Thursday, November 8, 2012

Take a long hard look at who you associate with...

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I'd like to take a minute to address all the Republicans out there who are crying about Romney not getting elected.

Watch this video.



Your party (with the help of its media cohorts) deliberately pushed Ron Paul out of the media, essentially forcing him from being nominated as the party's presidential nominee. I (and almost everyone else who voted for Gary Johnson) would have voted for Ron Paul in this election had he been nominated, and he probably would have gotten quite a few people who supported Obama in this election too. That would have been enough to secure the votes needed to get a republican into the white house as displayed in the picture below.



Moral of the story, stop blaming the people who voted for Obama, they spoke their opinion just like you did, and that doesn't make it wrong. Instead, take look at who's REALLY to blame, YOUR chosen party.

Thank you for your time.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Thanksgiving Practice

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My wife & I recently took a trip to Michigan to see family, where I was unceremoniously elected to cook our big family dinner. Since Thanksgiving is right around the corner, I figured I would brush off my Thanksgiving skills. The following ensued:

 The assembled feast

The Recipes

Sous Vide Turkey...the moistest bird you will ever eat...hands down


Ingredients:

  • 1 whole (10 to 14 pound) turkey, fresh or thawed
  • 2 cups kosher salt
  • 1 gallon water
  • 1 stick (1/4 pound) unsalted butter

Instructions:

  1. Prepare the turkey by carefully removing both breasts and the two leg quarters, with the skin intact (or ask your butcher to do this for you.) You can leave the breasts joined, which makes a nice presentation on the platter, or separate the halves.
  2. Make the brine by combining the water & salt in a large pot over low heat; stir until the salt fully dissolves; remove from heat and allow the brine to cool. The bring should be a 6% solution of salt water (about 1/2 a cup of kosher salt, or 1/4 cup of table salt per quart of water)
  3. Put the turkey breast and leg quarters into the brine and refrigerate overnight. (If your refrigerator cannot accommodate the large pot, put the turkey pieces into separate gallon zip closure bags, pour the brine over them, seal and refrigerate.
  4. When ready to sous vide, remove the turkey from the brine, rinse the pieces well, and pat dry.

Cooking the Turkey Breasts

  1. Preheat the water oven to 146F/63C.
  2. Sprinkle the breasts lightly with poultry seasoning and ground black pepper and vacuum seal them in a large food-grade pouch with ¼ stick (1 ounce/30 grams) unsalted butter.
  3. Cook the breast meat for 2 ½ hours, remove, quick chill the pouches submerged in ice water for at least 45 minutes (adding ice as needed) and refrigerate the pouches for up to 48 hours.

Cooking the Turkey Leg Quarters

  1. Preheat the water oven to 176F/80C.
  2. Sprinkle the leg quarters lightly with poultry seasoning and ground black pepper and vacuum/seal them separately in two large food-grade pouches, each with ¼ stick (1 ounce/30 grams) unsalted butter.
  3. Cook for 8 to 10 hours (overnight works well.)
  4. Remove the pouches from the water oven, quick chill the pouches submerged in ice water for at least 1 hour, and refrigerate up to 48 hours.

Reheating for the feast

  1. Return the pouches (both dark and white meat) to a 146F/63C water bath for an hour before the feast to re-warm.
  2. For the finishing step, brown and crisp the turkey skin, using the broiler set to high, a hot skillet on the stovetop, or a kitchen torch. (We prefer the broiler method (step 3) as being more hands off.)
  3. Just before serving, remove the turkey pieces from their cooking pouches, pat their skin surface dry with a paper towel, brush them with melted butter, and put them skin side up onto a broiling rack; sear the exterior until brown, about 5 to 6 minutes under the broiler.
  4. Arrange the turkey breasts and the leg quarters on a serving platter with garnish for the big presentation, if desired (See above picture)



 Homemade Sausage - Fennel Stuffing

Directions
  1. In a large deep skillet, saute 1/2 pound crumbled sweet Italian sausage in 6 tablespoons butter for 5 minutes.
  2. Season with salt and pepper and add 1 diced fennel bulb, 1 diced onion, and 1 tablespoon each chopped sage and thyme; cook 5 minutes
  3. Add 1 diced peeled apple and cook 2 minutes.
  4. Pour in 2 1/2 to 3 cups chicken broth. Simmer until step 5.
  5. In a large bowl, mix 2 eggs and 1/4 cup chopped parsley.
  6. Add to the bowl 16 cups toasted white bread cubes and the hot broth mixture.
  7. Gently toss the stuffing, then spread in a buttered 9-by-13-inch baking dish. Dot the top with butter or turkey pan drippings, cover and bake 30 minutes at 350. Uncover and bake until golden, 20 more minutes.


Homemade Yukon Gold Mashed Potato's


Ingredients

5 lb yukon gold potatoes
1 to 2 sticks butter
1/2 to 1 cup heavy cream
salt to taste


Directions

Peel potatoes and cut into rough chunks about 1 to 2-inches cubed. Transfer to a bowl of cold water to rinse. Change water two or three times until it runs clear.

Bring 4 quarts of water to a boil in a Dutch oven or large stockpot over high heat. Add potatoes and cook until completely tender, about 15 minutes. Drain potatoes in colander and rinse under hot running water for 30 seconds to wash away excess starch. Set ricer or food mill over now-empty pot and pass potatoes through. Add milk and butter and fold gently with rubber spatula to combine. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Keep warm until ready to serve.


Cheers!



Monday, September 17, 2012

From Serious Eats: The Burger Lab - Smashed Burgers vs. Smashing Burgers

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The Burger Lab: Smashed Burgers vs. Smashing Burgers:
From A Hamburger Today




It's time for another round of The Food Lab. Got a suggestion for an upcoming topic? Email Kenji here, and he'll do his best to answer your queries in a future post. Become a fan of The Food Lab on Facebook or follow it on Twitter for play-by-plays on future kitchen tests and recipe experiments.

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[Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]

"Never ever press down on your burger!"

How many times have you read that in a book or heard a TV chef say it? "It squeezes the juices out!" they cry. "It turns your lunch into a hockey puck!"they scream. Sometimes they'll try and appeal to your compassionate side. "Certainly there are some things that deserve crushing. Evil grapes. T-800 model Terminators. Rebel scum trapped in trash disposals. But what has that poor, defenseless little burger ever done to you to deserve such a fate?"

You've heard it so many times you can't help but believe it's true, right?

Well ok, Mr. Smarty-Chef, I'll believe you, but first! You must answer me these questions three:

  • Question the first: One of my favorite burgers in New York—the one that folks'll stand in line for an hour to get—is smashed. How does the Shake Shack burger still retain such abundant juiciness?
  • Question the second: The SmashBurger chain of fast-casual burger joints has built its reputation on its smashing technique. Are all of its fans (which are legion) deluded into enjoying the flavor of dry hockey pucks?
  • Question the third: I just had what was the finest burger I've tasted in recent memory at Off-Site Kitche in Houston where—guess what?—the burgers are smashed. What gives?

Now, these questions are largely rhetorical, and anybody who's been making burgers for a while or has been reading The Burger Lab for long enough knows the answer: not smashing your burgers is always sometimes only sort of occasionally good advice.

When is it ok to smash your burgers and when is it not? Well first, let's consider the advantages of smashing a burger.

In Crust We Trust


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There's really only one reason to do it, and it's the reason that all three of the burgers I mentioned above (as well as countless others) taste so good: The Maillard Reaction. The Maillard Reaction—also known as the browning reaction*—is a series of chemical reactions that take place when protein-rich foods are heated. Large proteins break into smaller compounds which react with others, recombining into new configurations. They break apart again, recombine, and on and on in a cascade of chemical reactions that creates hundreds of brand new compounds.

* This is not to be confused with caramelization, which is a reaction that takes place when sugar is heated—you can't caramelize a steak or a burger, no matter what any TV chef tells you!

It's what creates the crust on your steak or burger, the golden brown color on your toast, and the complex, pleasing aromas and flavors that accompany that browning. It's the smell of a steakhouse and fresh bread from the oven. And it's the smell of a good burger joint. It doesn't just make meat taste good, it actually makes it taste more meaty.

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Most of the browning reactions don't take place until foods are heated to at least 300°F or so, and are greatly accelerated at temperatures higher than that, so if maximizing browning is your goal when cooking a burger (and it should be!), then it's plain to see why smashing a burger can improve its flavor: It maximizes contact with the pan, increasing the surface area directly in contact with the hot metal, and maximizing browning.

While it's true that given enough time you can brown even a non-smashed burger, there are a couple problems. If the heat is too high, the browning will be uneven—at worst, the bits of meat directly in contact with the skillet or griddle will burn before the bits elevated above it can even begin to brown properly. With lower heat, you can get more even browning, but it takes longer—long enough that your burger will end up overcooking in the middle (and overcooking is the real path to dry burgers).

Smashing allows you to get a deep brown crust before the interior overcooks, even with a relatively small patty.

The Juice is Loose


So when is it not a good idea to brown? We all have a pretty good idea of this, but I cooked through a couple dozen burgers smashing at various stages during cooking in order to make sure. The results? If you don't want to lose juices, you must smash within the first 30 seconds of cooking.

When ground beef is cold, its fat is still solid and its juices are still held firmly in place inside small, chopped up segments of muscle fibers. That's the reason why you can push and press on ground meat without squeezing out too much liquid, and the reason why you can smash a burger during the initial phases of cooking without fear of losing moisture.

But what happens after that initial cooking phase as the meat warms up?

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This is what happens when you put a cooked burger patty in a citrus juicer.

When you look at a burger under a microscope, you basically see what amounts to an interconnected network of proteins interspersed with fat and water-based liquids. Like all meats, as a burger cooks, this protein network tightens, squeezing out liquids. Simultaneously, the fat begins to render and liquefy, allowing it to be squeezed out right along with the other juices.

In a properly formed burger—one that is made with meat that's been ground properly and kept chilled and minimally handled while shaping—the protein matrix is relatively loose. Even once fat has been liquefied and juices have been squeezed out, they can remain trapped in the patty, only getting released when you bite into the burger, in much the same way that liquids can be trapped in a sponge and only released by squeezing.

Press down on a burger during this phase, and the juices come gushing out into the skillet or onto your coals. You're left with what amounts to a meat patty with the texture of a sponge that's been run through a ringer.

All burgers will lose weight as you cook them—it's not possible to hold on to all liquefied fat and exuded juices. In my testing, four-ounce burgers that started as round pucks and were smashed down to a half-inch thickness any time before 30 seconds still lost a little over 20 percent of their weight while cooking. This was comparable to four-ounce burgers that were formed into 1/2-inch disks and cooked with no smashing at all. Both burgers tasted quite juicy, while the smashed burger had better flavor (obviously!).

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Once you start smashing after the 1 minute mark, that's when juices really start to flow and you end up with a dramatically drier burger—a good 50 percent more moisture is lost in a burger smashed after 1 minute versus one smashed within 30 seconds.

Move into the territory of double or even triple smashing—that is, smashing once at the beginning, then getting impatient and smashing again and again during the middle and latter phases of cooking—and a burger can easily lose half of its weight to the evil griddle gods. I've seen more than one short order cook at a greasy spoon with a backup of orders resort to this dastardly method, and not once have I ever taken more than one bite of a burger that's been exposed to it.

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A burger at Good Stuff Eatery being annihilated.

If you've read my breakdown of the Fake Shackburger, you already know the best way to cook a smashed burger at home, but I realized that I've never produced a more generic recipe for one.

Three Rules For Smashing Success


Other than the basic rules of burgers (use meat with at least 20 percent fat, a good blend of cuts or straight ground chuck, preferably freshly ground, don't add salt or other seasonings until after the patties are formed), making a smashed burger is simple. Just follow these basic rules:

Rule 1: Use a good stainless steel or cast iron skillet.


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The goal is steady, even heat, so you want to use a relatively thick pan and allow it to preheat for long enough that there are no hot or cool spots. I let my pans preheat over medium heat for a few minutes, pumping them up to high just before I add the meat. Don't use a non-stick pan, as the high heat required for a good crust is damaging to non-stick coatings and can cause them to vaporize. You don't want to breathe that junk in.

Rule 2: Smash early and smash firmly.


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I have a thick, flat, sturdy metal spatula specially devoted to the task of smashing burgers. You'll need one to do this properly. Form four to five ounces of meat into a puck about 2-inches high, season liberally with salt and pepper, and place it on the preheated skillet, then smash down on it with the spatula, using a second spatula to add pressure if necessary. Then just cook without moving until a deep brown crust develops. This'll take about a minute and a half.

Rule 3: Leave no crust behind.


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The whole goal of smashing is to develop a nice browned crust, so it's important that you scrape it all up intact. Once again, a sturdy metal spatula is your friend. I find that flipping the spatula upside down to help scrape the crust off is pretty effective. If you crust is properly developed and your burger properly smashed, it should spend very little time on its second side—just enough to finish cooking through and to allow cheese to melt (if added). 30 seconds or so.

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And, well, that's it. So simple, so fast, so freaking delicious. Do it.

Get The Recipe


Smashed Burgers »

About the author: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is the Chief Creative Officer of Serious Eats where he likes to explore the science of home cooking in his weekly column The Food Lab. You can follow him at @thefoodlab on Twitter, or at The Food Lab on Facebook.







Get the Recipe!






Thursday, February 23, 2012

This Weekend's Project: Raspberry Wheat

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A little preview of what Andi & I will be doing this weekend...



More to follow in the coming weeks.

Cheers!


Monday, December 19, 2011

Grilling: Herb-Crusted Standing Rib Roast

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Definitely plan on trying this amazing recipe once I get re-situated in Cincinnati. Recipe care of the awesome folks over at Serious Eats.
Grilling: Herb-Crusted Standing Rib Roast:
This content series is sponsored by Texas Beef Council representing Texas farmers and ranchers who work every day to produce safe, nutritious, and wholesome beef for your family.


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Nothing like a holiday as an excuse to roast a gigantic chunk of beef!



This year I must have been especially good because Pat LaFrieda so kindly provided a full 7-bone standing rib roast, cut into two pieces to let me test different recipes.



There was no question I would take these to the grill, where I did one with a simple salt and pepper coating and reverse-seared, while the other was seared then slathered with mustard and given a mixed herb coating.


Both were fantastic, but me and my meaty minions who helped devour this enormous amount of beef were all in agreement: the herb-crusted version is really something special, truly fit for a holiday dinner.



The herb crust had an insane amount of flavor that was strong enough to hold up to the intense beefiness of the medium-rare meat—best was when you got both together in one explosive bite.



No matter what holiday you're celebrating this season, having a rib roast on your table will make it an extra special celebration.



Get the Recipe



Herb-Crusted Standing Rib Roast >>



About the author: Joshua Bousel brings you new, tasty condiment each Wednesday and a recipe for weekend grilling every Friday. He also writes about grilling and barbecue on his blog The Meatwave whenever he can be pulled away from his grill.











Monday, October 24, 2011

Best cooking idea I have seen in a while

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OK. For years, I have loved to cook homemade Chinese-American food (specifically General Tso's Chicken (my personal recipe kicks ass, just ask my wife)), but I have always dreaded having to cut, batter, and fry all the chicken required. Insert Serious Eats with this most awesome suggestion. SO excited to try this as soon as possible. Thanks SE!


Popeye Tso's Chicken (General Tso's Chicken Made With Popeye's Chicken Nuggets)

Cheers!

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Thursday, June 23, 2011

Knife Sharpening

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For a long time now, I have been searching for a knife sharpening service to service my high end cooking knives (I own a set of WÜSTHOF knives). Fortunately in my search for someone to sharpen mine, I came along this article by the Wall Street Journal. The thing I like about this article is that they point out the pro’s and con’s of each service, and then test the knives against one another. I will most likely use Seattle Knife Sharpening or Korin.

 

Cheers!

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