I had to clean out the vegetable bin and decided to try a prepared curry spice mix that I had. I used Shah's Vegetable Masala mix.
Ingredients
I had to clean out the vegetable bin and decided to try a prepared curry spice mix that I had. I used Shah's Vegetable Masala mix.
Ingredients
A new butcher shop opened in the area, YEAH, and I made my first purchase there, some chorizo and chicken backs for stock.
I had about 1 lb of boar left over from last night, so I decided to make some chorizo myself and we could have a "taste off". The boar was quite lean, and I didn't really think about that part. I didn't add more fat until the very end. I used mexican oregano, garlic, both fresh and granulated, cloves, hot smoked paprika and sweet paprika, beef trim (for fat), salt, pepper, vinegar and white wine.
After cooking off a small amount, I realized that I did not have enough fat in the mix. I pulled the beef trim out and ground some of that up and added it to the mix. It was better, but needed tweaking. I add more garlic, more vinegar, more of both paprikas and salt. I also added some olive oil.
For the taste off, I liked my flavor but the butcher shops texture. Bill liked both. I felt that the butcher shop chorizo would crumble a lot better in a stew, so I used that in the stoop.
Ingredients
I had a box of goodies delivered from D'Artagnan Thursday, and one of the packages of boar meat had defrosted a bit, so I took it out and decided on making Boar chili, but not my usual Chili Verde, but a Chili Colorado. I found a good recipe from Hank Shaw on his website and decided to use it.
I did soak and blitz the dried peppers and then strain them. It does make a very silky sauce which was lovely. I had a pot of chicken stock going, so no worries on that end, and everything else was in the pantry.
The tacos were wonderful, albeit, a bit messy, but that is what napkins are for!
What would I do differently? It was very mild, which is ok, but next time I will not hold back on spicier dried peppers, maybe some chili arbol or habaneros.
Saw this recipe on Food52 and thought I'd give it a try.
I had all the ingredients and just felt in the mood for pasta. Didn't want linguine, so I went with gemelle instead. Bill, who doesn't like olives or anything brined, picked out the oil-cured olives and happily ate.
I was in Kalustyan's and saw this packet of Tagine spice. Brilliant, I thought, I have whole chicken legs at home that need to be cooked.
The recipe on the back of the package was simple and it turned out fantastic.
Servet came over and I cooked the picanha via sous vide, then torched the outside fat side to perfection with my NEW toy, S.A.F.E flamethrower. I have been trolling Kickstarter, and have found many interesting projects to invest in, the ROTOQ, this torch, etc. The torch acronym stands for Sears All Foods Equally. It is a beauty, and does a much better job than the other torch I have been using.
| Perfectly rare |
| Beautifully torched exterior |
| step 1, cubes |
| finished veggie side |
I made some sausages, brats and merguez, the other day and after eating vindaloo for 2 days, we needed a break So out of the freezer came the merguez and I raided the fridge for suitable vegetation for a morrocan stew-ish kind of thing.
I browned the sausages and after browning them, I sweated some onions and garlic.
| Sausages |
| sweating the onions |
Once that had softened, I added some stock and wine to deglaze the pan. Next went in quite an interesting array of veggies, some orange bell peppers, string beans, broccoli, preserved mandarin, collards, and cabbage.
| start of the veggie melange |
| veggies in Instant pot |
I was seriously jonesing for some spicy food. I had ordered from FD 3 pounds of pork stew meat. What arrived was beautiful large chunks of pork with very little excess fat.
I used Mahdur Jaffrey's recipe for pork vindaloo and Urvashi Pitre's Aloo Gobi.
This is one of my absolute all time favorites! I love a vinegary peppery vindaloo, not super burn-your-mouth vindaloo, but one with a distinct vinegar flavoring. Many recipes call for cider vinegar, or white wine vinegar, I prefer white distilled vinegar personally. As I had a TON of couscous left over from last night, no need for rice.
Ingredients
| plain old left over couscous |