Tomatoes
Hot dogs
Because of the long proofing period, the dough ages to an old-world texture and flavor that is utterly absent from breads made quickly. And by quickly I mean breads risen within just a few hours, which is the whole point of modern single-species yeast marketed for home baking. See? We're bucking the system here by purposefully going slowly instead of ripping them off quickly. I tell you, you'll never buy another package of hot dog buns again, and every time you have the misfortune of being presented with an ordinary white-bread bun by someone who simply doesn't care for your well-being, you'll be thinking, "gee, this would be so much better if it was only on one of my own home-made buns." And when that day comes, congratulations, you are now officially arrogant when it comes to hot dog buns.
Ham sandwich
Labels: ham sandwich, Maui sourdough
Salmon breakfast
* Hash browns from fries previously frozen
* Egg poached in ramekin sprayed with Pam™ and watched like a hawk. A chicken hawk. A chicken egg hawk. A chicken egg hawk that poaches chicken an egg and stands there watching it cook until the white turns opaque and removes the ramekin from the water before the yolk hardens, which is a very alert hawk indeed.
Breakfast, sugar peas, sweet peppers
Labels: breakfast, egg, ham, sugar peas, sweet peppers, tomato
Sourdough bread, Maui culture
These loaves were made in succession in a medium sized Magnalite pot with metal handle and lid using Jim Layton's no-knead method Search [+NYT +bread] for video.
Egg in a hole
And a hole in an egg in a hole
Labels: egg, egg in a hole, sourdough
Oatmeal
with fruity trail mix and extra shredded coconut, pecans, brown sugar, and if you forget a dash of salt, it's just blah, and milk and butter.
Shirred eggs
Yesterday somebody said, "My grandma used to make us shirred eggs." That caused me to look up the word shirred. Looked at pictures. Learned that apparently anything at all can go under the eggs. I'd prefer spinach and some kind of ham but I don't have any spinach. I do have Walla Walla onion and I'm long on sweet peppers, so I used that. Caramelized half an onion with mirepoix including garlic. Elaborated a veloute sauce from home-made broth and threw in frozen chicken bits.
But Bo, how did you manage to avoid the yolk from becoming cooked firm, a problem many people note on the photos you essayed in researching the word shirred? Easy. I separated them, and watched them like a hawk in the convection oven -- a hawk intent on perfect eggs.
Labels: baked, eggs, shirred, sweet pepper, Walla Walla onion
Sourdough, Carl's 1847 Oregon Trail
Two loaves.
Mark Bittman in Sullivan's Street Bakery, Manhattan, Hell's Kitchen, N.Y. introduces owner and head baker Jim Layton's no-knead method. Claiming, so easy a six year old could make better bread than any bakery. Challenged, Jim says, "Four year old!"
Well, there ya go. Video on YouTube and NYT website.
Here's the thing. Long proofing periods (time dough rises) is itself a form of kneading. After proofing, the dough is unceremoniously dumped onto a work surface. Gently patted. I do not know why, but Jim says pat, so pat I do. Considering the dough wad to possess four sides, although it's just a blob, pull outward one side gently but firmly, and ever so skillfully to stretch the entire wad, then flip it back onto itself, effectively halving the stretched wad in length but doubling it in height. Do the same thing to the opposite side. That leaves two directions not stretched. Stretch and flip those over too. So you've stretched and flipped four times, in so doing produced a stack of stretched flips, the stretching running this way and that, and all this stretching and flipping is all the kneading the dough gets. Cool, eh?
The pile of stretched and flipped dough is dropped into a rocket hot oven pot and covered with a hot lid, then baked on high for thirty minutes, then continued uncovered for another 15 minutes in an oven as high as it will go. Which, for a klutz like myself, is scary high 500℉. Jim burned himself in the demonstration.
The open secret behind this method is exceedingly wet dough. That allows large holes to form. The covered pot retains the moisture keeping the dough wet long enough for it to expand magnificently. Were the dough dry, this would not be possible. Uncovering for the final baking period allows the moisture to migrate to the surface and out.
Labels: 1847 Oregon Trail, bread, Carls, NYT no-knead method, sourdough
Pan searing whole chickens
The idea is to pan sear chicken parts so that the skin doesn't shrink, to steam them in liquid for speed and even cooking, then return them to to the pan to re-sear for crispy skin for great presentation. This makes more sense when fewer parts are all done at once, it makes less sense when two whole chickens are done in batches and when the purpose of the whole thing is for for chicken bits to freeze and to make quality broth. It was an experiment. It failed. Simply roasting them is better.
The first time I cut up a chicken I didn't know what I was doing. I also didn't know the difference between a fryer and a roaster so I bought both to find out. The roaster turned out to be a lot tougher to cut up, so I learned. The difference is really that roaster are a few weeks older than fryers. I thought the idea was to hack up the bird into segments whacking brutally through the bone. Surely, I thought, that's what cleavers are for. I didn't know about locating and skillfully slicing through joints. I had a great deal of difficulty and possibly ruined a knife. I kept thinking about Jeffrey Dahmer and the word "dismember" kept running through my mind. I nearly passed out. Had to sit down and recover, then get back to hacking. Later I'd see Julia Child on television explain how to do all this with some intelligence. I watched her with rapt attention. She cheerfully recommended cutting up whole chickens instead of buying parts, she said, "Plus, it's fun!" I thought, "You're one crazy lady, you are." But that changed my attitude toward the whole thing and now I think of Julia a bit fondly whenever I do this, which is often. I love Julia Child. I owe her everything.
Labels: broth, cutting, searing, steaming, whole chickens
Fried rice
* held-over kielbasa added.
Labels: flavor sauces, fried rice, fried vegetables, rice
Mashed potatoes
How to stave starvation in two easy steps. OK fine! Four or five easy steps.
Produced from potatoes prepared previously and frozen
Hummus as guacamole
* Olive oil heated with garlic added
* Chips made with masa herena and warm water, formed into small balls, smashed in tortilla flattener, fried for a few seconds, cut in stacks into wedge shapes, deep fried while turning until dehydrated.
Blog Archive
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2008
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October
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- Balcony tomatoes with pasta and olives
- Black beans and tomatoes
- Tomatoes
- Tilapia patties
- Hummus
- Tilapia breakfast
- Omelette
- Hot dogs
- Chicken soup
- Pasta infused with chicken broth
- Roast beef sandwich
- Ham sandwich
- Salmon breakfast
- Breakfast, sugar peas, sweet peppers
- Sourdough bread, Maui culture
- Egg in a hole
- Oatmeal
- Buttered noodles with chuck roast and sweet pepper...
- Avocado, Carl's sourdough, tomato, parmigiano
- Shirred eggs
- Sourdough, Carl's 1847 Oregon Trail
- Tomato
- Pan searing whole chickens
- Apple and cheese
- Fried rice
- Mashed potatoes
- Hummus as guacamole
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October
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