- Joined
- Jan 18, 2019
Yeah, I've made them in my cast-irons. I'm iffy on using spinach in mine, but it's probably just something I'm doing wrong.Have you considered just doing it as a frittata instead?
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Yeah, I've made them in my cast-irons. I'm iffy on using spinach in mine, but it's probably just something I'm doing wrong.Have you considered just doing it as a frittata instead?
Thighs and legs really are the best and the pricing makes them the obvious choice in many dishes. In addition to that, a lot of people don't even know how to make a good chicken breast anyway but they buy them because they are chicken breasts. With a thigh you really fucked up if it comes out dry, it would have to be a massive kitchen disaster.Thighs (and leg quarters) are the most underrated bargains in chicken (especially now that even whole chicken is through the roof). Leg quarters especially because even though the drumstick is the least versatile part of the chicken, often leg quarters are priced so that the drumsticks are essentially free. I also think it's the best part of the chicken fried when bone-in.
You are correct on the thighs and salmon bits. I miss being able to get the ham bone from the deli counter. For some unknown reason, they stopped stores allowing customers to buy them. It was great for making a soup and still had enough meat on it to make it worth the effort.Thighs and legs really are the best and the pricing makes them the obvious choice in many dishes.
Another overlooked part that is hard to get hold of these days is "salmon scraps".
Nice. I had a New York strip yesterday (and the second half of it for breakfast because I couldn't finish it). Very brief tamari marinade and rubbed with crushed garlic during cooking in a cast iron skillet. Turned out really well, which it should have, since I broke my usual cardinal rule and bought USDA Prime full price because fuck it, I needed a damn steak.Steak, a chonky thick NY strip. The rare doneness was a necessity; it was cooked in a cast iron pan from start to finish in a soy and worcestershire sauce reduction with the peppers and onions tossed in near the end of the cook. Not a bad way to get my protein and carbs.
Sushi is surpsingly hard to make because it's so easy to eat them while making them.Made sushi night with my SO’s family tonight. It was good
My father was a butcher and he was concerned about the lack of bones, not only for soup/broth(they used to sell just bones in the stores) but with whole cuts in general. Times had changed of course and fewer people had the saw/axe to cut their meat. At least if you cut it yourself you can't curse the cheap fuckers that left bone chips in the cuts.You are correct on the thighs and salmon bits. I miss being able to get the ham bone from the deli counter. For some unknown reason, they stopped stores allowing customers to buy them. It was great for making a soup and still had enough meat on it to make it worth the effort.
Please just be careful so they don't explode and burn you with splashes of oil. Temperature shock is a hell of a thing and emergency services have lots of Thanksgiving stories about exploding turkeys that some inexperienced deep-fryers try out for the novelty of it.Never really fucked around with deep frying so I tried a can of oysters, didn't make a mess like I expected. Only thing I'd do different is popping em in the freezer for a bit before breading to ease the process.
Yeah that was another thing I was concerned about. I almost boiled over since I was using the smallest saucepan I could get away with and overloaded because I was impatient/hungry. Tomorrow I'll try some mini corn dogs using vienna sausage to get some more use out of the oil and clear more of my bum food out of the pantry.Please just be careful so they don't explode and burn you with splashes of oil. Temperature shock is a hell of a thing and emergency services have lots of Thanksgiving stories about exploding turkeys that some inexperienced deep-fryers try out for the novelty of it.
A quick and lazy rice thing I've been doing for a while is making some ordinary garlic/herb/spice butter, then put half a portion of hot rice in a bowl, pop some of the butter in there, add more rice and then add the dish on top.Cheesy rice and shrimp.
Slopped together Italian five cheese blend, jasmine rice, and air-fried shrimp. Seasoned with spicy garlic, Bachan's Japanese BBQ sauce, and ponzu sauce. Strawberry banana nectar to wash it down and cut the heat.
I like lazy rice dishes as well, a ginger rice with scallions and some seasoned oils goes well. New Orleans styles like dirty rice are also great.A quick and lazy rice thing I've been doing for a while is making some ordinary garlic/herb/spice butter, then put half a portion of hot rice in a bowl, pop some of the butter in there, add more rice and then add the dish on top.
It's really nice for whole grain or wild rice mixes that are a bit drier and chewier. It doesn't get sloppy or greasy as you might expect, the rice absorbs it and it becomes sort of of steamed from the inside with all flavor. It is a pleasant taste breaker when reaching it and I'm going to try out various spices to see what can be achieved, a saffron combo of some kind would probably be fantastic.
Another lazy garlic thing is coring regular potatoes like they were apples, stuff some smashed up garlic in the hole and bake them in the oven with olive oil and salt on top. Comes out fantastic.
Moisture is the cause there, not temperature. Don't put wet things in hot oil, frozen or otherwise. The water will turn into steam and cause the oil to splatter.Please just be careful so they don't explode and burn you with splashes of oil. Temperature shock is a hell of a thing and emergency services have lots of Thanksgiving stories about exploding turkeys that some inexperienced deep-fryers try out for the novelty of it.