- Joined
- Mar 27, 2021
But I managed to burn the rice, too, the first time. "How do you do that," you may ask?
This is pretty easy to do, despite how shameful it feels.
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But I managed to burn the rice, too, the first time. "How do you do that," you may ask?
As you might have noticed in this thread, pot roast with chuck is one of my standards. Also note that while high end meat prices are going through the stratosphere right now, the mid range stuff like chuck and whole chickens is pretty stable, at least where I am.For myself - just made spaghetti marinara and sausage in the Instant Pot. Looking for easy weeknight recipes and wanted to start with a good basic one that can be customized and expanded.
Jesus Christ, dude, what we do behind closed doors doesn't have to be made public...My only real prep on pot roast is rubbing the meat with kosher salt
was it extra virgin olive oil or regular olive oil? extra virgin olive oil has a very low smoke point and should never be used to fry. Regular olive oil is better, but it's better to use something with a higher smoke point like canola oil, peanut oil, corn oil, or avocado oil. Your temperature may have been too high, I recommend using a temperature gun to measure.Did pork chops again. Rub was brown sugar, garlic salt, pepper, chili powder, and cayenne (yeah, it sounds like a Scalfani rub but I wanted something spicy). I almost smoked myself out with the sear, though. Is it smart to use olive oil for sear or was the temperature the problem?
Ah shit, it was extra virgin. I'll use canola next time around, it took an hour to air out my place.was it extra virgin olive oil or regular olive oil? extra virgin olive oil has a very low smoke point and should never be used to fry. Regular olive oil is better, but it's better to use something with a higher smoke point like canola oil, peanut oil, corn oil, or avocado oil. Your temperature may have been too high, I recommend using a temperature gun to measure.
If it smoked too much, it was possibly too hot even if you used the right oil.Did pork chops again. Rub was brown sugar, garlic salt, pepper, chili powder, and cayenne (yeah, it sounds like a Scalfani rub but I wanted something spicy). I almost smoked myself out with the sear, though. Is it smart to use olive oil for sear or was the temperature the problem?
I did put it on high to heat the pan up fast...it did kind of confuse me because I used it before but I never turned the heat higher than med-low before.If it smoked too much, it was possibly too hot even if you used the right oil.
You can cut a small piece of meat or vegetable first and toss it in to test the pan before putting everything in.
Also, I wouldn't have put any kind of sugar on the meat if it was going to be seared. Instead, you could try to make a 'glaze' that contains the sugar so the meat can cook without burning the sugar, then add the glaze after and cook it a little more if you want.
Crisco seems to work well as frying oil because it has no flavor and doesn't alter the taste of your food as much as other oils.
You can also flavor the Crisco with other oils.
One way to do porkchop is to sear or bake the meat until you think it's done, add any glaze or sauce, and put it in the oven just to briefly bake it onto the meat - or just smother it in sauce and eat it, that's up to you.I did put it on high to heat the pan up fast...it did kind of confuse me because I used it before but I never turned the heat higher than med-low before.
So, you would do the sear and put the glaze on before you put it in the oven, or after?
The salt pork is sitting in my shed now. View attachment 2652592
Little worried as it's not as cold as I would like yet, but then I remember this recipe was meant to preserve pork on a ship traveling to the tropics so I need to readjust my modern expectations. Will report back in a month. My one worry is it seems the hot brine washed alot of the packing salt to the bottom. Dunno if that is supposed to happen or not.
I am pretty confident in it. Used a shit ton of salt. My only worry is the temperature is stubbornly in the 60s right now when I need it to be in the 50s, and I didn't have a handy weight to press the meat down into the brine. So I used a plate. Eventually the meat should absorb the salt and sink on its own. So I guess I will keep pressing it down every few hours or so.Curing/brining meat is something I am not yet brave enough to try. I want to, but am scared.
I am pretty confident in it. Used a shit ton of salt. My only worry is the temperature is stubbornly in the 60s right now when I need it to be in the 50s, and I didn't have a handy weight to press the meat down into the brine. So I used a plate. Eventually the meat should absorb the salt and sink on its own. So I guess I will keep pressing it down every few hours or so.
Thinking about the process logically though, the hot brine is super heated. It is hotter then regular boiling water. When that got poured in, it killed pretty much all the bacteria. The already packed salt added to it and should create a super solution where only an extremophile bacteria can survive.