What's For Dinner? | Page 921 | FerrariChat

What's For Dinner?

Discussion in 'Drink, Smoke, and Fine Dining' started by agup48, Apr 7, 2010.

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  1. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    Zero. Not even residual heat. But not sweet like a red bell pepper...T
     
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  2. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    It's been a tough year in the garden even for peppers with our long hot summer. Most plants are putting out one or two peppers at most. Even the South American aji peppers are wilting in the heat. Have them covered by shade cloth, waiting for the heat wave to break, and hoping for a long Indian summer!

    T
     
  3. Jdubbya

    Jdubbya The $10 Trillion Man
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    My garden was going gangbusters till we had a few days pushing 100 a week or so ago. May have done in one little bunch of green beans, the other seems to still be doing ok. My pepper plants are all pretty well loaded except for habanero. Still have a ton of tomatoes to ripen up but if it's not raining tomorrow I need to actually pick a bunch of stuff.
     
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  4. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    Even our chiltepin peppers, which should be reasonably heat tolerant, are starting to wilt!

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    The little red peppers on this pizza I made last night are chiltepin peppers.

    T
     
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  5. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    I also made beef cheeks the other night! Not wagyu though. How'd you prep them? Slow braising?

    I braised mine in beef broth and spices after an initial browning. About 4 hours. So tender!

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    Barbacoa burrito. Homemade pickled red onions, jalapeños and serranos.

    T
     
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  6. boostedt0y

    boostedt0y Formula Junior

    Dec 25, 2014
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    your meal looks delicious!

    as for the beef cheeks, I prepared them in the same fashion as a short rib ragu. Browned on all sides and removed from pot, sauté sofrito, deglaze with red wine and reduce, add beef cheeks, broth, spices, whole garlic bulb, and simmer for 3 hours.
     
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  7. Steelton Keith

    Steelton Keith F1 Veteran
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  8. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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  9. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    Picked up Hatch chili peppers at Kroger. Since there's a burn ban and the missus forbids indoor chili roasting - plus our gasser is out of propane - I improvised and used the Weber electric grill. Took a bit of powerwashing and an extended burnoff to rehabilitate it, but it did a better job than I expected.

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    Chucked a jalapeño and a serrano into the mix. Grilled for about 15 min, flipping once.

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    Since I had a batch of carnitas in the freezer, plus the saved cooking jus, I blitzed the roasted peppers with a bit of the jus, added that to the carnitas, and cooked it through for a quick and easy chili verde.

    T
     
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  10. Steelton Keith

    Steelton Keith F1 Veteran
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    Hi Tom C. Great to see your post...hope all is well. Yes, it's an old Craig Clairborn NY Times Int'l cookbook) recipe updated by one of our faves, Amanda Hesser. Janet uses a sherry vinegar (could also use a white wine). Gotta be careful not to burn the garlic of course. We use about half the fat the recipe calls for. There is a restaurant here in Raleigh...that's in NORTH CAROLINA...getting $90 a la carte for a veal chop. We got those at Wegman's $21 a pound. We use fresh thyme and sage from our booming herb garden. Save the bones and fat, brown thoroughly in a sheet pan and that's the starter for veal stock.
     
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  11. Raconteur

    Raconteur F1 Rookie
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    #23012 Raconteur, Aug 26, 2023
    Last edited: Aug 26, 2023
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  12. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    Nice. Thanks.

    Hmm. May have to get some veal chops next time I'm at Central Market. Looks like a pretty straightforward recipe plus we have some sage growing wild in the back yard. And our neighbor is growing thyme!

    T
     
  13. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    Man, that looks good! Last time we tried to grow tomatillos, it was a hotter than average summer and never got many.

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    Despite the heat, our basil is doing well as it's mostly in the shade. Made a batch of fresh pesto without pine nuts.

    This recipe...

    https://www.feastforafraction.com/homemade-pesto-without-pine-nuts/

    Then used it for chicken margherita...

    https://www.thespruceeats.com/chicken-margherita-4690906

    Didn't take a pic, but I'd advise using a lot less mozz than the above calls far. I topped mine with crushed red pepper for a little extra kick.

    T
     
  14. NbyNW

    NbyNW F1 Rookie
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  15. damian in nj

    damian in nj Formula 3
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  16. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    Love hors d'oeuvres with phyllo dough, but haven't found a good source of the dough in years. Those look fabulous.

    Spoiler alert - no red meat the last few days.

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    Grilled yam.

    This recipe.

    https://gimmesomegrilling.com/grilled-sweet-potatoes/

    Didn't have smoked paprika, so I sprinkled some sumac on there instead. Not bad for veggie!

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    Grilled halibut with homemade pesto. Since I'm using the electric grill, I used an enameled grill pan to hold the heat. 12 min without flipping. Rest for 10 min. Pretty tasty, but certainly not as good as fresh off the boat / grilled over a weird fire that we had in Alaska.

    T
     
  17. BrettC

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    don't like pine nuts Tom?
     
  18. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    Missus has digestive tract issues. So, try to avoid nuts in food she'll be eating...T
     
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  19. boostedt0y

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  20. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    Looks fabulous. Your picture reminds me of the first time I was served shrimp toast. It was in Japan. I had no idea if I was supposed to eat it as it came or remove the shells then eat! I dawdled as long as possible until someone else finally tucked into their's! [emoji23]

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    Air fryer French fries. Fluer de sel.

    T
     
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  21. boostedt0y

    boostedt0y Formula Junior

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    haha yea we have similar experiences re first experience with shrimp toast
     
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  22. vandevanterSH

    vandevanterSH F1 Rookie
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    A FWIW experiment:
    Costco Steakhouse Tri-Tip..16 hrs sous vide at 139 degrees; a few minutes hot sear on a gasser. Came out pretty good, definitive opinion from wife after she gets off work.
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  23. tomc

    tomc Two Time F1 World Champ

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    We did a steak experiment too. Less successful per the missus.

    Cold searing. 5:20 mark.



    Start with a cold non-stick pan, high heat, flip" twice after 2" per side, reduce to medium. Reduce heat to medium. Keep flipping every 2" until desired doneness. Found steaks in the 1/2 off bin at Kroger that weren't short-dated. One a strip, other a ribeye.

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    Steaks down.
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    First flip.
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    Second flip. Reduce to medium.
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    Third and fourth.
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    Fifth and final flip.

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    Sliced. Not a great pic.

    Final analysis. Meh.

    Notes. Don't salt steak until the end. Thought is that this will keep steak surface dry, promoting browning. I used our big Scanpan to fit both steaks in without undue crowding, so there's a lag when turning up/down the flame. Not obvious to me what classifies as medium heat for the latter portion of the cook. Need to experiment. Finally, the strip was < 1.5 inches thick. Method supposedly works better for thicker steaks. The ribeye was 1.5 inches thick, and was the better of the two.

    T
     
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