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 |