tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-54920552024-03-19T06:44:07.684-05:00weber_caminescapably obsessed with process reproducibility, in columbus, ohioDavehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.comBlogger622125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-4415066217447708572017-08-13T07:42:00.000-05:002017-08-13T07:42:10.631-05:00weber kettle snake methodI never tried placing briquettes around the perimeter and lighting one side and letting the strip of briquettes burn, read about it but never tried. I hooked up my datalogger (Supco SL500TC) and thermocouple to watch the action. Given the long times needed for smoking brisket, I was hoping for at least 8 hours (sleep time) to not fool with the thing.<br />
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Here are the briquettes lined up. Two rows on the grate, one row stacked atop of that double row. Lit one end and placed my thermocouple dead center, where a piece of meat would be.</div>
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Boom! Click the image for a larger size. But I'm measuring 200-280F with no meat for 8 hours. With meat, the temp would come down some. I'd probably use a water batch to moderate the range as well, not bad!!Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-56676950817219737012016-12-16T10:27:00.003-05:002016-12-16T10:52:12.037-05:00crispy great northern bean snacksLast night I met friends for happy hour snacks at <a href="http://rossibarandkitchen.com/" target="_blank">The Rossi</a> and nibbled appetizers from <a href="http://www.columbuscrave.com/content/stories/2014/05/issue/tastemaker-matthew-heaggans-of-swoop-food-group.html" target="_blank">Chef Heaggans</a>. I loved the chickpeas! Yearning for more, I recall waaaay back in this blog a post I did on baked cannellini beans, not the same at all as Matt's treat but enough to keep me sated between visits (and there will be many more visits).<br />
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I'm reposting this recipe because the old post has a broken image link. <br />
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I used great northern beans, canned. The beans get drained and rinsed. Then tossed with a small bit of olive oil, salt and paprika then tossed in an oven at 325F convection for about an hour. They pop into crunch snacks that remind me of popcorn. I store them out on the counter uncovered so they won't loose their crispiness. Not sure if that's necessary. Try these!<br />
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Great northern canned beans drained, rinsed, spiced and placed on parchment in a baking pan.<br />
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After an hour at 325F convection. Popped and ready to munch.<br />
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Crispy.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-61710810368813246632016-10-25T12:36:00.000-05:002016-10-25T12:38:00.432-05:00chicharonesI don't have much to add to this. I learned of making chicharon from <a href="http://saucissonmac.blogspot.com/2011/09/pondering-pig-skin.html" target="_blank">SaucissonMac</a>. My pics simply validate the procedure and I encourage you to do the same the next time you snag pigskin from <a href="http://thebutcherandgrocer.com/" target="_blank">The Butcher and Grocer</a>!! (click on any image to enlarge)<br />
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Pigskin</div>
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After boiling gently in salted water 1.5 hours and then chilled an hour. See skin is separated from fat.</div>
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Shaving fat from skin with a slicer. Daisy quite interested in the fat to be discarded.<br />
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Skin, scraped of fat, placed on a cooling rack over a tray ready to be baked.<br />
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Skin dried for about 8 hours at 170F.<br />
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chicharon, hot out of the deep fryer and lightly salted.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-14141140512609629022016-09-08T09:22:00.001-05:002016-09-08T09:25:20.169-05:00flatbreads, yogurt doughThis is a great dough with only a few ingredients that's great for a flatbread that can be made in a few minutes out of the fridge. It uses 2% fat greek-style yogurt, I've been using Fage. It's a tight dough, not sticky, so it's easy to work with. It's also easy to push into a disc with just hands, I don't use a rolling pin. The method I use to cook them is stove top according to <a href="http://webercam.com/2013/02/stovetop-pita.html" target="_blank">this post</a> (or you can do them in the oven like in <a href="http://webercam.com/2015/02/naan.html" target="_blank">this post</a>).<br />
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The dough is simple, mix 2% Fage yogurt 100 g, water 50 g, salt 3 g, instant active yeast 1 t, unbleached white flour 150 g (ca. 1 scant C). I have also recently used a mix of yogurt 70 grams and ricotta 30 grams in this same dough. It was pretty amazing.<br />
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Mix by machine or by hand, let rise about a half hour at room temp and toss in fridge. Use up to 5 days later. To bake, remove from fridge, portion dough into 4 pieces, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWv-K8cGYmU" target="_blank">round them</a>, squish into ca. 6" discs using flour to keep from sticking. Bake according to one of the methods linked above.<br />
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After a few minutes in the pan and a minute or so flipped, I toss it directly on the gas burner. The first side cooked in the pan goes toward the fire first. Most of the time, it puffs up.</div>
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Keep them on the burner until they get as charred or as light as you want. Kids tend to not like the char, adults, given their tendency to being crushed under the pressures of life, appreciate the dark ashen bits.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-90955606153990358752016-07-18T19:43:00.001-05:002016-07-19T07:16:26.666-05:00bbq, propane and propane productsAbout a year ago, I made the mistake and picked up Franklin's bbq book. It was then I realized any bbq I had done was shit. Franklin's bbq is from live fire and rapidly moving smoke rather than any configuration of smoldering wood in a closed system, the latter producing an acrid mess of a smoked meat product. I kind of knew that was an extreme position, but was stopped in my tracks.<br />
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Adding to this reluctance to ever visit bbq again was the duration of a typical smoking session, i.e., 12h for a pork butt, ca. 18h for a brisket, too much time for a busy life.<br />
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Having thought about this for literally a year, I decided to take a shot with the most convenient rig I could imagine and just taste, again, the results of my own labor to see how horrible it was. I rigged up an electric hotplate, nestled inside a kettle grill, not the best long term solution, but good for a single shot. <br />
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I placed a 1350 W hotplate, a Corning PC101 I picked up at a thrift store, inside the kettle on medium high, cooking oak in the tray.<br />
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Then I placed a stainless cylinder, a type of kettle extender I picked up long ago, on the bottom, and placed a chuck roast (poor man's brisket) rubbed w paprika, salt, pepper and brown sugar and let it rip about 250F for about 7 hours.<br />
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Electric heating was trivial, no effort at all.<br />
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Here's the final product. I pulled it off when it was a tad over 200F internal, wrapped it and tried some after an hour. Crazy heavy bark, nice smoke inside, but surprisingly, not acrid at all. Great smoke and not overpowering. <br />
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So, I'm not sure why I feared this option for so long, but suddenly I'm alive and in the bbq game again and the perfectionists can snub me.<br />
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My final problem is the electric thing. That hotplate is going to self destruct if left in that hot chamber for too long. So, I decided propane might be an option for me. I decided to modify a kettle and place it atop my turkey cooker for future use.<br />
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I trimmed out the bottom of a spare kettle I had on hand. Then ...<br />
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I placed it atop the turkey cooker.<br />
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So, there, my turkey cooker/propane smoker. Space in there for a cast iron pan holding the smoke wood, a rack for a drip tray and a big surface for meat and easy access to add more wood. <br />
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I decided to try some fish to give it a trial. I cured a piece of salmon and tilapia with 1:1 brown sugar:salt for an hour, rinsed/dried it and smoked it at 200F (oak) for an hour until it was about 150F internal. Killer!!<br />
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salmon, quick cured and smoked<br />
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tilapia, quick cured and smoked<br />
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So there, the propane rig can hold 250 internal easy using about 100 grams propane per hour, it'll be an easy 18 hour brisket cook. As far as the purists, I'm ready for bbq again, my crispy ends on the chuck roast were too good to live without.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-23037981301188324242016-05-18T14:08:00.001-05:002016-05-18T14:08:22.391-05:00brown basmati, mung dal pilau<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<h1 data-reactid=".1.1.0.0.2.1.0.0" style="background-color: white; border: 0px; font-family: proxima-nova, 'Helvetica Neue', Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: 18px; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">
<span data-reactid=".1.1.0.0.2.1.0.0.1" style="border: 0px; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;" title="Edited"><br /></span></h1>
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<span data-reactid=".1.1.0.0.2.1.0.0.1" style="border: 0px; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;" title="Edited">My leftover rice game has always been weak. My attempts at transforming cooked rice into a biryani inevitably turn into an overcooked rice dish. I should also say, I'm not entirely sure about the difference between biryani, pilau, fried rice, etc. So, my terms might be off. </span></div>
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So, I had some brown rice (rice cooker, basmati, about 3 cups) and wanted some veggies and beans with it. I simmered some mung dal in water (50 g beans in 180 g water) until tender but not falling apart. I rinsed the dal in cold water and kept it on the side. I also prepped: fine diced carrots, chopped button mushrooms, sliced green onions, made a puree of garlic/ginger/serrano, chopped cilantro.</div>
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<h1 data-reactid=".1.1.0.0.2.1.0.0" style="background-color: white; border: 0px; font-family: proxima-nova, 'Helvetica Neue', Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: 18px; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">
<span data-reactid=".1.1.0.0.2.1.0.0.1" style="border: 0px; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;" title="Edited">Given my history with overcooked rice in dishes like this, I thought adding rice last might be best, here's how it went down: Turmeric, cumin, coriander, mustard and paprika were warmed in 2T ghee until the mustard seeds started popping. Then added serrano/ginger/garlic puree and let it cook a few minutes. Then sauteed carrots then shrooms, green onions, pre cooked mung dal, tamarind extract, cilantro and finally brown rice. After the rice addition, I only cooked it until the rice was warmed through. </span></h1>
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<span data-reactid=".1.1.0.0.2.1.0.0.1" style="border: 0px; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;" title="Edited"><br /></span></div>
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<span data-reactid=".1.1.0.0.2.1.0.0.1" style="border: 0px; font-family: inherit; font-size: inherit; font-stretch: inherit; font-style: inherit; font-variant: inherit; font-weight: inherit; line-height: inherit; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;" title="Edited">Finally, a rice, veg, bean dish that wasn't mushy. I'll make this again for sure.</span></div>
Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-86387637191378205242016-04-25T14:21:00.002-05:002016-04-25T14:21:40.833-05:00uttapam wafflesSometime back <a href="http://webercam.com/2015/09/uthappam.html" target="_blank">I tried making uthappam</a>. From what I understand from co-workers, uthappam and dosa use the same batter but vary in thickness which is derived from the amount of water used to thin the batter. <br />
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The little pancakes were fun, but I wanted to see if there was any difference in taste if the utthapam had a different texture and took out the waffle iron, used the same formula for the batter:<br />
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basmati rice, 160 g<br />
urad dal, 40 g<br />
basmati and dal soaked in a total of 300 grams of water for about 8 hours.<br />
pureed the mix in a wet grinder<br />
added salt, 3 g<br />
yeast, 1/4 t (I know, it's a cheat)<br />
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This mixture set for about 8 hours loosely covered in a bowl on the kitchen counter. Next morning it was nice and puffy. I took a scoop of batter and ladled it on to a well-preheated waffle iron and topped it with red onion, green onion and slivered serrano pepper. The top eventually crunched down on the mixture and voila! A utthapam waffle. We let them rest about 6 hours, warmed them up slightly and ate them with a raita. <br />
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Not sure if I'd make them again. I think I like the pancake version better. I did like how the toppings got cooked right in to the waffle. This would make them much easier to take along as a snack. </div>
<br />Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-34050743664195244522016-02-20T18:17:00.003-05:002016-02-20T19:04:12.711-05:00chicken wingsThere's nothing ground breaking here, but it is a reliable method for sublime wings.<br />
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A couple weeks ago I poached a 4 lb chicken with a bunch of veggies to make preparations for chicken and noodles. As I stripped the carcass of the meat, the skin fell off in large sheets. I couldn't resist, I needed to do something with it. I'm not a big fan of chicken skin, but decided to place it on parchment on baking sheet and bake it at 250F. Towards the end of the baking, I sat by the oven window and watched the darkened skin bake. There was a uniform bubbling across the surface as it cooked into a near potato chip crispness. Even at 250F, it was actually cooking like it was frying in oil. That chicken skin was so fatty and thick, it served is its own deep fryer!</div>
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<b>Just out of the oven, crackly potato chip-like rendered chicken skin.</b></div>
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For kicks, I took some wings out of the freezer. I had a big bargain bag of wings and drummies. I took a few pieces out, dumped them in water about 15 minutes to thaw them, dried them off with paper towel and placed them on a fry pan, skin side up, with a sprinkle of coarse salt, pepper and squirt of Louisiana hot sauce and baked them at 250F for 2 full hours. Internal showed at least 180F after an hour but I let them go, wondering if the cloak of thick chicken skin would protect them from getting too dry. I finished off the wings with a 550F broiler for about 10 minutes (DO NOT LEAVE THEM UNATTENDED!). </div>
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<b>thawed and seasoned</b></div>
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<b>250F for 2h, followed by a 10 minute broil. SO CRISP!</b></div>
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I will never cook a wing any differently ever again. Do this.</div>
Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-58811277350906326862016-02-01T09:38:00.002-05:002016-02-01T09:38:09.297-05:00thoughts on bbqSince reading <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Franklin-Barbecue-Meat-Smoking-Manifesto-Aaron/dp/1607747200/" target="_blank">Franklin's barbecue book</a>, my world view of low and slow has been completely demolished. Franklin is dismissive of any smoker set up that uses smoldering fuel, lump or otherwise. His view is bbq should be cooked from the indirect convective heat produced from a live flame, most often in a smoker with offset firebox. He doesn't think the heat and smoke emanating from smoldering wood is a good means to create good barbecue. <br />
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In one part of the book, he discusses a specific offset firebox. It's a cylinder where wood spans a lower arc of the circle leaving good airflow beneath. The fire produced in this way creates a perfect heat source for smoking. <br />
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Wouldn't you know, the wood in a kettle grill sits in exactly the same manner. And, with the vents and all, the airflow and movement is darn good in a kettle. So, despite Franklin's dissatisfaction with the kettle for 'q, it can be configured quite well for this ideal heat source.<br />
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Take my <a href="http://bit.ly/firedome" target="_blank">Firedome</a> for instance. Setting a small oak fire in the kettle and affixing the Firedome lid enables the fire to stay lit, not smoldering. Because of all the air let in by the lidded door, the heat only gets to about 200 on the center of the grate. Pretty perfect environment to get a "clean" fire and good smoke from my oak to smoke these pieces of salt-cured salmon. <br />
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Given this ideal set up am I ready to take on the ultimate challenge, a brisket? NO! This type of set up is a pain to maintain. Replenishing wood every 30 minutes is too much work for an 18 hour brisket not to mention how much wood it would take! But, it does provide a good start. Now maybe a redesign of the dome for this purpose, fuel type, ventilation scheme, etc. Fun stuff to think about.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-24308056138008047332016-01-14T11:22:00.001-05:002016-01-14T15:53:15.629-05:00pizza: high temperature on the Baking Steel (using parchment?!)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">
Few things cause more anxiety about pizza making than shoving the floppy piece of dough off the peel and onto the hot cooking surface intact. Lately I've been using, and have been smitten with the <a href="http://www.bakingsteel.com/" target="_blank">Baking Steel</a>. I use it in the lower third of my oven using 550F convection. This corresponds to a surface temp of about 570F, determined by infrared thermometer. </div>
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That's pretty hot. A pizza dough, topped, is pretty floppy. Takes a bit of practice to get the right amount of flour beneath it so the pie slides. Any toppings hit that surface and the smoke detectors are going off. </div>
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Parchment's a great crutch but it's only good to 425F. BUT, if it's trimmed close, the micro environment near the pizza crust should never exceed about 220F. I tried some 12" diameter pieces trimmed close to the pie but the bottom crust just wasn't as crisp as not using it. It must've encapsulated just enough moisture to prevent the crisping of the crust. </div>
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<a href="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-DuFTdmEBfV0/VpfHH-02s-I/AAAAAAACUG0/ahAKFJLzFLs/s1600/IMG_2453.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="222" src="http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-DuFTdmEBfV0/VpfHH-02s-I/AAAAAAACUG0/ahAKFJLzFLs/s400/IMG_2453.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
Which brings me to today. I tried the same 12" diameter parchment on a 260 g piece of dough. This time, I perforated it by folding it into 8ths and punched a bunch of holes in it. <br />
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I pushed the dough out almost all the way (should have had about 280 - 300 g to go the entire 12") but this was a good starting point. I dusted the dough lightly and tossed it on the paper. <br />
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Sliiiiides nicely on the peel without a ton of excess flour! Now I can relax, talk to guests and top this without worrying about the bottom sticking to the counter. <br />
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Topped lightly with tomatoes and parmesan, oil and some salt. I let it sit on the parchment about 12 minutes and it still floated around the peel nicely.<br />
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Baked at 550F convection for 4.5 minutes. The excess paper was definitely in danger of ignition, next time I'd trim closer or push the dough to cover the paper more completely.<br />
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Pulled the pie out and it slid off the paper with a few tugs. Note the paper in contact with the dough is perfectly fine, that section could even be used again.<br />
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<b>Biggest result of the entire experiment - good color and crispy on the bottom!!</b><br />
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Total winner. I'll be experimenting with this a lot, especially when making a zillion pies for a dinner. Set up a bunch of shells on parchment, go hang with guests, top and bake. Crusts can sit out for a long time without drying out.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-57039497846896155852015-12-17T10:12:00.003-05:002015-12-17T11:22:01.920-05:00hotdog in a pretzel / bagelDog walks are when I do what I enjoy most, think. I think about how to get rich, how to replace my 9-to-5 with a more satisfying 9-to-5 and what things need to be baked. <br />
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I make pretzels once in a while. They're fun and always come out tasty, big crowd pleaser. I use a stiff, pretty dry dough:<br />
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water/milk (1/1) 200 g<br />
butter 14 g<br />
sugar 10 g<br />
salt 5 g<br />
unbleached white 300 g<br />
instant active yeast 3-4 g<br />
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mix, knead and toss in fridge for about a day. Then shape, proof, toss in 5% w/v lye solution for a minute, remove, place on Silpat, sprinkle with salt and bake at 400F convection on the Silpat until they are a rich mahogany color - like fine leather (that's a Ron Burgundy reference, he's my idol). <br />
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Then I started reading more on bagels. My last run wasn't very satisfying. I use a similar dough for bagels, but after the shape and proof, I toss them in a sweetened (malt or brown sugar) pool of boiling water and bake. But I don't get the shine and tug to the exterior. I read somewhere that bagels were originally subjected to a lye dip. Are bagels just a chubby pretzel? Until I sort this complicated mess out, I decided to take a side step and make a snack while I do research. I had the desire to jam a hotdog into a pretzel (this is a reference to The Todd from Scrubs, another idol of mine "give the Todd some love!" /raises hand for high5).<br />
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Some action shots below, not much of a procedural post, just a few notes.<br />
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100 g of that dough rolled to 12" by 1 3/4"<br />
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Chopped (Ballpark) dog tucked in to the dough.<br />
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Formed into a loop and dusted liberally with flour, allowed to ferment in fridge for a day. Side note: looking at this image sometimes produces a negative image where the parchement paper looks like a bundt pan holding the bagel dough - it's crazy!<br />
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Removed from fridge, allowed to warm for an hour to do the final proof, dipped them (with care) into a 5% w/v solution of food grade lye, scooped them out with a stainless skimmer, placed the dipped dough on a silpat, sprinkled with coarse salt and baked at 400F (convection) until brown.<br />
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Taste test (photobombed). <br />
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A lot to think about on this. Need to read about bagels vs pretzels. Probably heading toward something similar to a pizza roll next, layered pepperoni, sauce and cheese in a pillowy soft dough but still using the lye treatment on the exterior, I like the effect a lot. Thanks for all the online discussion! And thanks to @jarsloth for being brave enough to taste it. I'm hoping he's still alive.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-88972700951665059762015-12-11T11:00:00.004-05:002015-12-11T11:02:29.370-05:00fermented banana muffinA banana muffin. I practically fell asleep typing that. Looking at a couple rotting bananas on my counter I decided to try something. I'm pretty sure someone on the internet did this already, but I was too lazy to go find it. <br />
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I peeled the two bananas and mashed them with a wooden spoon and added a ca. 1/8 teaspoon of yeast. </div>
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After 12 hours, the mush had what looks like krausen on a batch of fermenting beer and the mixture was at least twice as voluminous as when I started. </div>
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I stirred in the head to reveal this fizzing mass of fermentation. I let it go until that night, total ferment about 24 hours.</div>
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I figured enough alcohol hadn't been produced for me to be interested in, so I made a mixture to use it in. This mush was destined for muffins. I creamed butter (50 g) in sugar (100 g), added some milk (ca. 15 g) and then blended in the banana mush. I added to this flour (135 g), baking powder (1 t), baking soda (1 t) and salt (3 g) and some allspice because I was too lazy to find the cinnamon that Frankie had taken for mixing in her line of cosmetics. </div>
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I plopped the mix in little parchment cups and baked them at 350F for 30 minutes, internal about 198F, probably a tad too much. But soft on top, nice volume, texture good. Not sure they're any better than regular, but kind of a fun experiment. </div>
Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-59282287131159537252015-12-04T20:24:00.000-05:002015-12-04T20:29:24.884-05:00pizza: cast iron vs pizza steel, visually similar but Baking Steel wins crispness and taste by milesI hit a pizza slump some time ago. A slump with regard to my indoor pizza, baked in a conventional indoor oven. I bought a baking steel, altered my dough a bit and I'm out of my slump, but I'm not sure what made the big difference, cooking surface or dough.<br />
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So, the dough I'm using: water 220 g, Gold Medal unbleached white 300 g, salt 5 g, Fleischmann's instant active yeast 1 g, sugar 5 g, olive oil 10 g, mix, knead, toss in fridge for a day. Scale to 225 g pieces (to be rolled into 10" diameter pies).<br />
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Baking Prep: preheat oven to 550F convection. <br />
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Surface 1: Lodge cast iron 15" round. Tossed pan into preheated oven and let warm up for a full hour. Surface temp registered 570F using a infrared gun.<br />
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Surface 2: Baking Steel (bakingsteel.com), preheated in the same manner, temp also 568F with same thermometer.<br />
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Baked a simple margherita on each surface (an hour apart) using the same dough, 4 minutes baking time. Action shots below:<br />
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<b>Final Pie</b><br />
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cast iron</div>
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Baking Steel</div>
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<b>Side view
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cast iron</div>
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baking steel</div>
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<b>Bottom</b></div>
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cast iron</div>
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baking steel</div>
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Verdict? Despite similar looking images, hands down, the Baking Steel wins. Much better texture, more crisp, better volume and taste.</div>
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Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-86572582507634555632015-11-20T08:50:00.002-05:002015-11-20T08:51:45.228-05:00croissants, some notes. use a long proof<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">
I'm happy to call croissants a staple in our house. I'm even at the point where I can vary the dough and fillings to get fun creations that we all enjoy. I got to this point with a lot of practice and two significant events. About 5 years ago, I took a croissant class with Tad at La Chatelaine Bakery (<a href="http://www.lachatelainebakery.com/" target="_blank">@LaChatColumbus</a>). Tad is a masterful baker, one of my favorites ever. His croissant method produced exquisite pastry, but the method was taught to us with some rigidity. *This* is how it's done. I stumbled a little after this with little success. The next significant stop on this journey was years later at another class at <a href="http://www.thecommissarycolumbus.com/" target="_blank">@The_Commissary</a> with Aaron Clouse (IG <a href="https://www.instagram.com/aclouse11/" target="_blank">@clouse11</a>). In this class the dough was more enriched than in my previous class (some milk and butter) and there were physical variations in the folding. Some used a sheeter, some rolled by hand. The combination of classes led me to conclude there is a much greater range of methodology and recipe that will yield an amazing pastry. </div>
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My recommendation is to practice using any prep out there: Bouchon has a good method and many bloggers have stolen it and republished it - but it's easily available. Another well detailed prep is from King Arthur. BUT, I gather you'll need to use a class to go the distance. Take either mentioned above, but I'm a little partial to Aaron's (sorry Tad!).</div>
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A few examples of my work below. My benchmark numbers: </div>
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X grams butter, </div>
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X grams liquid, </div>
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1.67 X grams flour. </div>
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After a bifold of butter, 3 turns, scale each to about 75-100 g, roll, sit them in the fridge overnight covered, then a looong proof the next morning, ca. 2 hours, glaze with yolk/milk and baking at 375F for about 20 minutes (convection).</div>
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Classic and nutella. Dough using mostly milk and 10% whole wheat flour.<br />
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Similar but no whole wheat in flour bill.<br />
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Also all unbleached white, no wheat. Nutella on left. Interesting that the nutella didn't crush the internal structure.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-15838523234071980082015-10-31T09:31:00.003-05:002015-10-31T09:32:28.700-05:00quick picklesI needed some gardeneira the other day for a secret family recipe. For some reason, it's hard to find. I know Marzetti's makes one, but it's never in the stores I visit. <br />
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When it comes to pickles, I've only used Ruhlman's tossing veggies in 3-5% brine and letting them sit in a cool place for a week or more. I don't like them. Not sure why, it's never been a good pickle for me. So, from a few comments (@twixlen) and @SmittenKitchen, I found a general method that makes pickles I like and it's effortless. Briefly boil vinegar and water (500 mL/500 mL) containing 2T salt and 2T sugar and a bunch of spices (coriander seed, mustard seed, herbs, dill, celery salt, etc.) and pour it over vegetables. For tougher veggies, cauliflower and carrots, I simmer them in the solution a few minutes, but for sliced cucumbers, I don't. Place the cut veggies in a container, pour the hot mixture over them and toss in the fridge. No need to sink the veggies below the surface, just good pickles in less than a day. </div>
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Gardeneira: cauliflower, celery, carrots, cucumbers.<br />
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Cucumbers and zucchini.</div>
Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-2723154756505852302015-10-11T11:51:00.002-05:002015-10-11T11:52:50.578-05:00pizza notesI've been a little preoccupied with <a href="http://harvestpizzeria.com/" target="_blank">Harvest's Pizza</a> lately. It's wonderful. Tender, very lightly topped, crust as good as the toppings. On occasion I can hit something close in my grill, but in the oven, most of my pies suck. I latched onto thickness of dough over the past year or so. I thought tenderness might derive from a super thin crust, but some observations the other night at Harvest led me to different thinking. I realize a home oven isn't a real pizza oven, so my expectations are reasonable, but I should be able to do much better than I've been.<br />
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Thickness. One can never measure dough thickness when it's less than an inch or so. It's too irregular a surface to measure a cross section, one can only have a derived thickness by indicating the amount of dough per pie. The other night at Harvest, me and my 3" x 5" recipe card coupled with our server kindly answering how much dough they use per pie gave the following: They use 270 g dough per 12" diameter pie, roughly 2.4 g / square inch of pizza. I also noticed their toppings don't go anywhere close to the edge, presumably this is for crust people but more importantly, this undoubtedly keeps their oven from getting food on it and smoking.</div>
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This in mind, the next significant part is the dough. The most likely candidate in my mind is fat content. So, today I wanted to try a dough I've been fooling around with: a high fat dough from water 100 g, unbleached white 200 g, olive oil 40 g, salt 5 g, sugar 5 g and Fleischmann's instant active yeast, ca 2 g, allowed to sit in the fridge a day.</div>
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For kicks, I decided to try Lucky's dough. They sell a bag for $3. It's about 600 g, one of their pizza people says it's the amount they use for a 16" diameter pie (3 grams / square inch). From the feel of their dough (the extensibility and snap back) and the label order of ingredients, my estimation is it's 70% hydration and a small bit of oil, ca. 5 grams and a trace of sugar. By comparison to my high fat dough, it's much more slack and much leaner. </div>
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For the comparison, I used 150 g dough per 8" diameter pie, topped with a light tomato sauce and some shredded mozz (cheap stuff) to view the puff on the dough. I baked these directly on a cast iron sheet (half way position in the oven, preheated), 450F convection, 6 minutes each.</div>
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Left is Lucky's Market and right is my high fat dough. Click to enlarge.<br />
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Crust profiles, the lean dough wins! Airy and more crisp. The high fat one tasted terrible. Click on image to enlarge.<br />
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So I veered all over the place, that's what I meant by "notes" in the title. Not a great comparison. Lucky's made one dough, I made the other, undoubtedly different flour, not only higher fat in one, but hydration different, etc. It was just an itch I needed to scratch. My goal is something as tender as Harvest, cooked in a regular oven,<br />
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Future runs:</div>
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-sticking with 2.5 - 3 grams / square inch</div>
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-leaner crust</div>
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-longer rest prior to baking</div>
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-my own version of Lucky's dough, e.g., water 210 g, flour 300 g, olive oil, 5-10 g, sugar 5 g, salt 5 g, yeast. </div>
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-keep you all posted</div>
Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-84240778521443821912015-09-27T15:43:00.001-05:002015-09-27T15:43:51.160-05:00uthappamThis was fun and exotic, until I realized it was just a GF pancake. The best discovery on this, is one doesn't need a sophisticated wet mill to get a nice result. I mixed urad dal (20 g), basmati rice (80 g), a few seeds of fenugreek, water (150 mL), salt (ca. 1/2 t, 2 g) and let it sit an hour before pureeing with my immersion blender. I cheated and added a touch of yeast. Then, cooked 'em like any pancakes adding a mix of cilantro and green onion to the uncooked side of the pancake before the flip.<br />
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Try these, they're tasty at room temperature. Fun snacks.<br />
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Here's the batter after fermentation, about 8 hours after I added yeast. All the fine particles of yeast and dal had degraded during the fermentation to give a soupy batter that doubled in volume sitting at room temperature.<br />
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I took a ladleful and cooked it on a non stick pan using some olive oil. Just like a pancake, when the top surface gets the bubbles popping through it's time to add herbs/onions and flip.<br />
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Final pancake. I left them out at room termperature for snacking. They disappeared pretty fast.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-82028035481994571912015-09-15T07:54:00.003-05:002015-09-15T08:15:58.695-05:00more experimentation on friesHeston Blumenthal does a triple cook on his chips (fries). One boil until the potatoes are nearly falling apart, drying in the freezer, a double dip in oil. The drying in the freezer is what kills the method for me. No way it's going to be easy to prep 10 lbs of potatoes with that kind requirement.<br />
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In order to dry them out, I took the boiled potatoes and placed them at room temp in front of a fan last night. I may have overdone it. A sample of potatoes indicated I had a loss on drying of about 50% (sample of potatoes went from 50 grams to 27 grams). These were placed in a tub and I'll fry them tonight for kicks.<br />
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Russets: soaked, rinsed, dried for 8 hours at room temp with a box fan. I stored these at room temp in a plastic container, covered and will fry them tonight. I fear they have been dried out too much. For better or worse, I'll post the result, because I do not fear failure!<br />
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<br />Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-66330574567348535162015-09-01T20:21:00.000-05:002015-09-02T09:29:47.031-05:00potato chips, another thing microwaves suck atFood bloggers have a funny twitch. If something can be done, it's a great method.<br />
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The other day I saw a microwave potato chip maker at the thrift store. It was a round plastic carousel in which potato slices are placed and the loaded ring tossed in the microwave. What emerges is a slightly colored, crisp chip - As Seen on TV. There's a million posts about this method, <a href="http://www.thekitchn.com/how-to-make-crispy-potato-chips-in-the-microwave-166718" target="_blank">without the carousel thingy</a>.<br />
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A slice of raw potato and a piece of paper are similar; they are a hydrated (ligno)cellulosic or complex carbohydrate network. When moisture is removed, the residual starch dries out, upon continued dehydration, it can ignite. Igniting paper in the microwave is one of life's joys afforded only to the adventurous and drunk (similar to an exploding egg).<br />
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Still, intrigued by the idea, I had to conduct this one myself. I would easily swallow my pride and fancy theories and happily eat chips if it worked well. I sliced russets, rinsed them of residual starch, dried them lovingly, sat them on paper towels and tossed 'em in on HIGH. And watched closely. As the fine stream of smoke that precedes a fire started to rise from the chips, I stopped the microwave and rescued my starch nuggets from the (almost burning) microwave. <br />
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The chips had some reasonable color, were crisp but would not accept salt since they had no means to cling to it. They were not objectionable. A fun party trick at best. Real chips are deep fried.<br />
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Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-53226938127539442562015-08-29T10:09:00.004-05:002015-08-29T10:09:50.568-05:00pasta, statThe other night, the wife and I wanted to eat a special chili gifted to us by a friend, a special Indian vegetarian chili in limited supply. Given the child's finicky nature when it comes to chili, we coveted it and gave her spaghetti. Side dish of spaghetti coming up!<br />
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Rolling pasta by machine can take a lot of time if the initial hydration of dough isn't correct. Too wet and the dough requires running it through rollers, dusting with flour, and repeating that until it absorbs enough flour to get to a fine texture and dry enough not to stick when the noodles get cut. I also wanted to use a coarse wheat as part of the dough makeup. Here's what I came up with: 1 yolk + 1 whole egg, 65 g, salt 2 g, olive oil 5 g, unbleached white 110 g, coarse whole wheat 20 g. I mixed this quick by hand, dumped it on the counter and folded the stiff crumble a few times. It eventually gathered into a ball after some work, but it was tough. I resisted adding more water. The rollers would finish the kneading. I let it rest at room temp only about 10 minutes, passed it through coarse rollers and then down to 4 using a roller on a KitchenAid. Then the strips were cut to fine noodles which turned out to be a nice looking spaghetti. Because the dough was on the dry side, it flew through the process without too many passes and was silky smooth by the end. We got our chili and the kid her spag. <br />
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The noodles were allowed to sit on the counter for 20 minutes while I prepped dinner. These were boiled and tossed olive oil, butter, slivered garlic and hot pepper flakes.</div>
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<span id="goog_44393165"></span><span id="goog_44393166"></span><br />Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-75454209974043303312015-08-24T09:39:00.002-05:002015-08-24T09:43:44.810-05:00oven fried (coconut shrimp)"Oven fried" is an expression commonly seen in the doctor's office copy of Family Circle. Potatoes or chicken skimmed with oil (because low fat food makes us all thin) and baked will make food that tastes "just like it's deep fried" claim the recipes.<br />
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These methods are an insult to the beauty of deep frying. With one exception. Mayo. Frankie and I will take thin pieces of chicken breast, coat with mayo and cover with seasoned bread crumbs and bake in a 400F oven. They're really great. It's not deep frying, but it's really a great coating that doesn't flake off. The mayo sticks to the flesh and holds the breading better cooking with just a skim of oil. It's like oil fixation .. or something.<br />
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I used this the other night on some frozen, poor quality shrimp in an attempt to salvage them. I thawed the shrimp, air dried them a while, plopped a bunch of mayo on the floor of the sink (I frequently use the floor of the sink as a workspace for messy jobs), dumped the shrimp and worked the mayo over the outside of the shrimp with my hands leaving as much on the surface as would stay on. I took the coated shrimp and dropped them in a mixture of 1 C bread crumbs and 1C sweetened coconut (and about 5 g salt) to coat them. I baked them in a 425F oven (a little too hot) on top of parchment. Next time I'll cook them a little lighter in color. Fun appetizer for the gang.<br />
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<br />Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-18917717959603358322015-08-05T06:46:00.000-05:002015-08-05T06:49:56.894-05:00"natural" peanut butterI'm a Jif super crunch guy. I lived on it during grad school. Almost everyday, lunch was a quick sandwich at my desk.
When I'm not eating the maligned processed peanut butters, I love the peanut butters made before my eyes with peanuts ground in the hopper before my eyes. The style/peanut-crunching-machines are in most fancy supermarkets. The peanut butter has got great texture, doesn't separate for a long time, about a few weeks and tastes great.<br />
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Today's question: Why does each and every "natural," no additive peanut butter taste like shit and absolutely nothing like the stuff crushed just prior to eating? Sorry locals, even @KremaNutCompany. The pre-ground peanut butters have some texture, kind of runny, separated and above all, the deal breaker, with a bitter aftertaste?
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Machine mashed before my eyes...yum.</div>
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Leading "natural" brand, runny, icky, bitter.</div>
Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-59825103418434671522015-06-22T04:59:00.000-05:002015-06-22T11:11:05.384-05:00baguette, focus on the baking<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">
Instead of forcing you all into compliance regarding specific ingredients, I'm going to let my hair down a bit (ha, that's a joke) and let you use any damn recipe you like. The baking method here is the thing to take a shot at with any dough you have lying around.</div>
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I'm using a slightly enriched dough. I was curious to see the results using higher temp and a cast iron surface with a little steam. The result was unexpected and great. The dough I used was 73% hydration with some enrichment and baked at 500F. What I got was incredible oven spring and a higher hydration gave a nice open texture.</div>
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The dough I used: unbleached white 275 g, whole wheat 25 g, salt 5 g, sugar, 5 g, crisco 9 g (sounds odd, but I wanted a neutral shortening at 3% rel to flour), water 220 g, fast dry yeast 3 g. Straight dough mixed in a bread machine and left in fridge 2-3 days (I've made this many times now, I love it.</div>
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Using a 9 x 17" cast iron surface in the upper half of the oven (NOT TOO LOW, the dark surface can burn the bread if it's too low). I'm a few inches above the half way mark with normal heat, no convection. 1/2 hour before baking, preheat to 500F (500F and above, your oven has to be clean).</div>
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For steam, lately I've been using a hand-pump pressure sprayer, 2L (dedicated use for water). Have it charged, pumped and ready.</div>
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In this image, I'm squirting the water in a fine stream on the front margin of the floor of the oven to avoid hitting the electric element (I heard it can stress it and ruin the element; I've never had the problem). I also avoid hitting the cast iron bake surface, I want that to maintain high heat - vaporizing water requires a lot of energy. If you hit the cast iron, the surface goes down in temp rapidly, can't remember how much, but I've measured this a few times. So, by squirting the floor and walls of the oven, you're able to maintain a hot cook surface from the pre-heated, high thermal mass of the cast iron. That will stay hot while the oven recovers.<br />
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Dough removed from the fridge. This is about 300 g and 15" shaped into a baguette and allowed to proof for about an hour. Having proofed enough, I docked it (slashes) using a favorite serrated knife (I've tried a lame extensively and prefer the knife for docking).<br />
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Slide the loaf onto the cast iron, give a ca. 50 mL blast of steam initially and give another blast 5 minutes later, and that's it. About 5 minutes into the bake, the soft dough jumps with oven spring. Use a total bake time of 15 minutes 500F. Watch your oven! I know mine very well. This is a rapid bake. It's over when it gets the color you like. <br />
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Even with this much enrichment, it's pretty crusty. <br />
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Pretty nice open texture (sliced AFTER at least 10 minutes cool down). Aside from the cast iron ($20 at World Market columbus people), it's an easy method to try. Let me know your results.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-19703224987490738452015-05-16T13:41:00.003-05:002015-05-16T13:42:45.497-05:00porcini pastaIngredients tossed together, mixed, rested and rolled. That's my quick fix for fresh pasta. It's not quite as fine as that derived from machine rolling, but it's pretty good for a weeknight and a few servings barely takes an hour.<br />
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The other night @ChefBillGlover gifted me a sample of porcini powder and suggested one good use for it was as a partial replacement for flour in pasta! </div>
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Here's my version:</div>
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The powder, WOW! After I broked the vacuum seal what an earthy strong smell!<br />
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This is the dough after some mixing in the bread machine: eggs (3, 160 g), olive oil (10 g), salt (3 g), porcini powder (20 g), unbleached white flour (290), whole wheat coarse ground flour (10 g). I like a bit of whole wheat to tighten up the dough. Look at that color!<br />
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After a few minutes kneading in the bread machine, I cut it into 3 balls, wrapped and let the dough rest for about 10 minutes.<br />
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Using some whole wheat flour to keep from sticking, the first blob of dough was rolled to about 18" x 12" and kind of thin. It got tough at the end and I was too impatient to wait for it to relax to get it thinner.<br />
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To cut noodles, I laid out the pasta and let it dry out about 5 minutes. This prevents the noodles from sticking to each other later. Then I just cut lines with a pizza roller. This is different than many cut pasta, but I like it, it's faster than it looks.<br />
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Scooped the noodles from the center into a bunch.<br />
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I let these rest on a wooden peel for about an hour while I went out for a quick wine tasting.<br />
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Tossed in boiling salted water for about 5 minutes, strained and tossed with blanched/sauteed asparagus and peas, and topped with reggiano.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5492055.post-36570876874265773522015-05-10T14:53:00.000-05:002015-05-10T14:56:05.056-05:00poached, a validationValidation has many meanings. The most interesting context for this word from my experience was in big pharma. When scaling up a process, bringing a chemical reaction from research to manufacturing, a reaction procedure goes through a process of being tried by many others to see if it works as described. If you're the first chemist in line, the innovator, it is a humiliating process. You see your personal touch get shredded with vigor by others until it becomes reproducible. It's one of the fastest ways an experimental chemist matures. <br />
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This is what I think about when @TestKitchen or the ilk call something "Master Recipe." It rarely is. But this poached egg method, it's perfect. <br />
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So, this post is only my experience with someone else's method, a validation of sorts. The only thing - I don't know where ground zero is, feel free to chime in via comments. I don't know who created this method. I'd like to have a beer with whoever it is.<br />
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Crack open and egg and swirl on a fine screen for a minute or so. A small but crucial amount of white, will come through the screen, discard it. Then place the egg in a cup or ramekin for dropping in the water. Repeat with as many eggs that you want or will fit in the pan.<br />
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Gently spill the egg into simmering water (no vinegar needed). Let sit 3 minutes. Use screen to remove them. As they cook, they'll lift off the bottom of the pan of boiling water. The eggs will stay separated!<br />
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To serve, bake a baguette, slice in half, toast and butter.<br />
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Grab your egg out of the water with that same screen, swirl to remove excess water and plop on baguette. Enjoy. It always works. Always.Davehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14363867140919109904noreply@blogger.com2