I had some chicken thighs that needed to be cooked or frozen, I opted for the former. I sprinkled Galena Street from Penzey's on the thighs and then put them in the 400° F oven for 30 minutes.
After I removed them from the oven, I added the vegetation, broccoli, onions, potatoes, tomatoes and a green pepper. Coated them in the fat in the pan, and nestled them around the thighs. Back into the oven for another 30 minutes. or until the internal temp of the thighs reached 180°F. Then we ate!Thursday, April 29, 2021
Sunday, April 25, 2021
Dateline: April 24, 2021 Experimental Dinner: Air Fried Chicken Thighs
I know, I know, I visited the website Modernist Pantry and saw a demo of air fried chicken, ordered the components and decided to give it a go.
I should have been more attentive to the recipe, there was an error, that I unfortunately didn't notice until after I made the breading..... live and learn.
The error was in printing the weight of the AP flour as 600 g, but it was supposed to be 60 grams. So I have a big bag of stuff that didn't work out so well.
I brined the chicken first in a buttermilk brine with Worcestershire sauce, powdered hot sauce, salt, pepper, marjoram, thyme, and vinegar powder. That part went well.
Next came the breading procedure. The products that I ordered were Evercrisp and Batter Binder S. These are designed to 1) hold the batter on the product and 2) provide a long lasting crisp on the food. Neither worked, which I attribute to the stupid error in the recipe and I will have to try again.The taste was pretty good, hit of spice came through and the crispy parts were crispy, but the batter did not adhere very well. The vegetables were good, they were steamed!
I have to admit, the photo makes them look really good!Dateline: April 22, 2021 Old Fashioned Pot Roast
I bought a large chuck roast that I had thought I would smoke, but the weather was too cold and windy to stand around tending the smoker, so I had to move to another plan......Pot Roast.
Old Fashioned Pot Roast
Ingredients
Thursday, April 22, 2021
Dateline: April 21, 2021 Lamb Tajine
We were visiting my mom in North Carolina last week, and prior to that I was not cooking.....that explains the break in posts!
I recently "found" my tajine pan again, so was itching to use it. I had ordered from Fresh Direct some lamb chunks, and decided on tajine last night. This was the perfect setting to pull it out and have a go.
I used a Melissa Clark recipe from NYTCooking. Of course, I had to make a few changes, I didn't have apricots, so I used prunes, I didn't have almonds, so I used a mix of walnuts and pine nuts. My lamb was without bone, so sue me, as it was boneless, I went with 2 lbs of meat chunks instead of the 3 lb called for in the recipe.
This was pretty easy, and very delicious. I was concerned that it would be too sweet and possibly cloying, but that was not the case! I had read some of the notes that stated they felt it was too salty, I used only 1 t of salt at the beginning and probably could have used the 2 t called for in the recipe. The onions melted down into this delectable thick coating on the lamb chunks. It was not too sweet. It was luscious with the rice and the meal was rounded out with a salad. Both of us were quite happy and it may just become a regular in the rotation.
Tuesday, April 6, 2021
Dateline: April 5, 2021 Bottarga, Baby, Bottarga
I was reading on Serious Eats about pasta with bottarga. I had a jar of bottarga in the pantry that I was aching to try. The article said it would give the taste of the sea to the pasta. I looked at the recipe, and decided to take a slightly different tactic but incorporate some of the techniques for dealing with the bottarga in my dish.
For those that don't know what bottarga is, it is the salted and dried roe sacs from mullet fish. You can buy it in whole lobes, or pre-ground up. I had a jar of pre-ground, so that is what I used.
For my version, I used short pasta, lots of parsley, a sliced red finger pepper, and A LOT of garlic, sliced into not so thin slices.
Ingredients
Dateline: April 4, 2021 Grilled Steak, Roasted Whole Cauliflower, and Grilled Potatoes
I had 2 beautiful strip steaks that I wanted to grill. So I set up the grill and lit a fire hoping to get everything done before it got dark and cold! I threw a chunk of wood on to supply a little more smoke for the veg.
I oiled the steaks and seasoned with salt and pepper as well as oiling up the cauliflower and seasoning it with salt, pepper, and smoked paprika. I washed up a couple of yukon gold potatoes and oiled and seasoned them up as well.
When the fire was ready, I got it to hold steady at 300°F and put the cauliflower on the grill. I figured I had about 40 - 60 minutes before it was cooked through and delightfully smokey. I figured the taters would take about the same amount of time. They would not fall apart, but get crustier, which is a lovely thing in its own right!
Dateline: April 1, 2021 What to do with leftover chicken?
We had quite a bit of chicken left over from the buttermilk brine experiment, so I needed to get creative with it. I decided on Chicken Pot No Pie.
I created a mirepoix of veggies: carrots, green pepper, onion, and sautedd in butter and olive oil. After the veggies had softened, I added flour and cooked until the raw taste was gone, and then added the left over veggies form the previous night. I added chicken stock and cooked until the stock thickened and then added in the cut up chicken meat. Brought it to a boil, and put it covered into a 350°F oven for 45 minutes until hot and bubbling. I removed the lid, and let some of the liquid cook off to thicken things up a bit, and dinner was served!
Thursday, April 1, 2021
Dateline: March 31, 2021 Buttermilk Brined Roasted Chicken with veggies
I had 2 smallish chickens in the fridge, they needed to be cooked. I was going to do a taste test between Cook's Venture and a Kosher bird, at least that was the plan. However, the fridge was packed and I needed to make room. The smaller bird went into the freezer, and the larger one into the buttermilk brine. I used Samin Rosrat's recipe. The larger bird was the kosher one, so I didn't use all the salt in the brine. I put the bird into a gallon size zip bag and put it in a bowl in the fridge over night.
cut up and ready to eat. |
fresh from the oven |
roasted vegetation |
Dateline: March 30, 2021 Dumplings with guest
Bill and I met our friend Jeri down in Chinatown for lunch and a shop at Hong Kong Market. I purchased some dumpling wrappers and rice noodles, along with some leafy greens, chinese leeks, and flowering chives. What does one make with all of this? Dumplings!
I made 2 fillings, one vegetarian and one with some left over spicy chicken. The vegetarian filling was a mix of shredded cabbage, flowering chives, scallions, leeks and any other vegetation I could chop up and get out of the fridge. I stir fried it for a bit and seasoned it with soy, shaoxing, and chili crisp. To fill the wrappers, I put a teaspoon or so of the filling in the center of the dough circle, and wet a finger and traced around the edge of the wrapper and folded the wrapper into a half moon shape. Pushing hard on the edges to seal them tight.
For the chicken filling, I chopped up the spicy chicken finely and added some scallions, leeks, and other bits I had in the fridge that were already cooked. I didn't need to add seasoning as the spicy chicken was already quite flavorful. I placed 1 teaspoon in the center of the wrapper, wet the finger, and sealed into a half moon shape, I then pleated the top edge to distinguish the different types. Bill came into the kitchen and I recruited him to make the rest of the dumplings.
So, after the dumplings were made and laid out on trays covered with a damp towel. I set about cooking them. That is where the trouble started. The big mistake I made was now oiling the bottom of the pan I was cooking the dumplings in. What happened is that they stuck to the bottom and got crispy, but the crispy part stayed in the pan!
I put a steaming rack over the pan frying ones and steamed the veggie dumplings....they were too doughy. I think the ratio of filling to wrapper was incorrect. More filling would have worked better, and I guess boiling them would have been the way to go as well and then browning the boiled ones afterwards. I tipped the steamed ones into the pan. You can see the bottom is browned but most of the pleated ones stuck fast to the bottom of the pan.
I also made some stir fry with rice noodles. There was left over filling of both types, so I combined them and then tried to figure out how to make the noodles work. I decided to steam them, then unroll, and cut into noodles. The concept was good, the issue was in the execution. The noodles were hot, damn hot, so handling them was difficult and being an impatient cook, I just couldn't wait for them to cook down enough to handle easily. I managed to get them unfurled and cut and mixed in with the left over filling. I also steamed some green beans and added them to the mix. That dish was better than the dumplings. Although the dipping sauce was ok, next time, I will search for a more vinegar based sauce. The one I used had dark soy in it and the molasses really came through too strongly for me so I added more Chinese vinegar to balance out the taste. With garlic, ginger, scallions, cilantro, hot pepper slices and sesame oil it was quite tasty.
Dateline: March 26, 2021 Grilled Rack of Lamb
I was pawing through the freezer and found a rack of lamb. It was a beautiful day, so it was grilling time. I marinated the lamb, after cutting a slit between the bones, with a puree of preserved lemons, garlic, and red finger peppers. This was rubbed all over the rack, front and back, and it was put to the side while I made a salad.
The rack was put on a hot grill along with half of a red cabbage that I found in the fridge. I closed the lid, and let it go for about 6-8 minutes, then flipped it over to the bone side, closed the lid and let it go for another 5 minutes. Tested the temp, bingo, for me, 130°F and I pulled everything off the grill.
Cut the rack into lamb chops and served it up. Yummers!
Nota Bene: The red cabbage was fabulous. Sweetly charred and cooked through.