► Show Top 10 Hot Links

Posts Tagged ‘Food and Drink’

Monday Night Artisan Bread Foodie/NCAA Football Open

by coldwarrior ( 115 Comments › )
Filed under Food and Drink, Open thread at January 2nd, 2012 - 8:00 pm

Hey there fellow epicureans! Today we are going to make a great loaf of bread. This is a variation on the basic Italian Ciabatta bread making method. This is somewhat advanced so, if you have never made bread before, practice by making standard loaves or buns at first. Also, a great book on the subject of making bread is “100 Great Breads“. This book is a must have along with Le Cordon Bleu Complete Cooking and La Bonne Cuisine. These two are THE books that all others are based on.

We need to make a sponge as the starter for this bread, so in goes 2 cups of warm water. a teaspoon of sugar,  two tablespoons of yeast and two cups of bread flour into the Kitchen Aid. I use King Aurthur Unbleached Bread Flour) its more expensive but makes better bread. This will look like a thick pancake batter. Mix this with the whisk attachment for a good 5 minutes until perfectly smooth. The sponge starter, or in this case a ‘Poolish Starter’ is explained here:

 

A poolish is a sponge starter has the consistency of a thick liquid and is very easy to prepare. It requires only a few hours of fermentation before it can be used, but it produces some excellent qualities, such as depth of flavor and a pleasing aroma usually in found breads prepared with the more time consuming sourdough method. The recipe for a poolish starter will differ depending on the type of bread being prepared, but often the only difference is in the quantities of the ingredients that are used in the starter in relation to the quantities of the ingredients in the full recipe. This does not apply to the yeast, which does not change proportionally as the quantities of the other ingredients are changed.

A biga starter is an Italian version of the sponge leavening method or French poolish. It differs from a poolish in that it is firm and dough-like instead of batter-like and it requires a longer fermentation period. Breads made with a biga starter feature a subtle flavor, a porous texture, moist, open crumb, and a champagne aroma. Like other starters, there are several methods for preparing a biga starter, but the biga recipe will differ with each type of bread being made. Often the same recipe for the biga sponge starter can be used for a number of breads if the quantities of the ingredients in the biga starter are changed proportionally to the quantities of the ingredients in the full recipe; however, the quantity of yeast usually does not change proportionally.

 

Sous-Chef Puti tests the sponge:

 

 

The starter should sit in the bowl, uncovered for 2-4 hours depending on temperature (or it can go in the fridge overnight). What will happen is it will expand and the yeast goes through its life cycle and produce CO2. In about an hour or so it will begin to collapse. This is when i like to add a half a cup to cup of Spelt Flour, or some rye, or whole wheat, or just stick with unbleached flour; this is where experimentation on your part will result in a loaf to your liking. The addition of more flour will cause the sponge to expand again. If you are just using unbleached flour, this step of adding specialty flour can be skipped. Don’t add this additional four at the beginning or you will probably have a mess on your hands.

 

The Sponge after an hour or so, note the large bubbles:

 

 

A Note: If the addition of different flour is skipped and you want to make traditional Ciabatta, after the 2-4 hours, add a teaspoon of kosher salt, 3 tablespoons of olive oil and 2 or so more cups of flour and mix with the dough hook attachment slowly adding the flour until the dough just lightly sticks to your finger. Let it rest in the bowl, uncovered for another 2 hours. Then turn int out onto a floured board, divide the loaf in 2 and make 8 long rectangles. Let them rest for another hour and split into 8 inch loaves again. Let rest for an hour. Then bake at 400F 25-30 minutes.

Once the sponge with the additional step of ‘other’ flour has begun to collapse (2-4 hours since the beginning) then it is time to add the rest of the ingredients.

 

1 tsp of kosher salt, 3 tablespoons of olive oil, and 1-2 cups of flour, mix with dough hook and add the flour slowly until the dough just lightly sticks to you finger The final ratio of total flour to water is proximately 4 cups flour – 2 cups water. Let this rest in the bowl, uncovered for an hour so it doubles in size.

Once the dough doubles, or ‘proofs’, then gently turn it out onto a floured surface and very gently it into 2 loaves. Do not knead the bread, be as gentle as possible to save the air bubbles that have formed int he dough.  I prefer to cook the loaves in a French Bread pan . If you go this route, it is advisable to have two pans, that way doubling a favorite bread recipe can be done more efficiently. You will want the loaves to be cylindrical and about 8-10 inches long. Let them rest in the pan until they double in size.

The Loaves in a French Bread Pan:

 

Preheat oven to 500F.  Now comes the parts that have caused endless discussions: To score the top of the loaf or not and to use steam or not.  With this style of bread I normally would not score the tops as it is claimed that by scoring, air is released form the inside of the bread and I want to retain the large and small air pockets that worked so long to get. If this were a straight baguettes, i would have sous-chef Puti score each loaf 3 times. However, I have never scored this recipe, so lets experiment. I will score one and not score the other and see what happens.

 

Now, onto the question of steam. Steam in the baking does create a nicer crust.

 

These are ready to go into the oven:

 

Place a large cast iron skillet filled with lava rocks in the bottom of your oven. If you don’t have those on hand, go with a shallow baking pan. Carefully and quickly place the bread in the middle of the oven and pour two to three cups of  boiling water into the pan in the 500F oven. Be quick to maximize steam and limit heat loss. Reduce the oven heat to 425. Bake for 30-35 minutes.

 

The finished product; nice crunchy crust and a great texture on the inside:

.

 

Now for the Football, at 8:30pmEastern on ESPN:

No. 4 Stanford vs. No. 3 Oklahoma State*
TOSTITOS FIESTA BOWL

 

This promises to be a great game. Evenly matched offenses going head to head.

Rotisserie Chicken Foodie Open Thread

by coldwarrior ( 201 Comments › )
Filed under Food and Drink, Open thread at August 26th, 2011 - 8:00 pm


Navy Seal Foundation Charity… Gun Raffle Tickets!

Great prize! Great cause!



Rotisserie Chicken…that’s right! And you thought you couldn’t do that at home. Well, you can’t, unless you have some specialized equipment like the the Faberware Rotisserie FSR150 that we use in the winter, or a rotisserie that attaches to your grill like what is used in the post below. Since I want a very large carbon footprint, we will cook the birds outside on the smoker.

I got these two chickens from my farmer; I try to buy as much produce and eggs as I can from him because its cheaper, local, and much better quality. These two birds were making me eggs last year, production is down, so apply the old Soviet proverb. It goes like this: ‘He who does not work, does not eat’. I have changed it slightly for these chickens as ‘She who does not produce eggs, gets eaten… Lets prep two 5 pound chickens for the rotisserie:

First, Stuff some aromatics in the bird’s cavity like garlic, thyme, rosemary, whatever you like. Then set the first tine on the rod securely then add a chicken, add another tine (one chicken held by two tines). Add another tine, another chicken then another tine. Like this –>chicken<– –>chicken<– . Tie the legs and wings up so they don’t flop around on the spit and inject the chicken with your favorite marinade.

Injection is an option, you can use a rub under the skin as well; or both! . I used an injection this time. Injection is tricky because the needle will clog if there are particles in the marinade. For beginners, try any of Ton Chachere’s injectable marinades and experiment from there. Insert the needle and inject as you pull the needle out on multiple sites to get the marinade out there evenly.

..

This rotisserie set up is available at any hardware store and can be adapted to just about any grill. Make some fire with brickets. Smoking the chicken here is pretty pointless as the skin is still on, a little smoke from some apple or even some pecan is a nice touch though, i used a coal or two of Jamaican Pimento wood (from the allspice tree) at the beginning. Place the charcoal in a circle around the chicken and replace with 2 or 3 brickets as the first burn out. Don’t put it directly under the chicken or there will be flareups.

..
Mrs Coldwarrior’s favorite thing  about rotisserie chicken is the skin, it should be crispy and yummy. To get it right requires a few extra steps. Take your remaining marinade and add a couple of tsps of olive oil and a tsp of brown sugar. The sugar will help make a light flavor glaze and aid in crisping, the oil will help the marinade stick. Brush the mixture on the chickens as they cook with a paint brush. Some skin may get burned a bit as the internal temperature is reached, but the majority of it will be great.

The above photo shows the orientation of the coals, below shows the larger set-up. Most of the cooking happens with the lid down or slightly opened 3-4 inches. Your technique will depend on your setup.

The rotisserie motor is located on the left.

 

It should take about an hour and a half to hit internal temperature of 165-170 (YMMV). Please use a meat thermometer to ensure doneness. at 165F.

 

..

Rotisserie chicken retains much of its fat because the chicken is always rotating. Therefore it will be more tender and flavorful than baked.

Let’s Eat!



Navy Seal Foundation Charity… Gun Raffle Tickets!

Great prize! Great cause!



Ox Tail Soup (Peasant Style)….Foodie Thread!

by coldwarrior ( 40 Comments › )
Filed under Food and Drink, Open thread at July 9th, 2011 - 8:30 pm

On Wednesday i looked around in the fridge and saw a ton of leftovers from the  4th of July party.  Veggie tray, beef brisket (put that in the freezer and make chili out of it later), got some onions here…potatoes…fresh herbs outside…Well, the basics of a Mirepoix are staring me in the face from the veggie tray.And where there is Mirepoix, there is soup! And I just happen to  have some Ox Tails in the freezer! That makes the decision what to cook today an easy one. Ox tail soup is peasant food, so there will be more vegetables than meat and the stock will be thickened with some roux in this recipe; the flour thickening may be skipped if desired.

 

 

 

As Mme. E. Saint-Ange states in the absolutely essential and definitive cookbook  “La Bonne Cuisine – The Original Companion for French Home Cooking”  Mirepoix ‘is used a the aromatic element for many dishes’. And of course she is correct. Her Mirepoix and mine vary just slightly, i add celery to mine and some pepper, make sure that celery is used at 1/3 volume or so  of the carrots or it will dominate the dish. (A word on “La Bonne Cuisine”, this was the book that started Juliet Child on her epic Culinary adventure. It is an essential book to have in any kitchen and accompanies the “Le Cordon Bleu Complete Cooking Step-by-Step” perfectly.)

 

Mirepoix + Stock and spices + some potatoes to stretch the dish + 2-3 lbs Ox Tails….

 

So to begin our Ox Tail Soup:

 

For our mirepoix, small cube the vegetables so they brown evenly and all of the flavor is available when we move into the stock making: 2 medium Spanish onions, 4 large carrots, parsley (from the garden), bay leaf, thyme, a touch of fresh garlic, a little salt, and fresh ground pepper, all browned in bacon fat. You can use fresh cubed bacon here as well, but since the oxtails will provide the meat, we can go with just the fat.

 

1) Start with the Mirepoix in a heavy bottom pot (mine is  9 quart). Get the bacon and or bacon fat cooking on medium heat and toss in your cubed vegetables (basic ingredients listed above). Mirepoix is different in every kitchen and with every cook, experiment with it to make your own. The base ingredients however do not change, these are carrots, onions, celery, bacon fat or cubed bacon or cured ham, parsley, thyme, and bay leaf.  8-10 minutes of progressive browning should do it.

 

2) While you are sauteing your mirepoix, we also have to sear the ox tails. Dredge them in flour and sear them in bacon fat over high heat in a heavy bottomed saute pan, 2.5 lbs of ox tail  fits in a 12″ saute pan nicely. The oxtails can drain on a rack when they are done, the dripping in the pan can be deglazed with a little liquid (wine cut with stock) and the contents of the deglazed pan can be used in the stock if the ingredients are not too burned. Taste the deglazed liquid, if it tastes good, we will use it later. Do note, it will be strong though. Please, do not ever use ‘cooking wine/sherry’ it is an abomination unto the Lord and unto all things foodie. Only use wine that you would actually drink in your recipes. We happen to have a leftover bottle of Beaujolais nouveau from last season.

 

3) The Stock: In the large pot, the mirepoix needs a little flour, 2-3 tblsp sprinkled over it and golden-brown the flour just a touch, sort of like a roux. This will thicken the stock (optional).

 

I don’t happen to have any beef stock on hand, i do however have a ton of chicken stock though. Since this is Provincial, use what is on hand. Anytime we cook a chicken or even make a bunch of wings, the bones are cracked open and boiled down with some salt and pepper to make stock.I can add some high quality beef bullion to the chicken stock to get it close…have to remember to cut back on the salt in the recipe though! Perhaps salt it at the end if needed. So, eight cups of stock and some beef bullion goes into the pot of mirepoix with some red wine, a few cloves, a spare pinch of rosemary (use whatever spices you like), and tomato paste (also optional).

 

Notice, no water is used. Some can be added before/during simmering to retain volume, but water adds nothing to the party. Toss in the Ox tails.

 

 

4) Simmer on low for 3-4  hours until the meat is ready to fall of the bone. Stir and scrape the bottom of the pan often. There is a lot of connective tissue that has to be rendered here so this takes some time.  Have a nice glass of wine and make some baguettes while you wait. When you are done making baguettes and are eying your second bottle of wine remove the ox tails and separate the meat from the bones and cut the meat into bite sized pieces and put them back in the soup.

 

5) Add some cubed red potatoes or some garbonzo beans or other pre-cooked beans if you want to stretch the dish.  Barley works well here as long as it is put in early enough to fully cook.  Simmer for another 15 minutes and drain some of the fat from the top of the soup. I use a turkey baster to do this. You will not be able to get all of it and you need some for flavor.  Do this at your own discretion.

 

Enjoy with fresh baked baguettes, or some garlic bread, and a glass of red wine!

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday BBQ Open Thread…Did We Rapture Yet?

by coldwarrior ( 59 Comments › )
Filed under Food and Drink, Open thread at May 21st, 2011 - 12:00 pm

Well, According to Harold Camping, the “evangelical Christian minister” who has proclaimed today ‘Judgement Day’, today is the day that we are to be judged…its ‘The Rapture’!. Oddly, there server is down

As I am not a Dispensationalist, I shall be judged today on my BBQ ribs, verily, amen, pass the baked beans, yea, verily unto them. Final Judgement for me is father down the road.

Back to more terrestrial matters. Today is the first Saturday with decent weather that we have had here in PGH. I thought it appropriate to do a BBQ thread and will insert a few pics of mine as time permits. Its an open thread, anyone have any recipes that they would like to add, feel free to post em here.

We will remain on ‘Rapture” watch as well.

Lets BBQ!

The Ribs….

Phoebe is smoke-dog!

…and The-Puti!