Thursday, June 23, 2011

Round up with photos




Pork Shoulder with Braised cabbage

Braised cabbage:
Use a heavy pan, soften some sliced onions then add a grated apple (granny smith is good), a spoon of mustard, glug of wine, a couple juniper berries, enough cloves, salt and pepper & 1/2 of a cabbage shredded.
Cook on a low heat until soft.

Pork: score skin, oil and salt heavily, cook at 220-230°C for about 20 min to get the crackling going then down to about 160°C until internal temp is about 65°C (about 25 min per 500g).

Oven Thermometer
Recently got around to buying a thermometer for our oven, and found out that our oven is 20°C hotter than what we set it at! I always suspected it was hotter, but didn't realise by that much, on the plus side it can hit 270°C.

Pulled beef pitas
Rubbed spices over the beef and gave it a heavy sear in the pressure cooker and set it to high pressure and let it cook till tender and falling apart.

While it was cooking made up some Hummus (chickpeas, Lemon juice, garlic, a drop or two of sesame oil (as didn't have any tahini), olive oil, paprika, yoghurt and salt. Puree, add more yoghurt or oil if it's too thick, place in bowl, sprinkle paprika over it, drizzle with oil, and munch away with pitas)

And also made up some aioli to toss with some shredded cabbage, I make mine with a stick blender in a fairly tall narrow measuring jug (not much bigger than the foot of the blender). Put an egg yolk, garlic, mustard, lemon juice and dash of cider vinegar in the container, start blending and when it is pale yellow and increased in volume slowly start pouring in oil (a mix is nice, soy oil and olive just olive is too strong). once it is all blended check the seasoning and adjust with salt and lemon juice or vinegar.

We Toasted some pita's (bought not made, lazy) stuffed them with the shredded beef, hummus and slaw, and a spoon or 3 of jalapeno jam. Very tasty, and filling.

Pork Belly (AGAIN!!!!)
Well the pressure cooker has been getting a work out, and I'm trying to find the ultimate pork belly. So thought I'd try it in the new toy.

I cut a couple of onions in half and placed them cut side down in the pan starting to caramelize them, I also put in half a lemon to caramelize, after they had taken on a tasty brown colour I poured in a glass of wine, a dash of cider vinegar and some mustard and let that reduce to almost nothing.

The pork (scored and seasoned) was placed in the pan using the onions as a trivet, and then cooked on high pressure for about 45 minutes. After that time I took out the pork and let it sit until it was cool enough to handle.

Once the pork was cool enough, the bones were removed from the underside, and the bottom half was wrapped in foil with the skin still uncovered, the skin was then patted dry and a bit of salt gently rubbed in to it (it's very fragile when pressure cooked), the oven was set to 230°C on grill (broil) and the meat place slightly above the middle of the oven for about 20 minutes.

Well, it tasted great, and the crackling was perfect but there are problems, the main issue was the fat didn't render out, it was very soft and had the texture of very lightly set jelly, so was easy to scrape off. And the meat wasn't 100% melt in mouth, I think 5 more minutes in the pressure cooker would of solved that, or perhaps letting the pressure drop naturally.

I'm not sure why the fat didn't render out of the meat the temperature should be more than plenty for it to happen. I will have to investigate further because I like the idea of pork belly in an hour rather than my other method of slow cooking for 3-4 hours.

Things I have to try
I've found a great way to make some crackling at ideas in food and is something I have to try, but I need a dehydrator first. They basically pressure cook the skin in liquid to make a pork skin stock for other uses, then take out the skin, gently scrape the fat off and dehydrate, then deep fry.

Still have to try Stock, caramelized eggs, garlic in milk and egg bread in the pressure cooker,

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

The Trials of Transglutaminase—The Misunderstood Magic of Meat-Glue

The Trials of Transglutaminase—The Misunderstood Magic of Meat-Glue

A must read, the real truth about 'meat glue', cut through the pile of trash that's out on the net

Monday, May 30, 2011

Photo Post


New glasses, rye whisky Old Fashioned.



Potato and Courgette Rösti


Birthday present, Cuisinart pressure cooker


Pork shoulder boned and sitting with a dry rub

Browning in the pressure cooker

40 minutes at high pressure, falling apart

The pork shredded and the cooking liquid reduced and mixed together, we had this with tortillas


Sauteed potato with spinach from our garden, left over pulled pork and topped with poached egg, a very tasty hash

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Potato and Courgette Rösti


Potato and Courgette Rösti with sautéed Chard and peas, topped with a poached egg.

For the Rösti, grate a couple of potatoes and courgettes in to a bowl and liberally sprinkle with salt. Let it sit for 30 min, so the salt can draw out the moisture.

After half an hour, squeeze the potato mixture, getting out as much liquid as possible. Then season the dry (dryish) potatoes, I use mustard powder a bit of pepper and thinly sliced scallions.

In a hot pan, put a good chunk of butter and a little oil and when ready pour the mixture and press down. leave for about 5 minutes (depending on how thick it is) then flip and cook for another 5 minutes (use of a chopping board or plate to flip the Rösti makes light work of it)

Photo's to follow, and a couple more posts, I've had some difficulty getting in to the site recently.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Lentil Salad and Roast Beef



1 Cup of Puy Lentils
1 onion finely diced
1 carrot finely diced
1 Cup of Stock
mustard
salt and pepper
white wine vinegar
herbs (I used parsley and basil)

Cook the lentils in boiling water for about 15 minutes, until they're almost cooked (You can add things like onion and garlic to the water, but not salt or acid as they will toughen the skin of the lentil).

Drain the lentils, and in the pan I used to sear the beef, soften the carrot and onion, once done add a splash of the vinegar and let that evaporate off.

Add the lentils to the pan and toss through the vegetables, then add the stock and let it simmer and reduce down till there is almost no liquid left.

Take off the heat and pour the mixture to a bowl then add the herbs and mustard and stir through, season to taste, I always like to add a little extra vinegar at this stage too.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Hangover cure...


Potato Rosti fried in lots of butter, topped with a poached egg covered in rarebit sauce

Pork Belly... again


Tried a different method this time though, in a dutch oven...

First I made a dry spice rub by powdering mustard, coriander, cloves, bay leaves, black pepper and salt.


Then I sliced a couple of onions up to act as a trivet so the pork wouldn't be sitting directly on the pot (and also so I ended up with some tasty caramelised onion), then to the pot I put in a couple of good slugs of cider vinegar.

Placed the pork covered in the rub on top of the onions, lid on and in the oven at 130°C for 2.5 hours, then cranked up the heat to 220°C took the lid off the pot and cooked for another 30 minutes.

The results were very juicy melt in your mouth meat, with good crust.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Garden


Basil Mint


Chard (Golden, Red and White), Spinach (+another big planter full of spinach)


Parsley (continental), Marigolds, Thyme, Chives, Thai Basil, Basil, Chilli


Oregano, Corriander, Basil, Marigolds, Parsley (continental)

Monday, January 24, 2011

Hydrocolloid - part 2

Well finally got my sample of N-Zorbit M, so will be fun experimenting with it. (original post here)

Dinner last night was a tasty falling apart belly of pork very simply prepared.

Seasoned and browned the belly on the stove, then set aside while some onions softened in the same pan (dutch oven), added in a couple spoons of fennel seed and sauteed a little longer to release the aroma.

Finally placed the pork back in the pot, with about a cup of cider. Put the lid on and in to an oven at 140°C for a few hours.

I was left with pork wonderfully soft and falling apart, and a ready made cider-onion gravy.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Chips and Gravy = Yum!


Who ever invented the idea of having french fries and gravy is a complete genius. And the ultimate expression of this combination of foods has to be poutine, french fries topped with cheese curds and lavishly drenched in rich gravy.