Angry Beavers
Footballguy
Hungry....
Trolling for new ideas. Gracias Amigos
Trolling for new ideas. Gracias Amigos
Another good angle.Hungry....
Trolling for new ideas. Gracias Amigos
Another good angle.
What are websites you guys often lean to for ideas?
I think seriouseats is probably my go to.
Kenji is a god among menyoutube is a treasure trove for me. You can find an incredibly wide range of food preparation with as many countries and regions as you can think up. Ranging from easy to prepare to hard.Another good angle.
What are websites you guys often lean to for ideas?
I think seriouseats is probably my go to.
Food52.Another good angle.
What are websites you guys often lean to for ideas?
I think seriouseats is probably my go to.
OTOH - my recent discovery is to roast the #### out of veggies like broccoli, cauliflower, brussels sprouts. Heat a sheet pan in the oven up to ~450F. Toss the cut veggies with oil, S&P and then spread them on the hot pan and roast 15-20 minutes until they start showing some char.Wingnut said:I've been cooking since I was around 17 and got my first cooking job as a short order cook. Since then I've worked in several kinds of restaurants from sports bars to fine dining, but got out of cooking for a living about 15 years ago. Once you learn the basics, the rest is easy. And when I say the basics, I mean the basic proteins. Once you know how to cook chicken, steaks and roasts, pork chops/loins, and fish, you can experiment with different flavor combos and make delicious meals any time you want. Sauces are a different ballgame, but again if you learn some basics (or mother sauces) you can make a sauce for anything with things you probably keep in your kitchen most of the time.
Side dishes (starches and veggies) are all pretty simple. Just don't overcook anything and you're golden.
One word of advice with proteins if you're trying to learn how to cook them properly is go lower on temp than you probably think. The most common mistake people make, especially with chicken breasts, pork chops, steaks, etc, is cooking them too fast over high heat which drys and toughens them up. You can start with higher heat to sear but turn the heat down after a minute or two and let them slowly finish. Use a digital thermometer if you need to, and you'll be a Master chef in your own household before you know it. And YouTube is your friend, you can find anything you want to cook and just follow along with the video.
Theres my PSA for the day.
Wingnut said:I've been cooking since I was around 17 and got my first cooking job as a short order cook. Since then I've worked in several kinds of restaurants from sports bars to fine dining, but got out of cooking for a living about 15 years ago. Once you learn the basics, the rest is easy. And when I say the basics, I mean the basic proteins. Once you know how to cook chicken, steaks and roasts, pork chops/loins, and fish, you can experiment with different flavor combos and make delicious meals any time you want. Sauces are a different ballgame, but again if you learn some basics (or mother sauces) you can make a sauce for anything with things you probably keep in your kitchen most of the time.
Yeah we do this too. We love charred roasted veggies...the darker and crispier the better. We usually just put em right under the broiler until desired doneness.OTOH - my recent discovery is to roast the #### out of veggies like broccoli, cauliflower, brussels sprouts. Heat a sheet pan in the oven up to ~450F. Toss the cut veggies with oil, S&P and then spread them on the hot pan and roast 15-20 minutes until they start showing some char.
This channel, CookingInRussia, was the best thing ever as far as cooking goes, unfortunately, YouTube disabled annotations this past December. Annotations are generally regarded as bad because some creators liked to populate their videos with spammy links, but in the case of this cooking channel, the chef used annotations to say things like, "place dish in oven at 350 with fan assist on," or some such. Now all you see is a black screen. Hopefully this will be remedied. Anyway, the annotation problem notwithstanding, his videos can make a C- wannabe chef like myself produce A+ dishes. And it's all done with the most ordinary of cooking hardware.Joe Bryant said:Another good angle.
What are websites you guys often lean to for ideas?
I think seriouseats is probably my go to.
It's funny in I find myself liking the stuff when it's not him better. He seems to have taken a huge step back from the site as he opens his restaurant.heckmanm said:Kenji is a god among men
I think most of my impression from him is from a couple years back, leading up to his Food Lab book (which is great).It's funny in I find myself liking the stuff when it's not him better. He seems to have taken a huge step back from the site as he opens his restaurant.
Agreed.I think most of my impression from him is from a couple years back, leading up to his Food Lab book (which is great).
They do have a lot of good content whether he's there or not. Daniel Gritzer is excellent. I still try to visit the site once a week or so to see what's new there.Agreed.
I'd be lying too if I said his whole "MAGA hats = KKK hood" and refusing to serve anyone with a MAGA hat that he later retracted wasn't a factor. That was so dumb it was incredible. And this from someone like me who voted for Hillary Clinton. I know I should be able to separate the cooking from politics but that was just weird.
The site seems better than ever though without him.
Me too.They do have a lot of good content whether he's there or not. Daniel Gritzer is excellent. I still try to visit the site once a week or so to see what's new there.
looks awesome.A perfectly roasted chicken is one of my favorite basic comfort foods. The recipe I've settled on as my favorite is also the simplest, just three ingredients: a whole chicken, buttermilk and kosher salt. I first saw it done on an episode of Salt Fat Acid Heat, a Netflix series starring a gal (Samin Nosrat) who cooks a lot of great stuff - highly recommended. I made it tonight for the third time since I saw the show a couple of months ago. Did two small birds, best ones yet, maybe because I remembered to convection roast it which I think I forgot to do the other times. Here's a pic that I'm not sure does it justice (need to work on food-pic skills) - perfectly crispy skin and juicy as heck on the inside.
Thanks for posting this. I'm gonna try your recipe.Bryant's Black Eyed Peas.
https://imgur.com/gallery/JqKEB4s
REC - Black Eyed Joe’s Black Eyed Peas Added 1/1/2010 *Modified 12/31/14
2 TBS Bacon Fat or other oil
1 pounds dry black eyed peas (make sure it’s not the 12oz bags)
1 pound ham cut into cubes
8-10 cloves garlic (Use garlic press to get it fine)
1 white onion chopped
1 red bell pepper chopped
8 celery stalks chopped
2 carrots chopped
4 cups pork or chicken stock
4 cups water
½ tsp Tony Chachere seasoning
1 TBS Sweet BBQ Rub
2 Packs Goya Seasoning
*1 TBS Cooking Oil
*1 TBS Sugar
*½ tsp Cayenne Pepper
Soak beans overnight in dutch oven covered at least by 1" of water
In bacon grease, saute onions, red bell and celery until almost translucent. Then add garlic.
Add beans, salt, Goya seasoning, sweet BBQ rub and about 4 cups pork or chicken stock and then enough water to cover beans. Usually takes about 4 cups stock and 4 cups water. Add Sugar, oil and cayenne.
Bring to boil.
Once boiled, turn heat to medium low and simmer uncovered for about 3 hours. Key seems to be cooking them longer than you think you should. They start to break down a bit and get creamy.
Stir to avoid burning. Add water if necessary.
This fills up about ⅔ of big Le Creuset dutch oven. Don’t think it would work with 2 pounds of peas.
Also made without ham and just as good.
All good. That's one of my favorite things about cooking - you do you. Rock on @Uruk-HaiThanks for posting this. I'm gonna try your recipe.
But, for whatever reason, I like my black-eyed peas simpler. I usually fry up a really fatty ham steak then chop it. Throw that, a pound of black-eyed peas, and coverage in broth into the pressure cooker and let her rip. Greens - collards, spinach, or kale - and corn bread on the side.
Which is weird. When I do chili, stew, or gumbo (my "gumbo" would absolutely horrify true believers) I kitchen-sink it. Not black-eyed peas, though. I'll have to talk to my therapist about that.
My two biggest issues with cooking are a) I'm mostly cooking for one and (especially) b) I'm not a natural. I have family and friends (including a bunch of you reprobates) that can be blindfolded and pull 4 items each out of fridge, freezer, cupboard - and make something fantastic out of them. I can't do that. I don't have the imagination for it, especially when it comes to proportions. That's why these threads help me so much.All good. That's one of my favorite things about cooking - you do you. Rock on @Uruk-Hai
I hear you. My thought on that is just keep at it. After a while, you start to get an intuition for what goes with what and you can be creative. Although to be fair, 95% of the time I'm cooking, I'm just following a recipe and maybe adding or omitting a thing or two I know I like or don't like. With the internet today, there's more recipes out there than we can cook in a zillion lifetimes. Have fun.My two biggest issues with cooking are a) I'm mostly cooking for one and (especially) b) I'm not a natural. I have family and friends (including a bunch of you reprobates) that can be blindfolded and pull 4 items each out of fridge, freezer, cupboard - and make something fantastic out of them. I can't do that. I don't have the imagination for it, especially when it comes to proportions. That's why these threads help me so much.
The bolded is the straight truth. I usually pick those that don't involve me having to cut garlicI hear you. My thought on that is just keep at it. After a while, you start to get an intuition for what goes with what and you can be creative. Although to be fair, 95% of the time I'm cooking, I'm just following a recipe and maybe adding or omitting a thing or two I know I like or don't like. With the internet today, there's more recipes out there than we can cook in a zillion lifetimes. Have fun.
This is mine:Tempted to start a new thread.
Dudes, what is your signature dish? My top two are Coq au Vin and Beef Bourguignon; and eggplant parm says hi!
Pinterest for me. My wife was the one who steered me to it. I set up about 25 boards of just recipe catagories and started pinning just recipes. Now, it's my cookbook. And I can find just about anything on there.Another good angle.
What are websites you guys often lean to for ideas?
I think seriouseats is probably my go to.
Took 3rd place out of 65 teams in our first SCA event in one of the most competitive markets with an entry we made up over beers yesterday.[icon] said:Competing with a couple buddies in our first SCA (Steak Cookoff) event today.
Ancillary category is bologna.
We are going with a slider that I’ve affectionately named “Goooood Morning Vietnam”
Start with Boars Head bologna Chub. Cut down to size, scored around edge, and smoked over applewood at 225 for 2 hours.
Then sliced into 1/2” thick slices, seared over 800 degree grates for nice crosshatching, and then finished with a heavy glaze consisting of 2pts homemade hot-chili sauce, 1pt Hoisin sauce, a squeeze of honey and dab of molasses.
Placed on buttered/toasted Hawaiian slider roll.
Topped with thick cut Wright’s Farm Bacon (extra crispy), egg (over easy then chopped with extra yolk), and homemade quick-pickled shaved red onion.
Its really really tasty.
The vietnamese theme is somewhat tenuous given the boars head chub is not technically Chua Lua (vietnamese bologna), and Hoisin is Chinese (but heavily used in Vietnam with certain dishes)... and vietnamese vinegared onions use white onion not red.... it’s a close enough play for us to have fun with.![]()
dude.Uruk-Hai said:The bolded is the straight truth. I usually pick those that don't involve me having to cut garlic![]()
That's one of the best parts about cooking.Uruk-Hai said:The bolded is the straight truth. I usually pick those that don't involve me having to cut garlic![]()
I use the juice in the marinade as a compliment. really like tropical flavors and use guava, mango, pineapple, etc in bbq sauces.... or for seafood, passion fruit beurre blanc and whatnot .Tried something new tonight. Threw some fresh pineapple and papaya in the blender and got it close to liquid as I could. Then marinated chicken chunks in that for 2 hours, then wrapped those in bacon, and skewered them with fresh pineapple and red onion. Grilled em and brushed them with a mixture of soy, oyster sauce and brown sugar. They turned out pretty awesome, but using fresh fruit juice over tenderized the chicken and the texture was a bit mushy.
I never marinated with fresh pineapple it papaya juice, I've always used the canned or bottled stuff, which doesn't actually tenderize meat because the canning process kills the enzymes that do the work. Next time I'll go that route, as the chicken really doesn't need tenderizing, I just wanted some pineapple flavor.
Anyway here's before and after the grill pics. I served the skewers with air fryer sweet potato fries.
Before: https://i.imgur.com/pDOJBAV.jpg
After: https://i.imgur.com/843YV0C.jpg
California Pizza Kitchen used to make a mu shu calzone..... and a peking duck pizzaI am a big fan of calzones and meat pies in general. As part of my new Asian kick of cooking, I am going to try what looks to be a Chinese version of pocket food. It looks awesome. Wish me luck!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kgc4rFv63oA
I neglected to reply to this earlier, Seriouseats makes me look like a pro on Thanksgiving.Another good angle.
What are websites you guys often lean to for ideas?
I think seriouseats is probably my go to.
You had me at bacon fat.Wingnut said:Trying another something new tonight. Chicken and Italian sausage cooked with garlic, onions, wine, artichoke hearts, and cherry peppers because I have all those things on hand and I think this will be good.
No recipe, just gonna chunk up chicken breasts, season, brown on stove and set aside, then slice the talian sausage into half inch discs, brown on stove and set aside. Then I'll add some bacon fat to that same pan, and cook some garlic, oregano, and sliced red onion for a few minutes, then deglaze with white wine, scrape up brown bits, reduce by about half, add some chicken stock, then add the chicken, sausage, artichokes, and cherry peppers to the pan and simmer on stove for 15-20 min and season to taste with salt and pepper. Gonna serve it over Angel hair pasta, top with a sprinkling of finely chopped garlic greens from the garden for color, and a side of grilled asparagus.
Will report back on how it turns out.
I blanch and shock them. then either roast or pan sear. bacon, apple, and variations of vinaigrettes.I didn't see anything in this thread on brussels sprouts. They are historically pretty crummy when moms used to boil em. But roasted, they are pretty darn tasty. I did this one tonight and turned out very good.
Oven to 425
Start with 1 to 2 lbs. of sprouts
Halve sprouts and get rid of loose leafs
Mix with salt and pepper and 2T of evoo
Roast for 20 minutes or until browned/carmelized. Stir occasionally.
After cooked, mix with 1T evoo, 1T balsamic vin, 1t honey. (initially seemed like not enough liquid, but was actually a little much)
What is the benefit of blanching?I blanch and shock them. then either roast or pan sear. bacon, apple, and variations of vinaigrettes.
But then you roast them afterwards?Quick, partial cooking. Maintains color, vitamins, and most flavor..... removes bitterness in the case of brussel sprouts.
..... vs boiling to fully done.But then you roast them afterwards?
If I just go straight to grill r roast them what I am losing in vitamins and flavor?
Turned out great. I added a little flour after deglazing so the sauce would thicken up a bit, and man was it good.Wingnut said:Trying another something new tonight. Chicken and Italian sausage cooked with garlic, onions, wine, artichoke hearts, and cherry peppers because I have all those things on hand and I think this will be good.
No recipe, just gonna chunk up chicken breasts, season, brown on stove and set aside, then slice the talian sausage into half inch discs, brown on stove and set aside. Then I'll add some bacon fat to that same pan, and cook some garlic, oregano, and sliced red onion for a few minutes, then deglaze with white wine, scrape up brown bits, reduce by about half, add some chicken stock, then add the chicken, sausage, artichokes, and cherry peppers to the pan and simmer on stove for 15-20 min and season to taste with salt and pepper. Gonna serve it over Angel hair pasta, top with a sprinkling of finely chopped garlic greens from the garden for color, and a side of grilled asparagus.
Will report back on how it turns out.
PSA: Google this with Safe Search ONSlight tangent. Just watched a show on Food Network called "Girl meets Farm". Hottie. Like ridiculously hot. PSA.
I recognize your name. I do not trust you. Will report back.PSA: Google this with Safe Search ON