javadog; 03-23-2011 at 06:08 AM.. |
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country style spareribs with fettuccine and marinara. note that this was 3X tastier2 hours after first eaten. and even better this morning. Wonder if you could open a day-old pasta restaurant?
lot of olive oil brown spareribs and garlic (note that the correct sparerib color is the shadowed part) add a very simple marinara and simmer for 2+ hours fettuccine tossed in sauce over a flame, a little more on top ricotta to your liking. ![]() ![]()
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For meatloaf, we use my wife's recipe. The secret ingredient is 2-3 packets of instant onion soup mix. Separate the powder & the crunchy noodles. Use a bit of powder in with the ground beef, bread crumbs, beaten egg. Mix the rest with melted butter. Brush this on the formed meat (doughnut shaped) & press the crunchy noodles all over the meat. I always serve it with a simple beef bovril watery gravy. Serve with mashed potatoes, of course.
Ian
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'87 Carrera Cab ----- “Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.” A. Einstein ----- |
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: salt lake city, utah
Posts: 24,705
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baked chicken, polenta, homegrown oyster mushrooms, delicious with red wine:
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2000 Corvette - ????, 2007 Buell XB9R - Astrid, 1996 Discovery - Piglet, 2000 Forester "COOL PRIUS!" - Nobody Ever |
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Someone tell me about polenta. I've had it, oh, once. It was gooood. Is it as straightforward as cooking rice?
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Navin Johnson
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Wantagh, NY
Posts: 8,760
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Quote:
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Don't feed the trolls. Don't quote the trolls ![]() http://www.southshoreperformanceny.com '69 911 GT-5 '75 914 GT-3 and others |
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polenta = grits with an attitude
get real high quality ingredients &.. ah.. let 'er rip |
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19 years and 17k posts...
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nynor,
I'm glad the mushrooms worked out well for you, I know you put a lot of effort into growing them.
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Art Zasadny 1974 Porsche 911 Targa "Helga" (Sold, back home in Germany) Learning the bass guitar Driving Ford company cars now... www.ford.com |
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Navin Johnson
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Wantagh, NY
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Quote:
Ya think? or similar to making a Roux.. "Cajun Napalm" per Paul Prudhomme Polenta is easy peasy..
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Don't feed the trolls. Don't quote the trolls ![]() http://www.southshoreperformanceny.com '69 911 GT-5 '75 914 GT-3 and others |
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Location: salt lake city, utah
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thanks, that is true. i have three varieties going right now, all gourmet edible varieties of oyster mushrooms.
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2000 Corvette - ????, 2007 Buell XB9R - Astrid, 1996 Discovery - Piglet, 2000 Forester "COOL PRIUS!" - Nobody Ever |
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Join Date: Oct 2003
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polenta:
get some corn grits. 3 parts water 1 part grits salt parmesan cheese butter to taste (1 Tbs butter per part of water). bring water to a boil in a shallow sauce pan. add grits, water, salt, and butter. reduce heat to simmer. stir constantly, otherwise grits will clump. stir and break up clumps until grits form a thick consistency. let simmer on very low heat for about 15 minutes more. sprinkle parmesan on top of polenta. allow to cool. at room temperature, polenta should be a consistency that can be sliced. many eat polenta with marinara. i eat polenta plain, with marinara, or with a bit of cajun style sprinkle. good stuff.
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2000 Corvette - ????, 2007 Buell XB9R - Astrid, 1996 Discovery - Piglet, 2000 Forester "COOL PRIUS!" - Nobody Ever |
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