All entries tagged with food
Recently my best friend from growing up came over from London on a business trip, so I picked him up at the airport and we went to have dinner at Capital Grille in Dallas. The food was good, if not as good as at Nick and Sam's where we went at a previous visit. But still good. After dinner I had a Cognac. I am usually more a single malt person, but on occasion I enjoy a good cognac as well. Capital Grille did not have any really exciting single malts, so I decided to the the Delamain Vesper cognac. At $48 for a glass, it was pricey, but worth it! This 35 year old cognac was incredible smooth, had a great fruit flavor with a hint of vanilla flavor and a very long aftertaste. I been looking in the local liqour stores for it, but no luck. Even wrote to the importer, who told me no stores in the DFW area carry it. They told me to contact their local sales rep/agent for this part of the country to see if I could buy a bottle. So when I get back from Lotusphere, I plan to do that. If you like cognac, I can not recommend this one enough. At between $120 and $199 per bottle (online prices) it is not cheap, though. But I would say it is worth it.
|
Ratings
0
|
The other day I found some fresh yeast in the grocery store, and i picked some up because I wanted to bake something. After I can home, I decided I had not had any cinnamon rolls in a long time. So is I made some. 
* Crumble 2 1/2 packages of fresh yeast (totalling about 50 gram) into a big bowl. * Melt a little bit more than one stick (113 gram) of butter, I used about 130 gram. Add 5 dl (a little over a pint) of milk. Heat to body temperature/finger warm. You should not be feeling anything when you put the finger in it. * Use some of the liquid to dissolve the yeast, the add the rest of the liquid, 1/2 teaspoon of salt and 1 dl sugar. * Add 14-15 dl of flour. I first added 10 dl, stirred well, then added 4 dl more, stired, and slowly added 1 more dl . * Put the dough on a table and kneed until smoth but not sticky. Add flour until you get the right consistency. * Shape into a big ball, put back into bowl, cover with a linen towel and let rise for 30 minutes. * Put the dough on the table, cut into two equal pieces, and shape into two rectangular flat pieces, about 20cm x 45cm (8x20 inches) using a roller. * Spread a thin layer of soft butter over each piece, sprinkle granulated sugar and cinnamon over it, and roll them from the long side. Leave a 1/2 inch strip on one long side without butter, and start rolling from the opposite side. This will make the end of the rolls stay closed. As you can see in my picture above, I did not do that on this particular batch, which caused the ends to separate. * Cut the rolls into about 1 inch think slices, place each slice laying down on a cookie sheet and cover. You should have about 32-40 rolls, depending on size. Rise for 30 more minutes. Note: I use AirBake non-stick cookie sheets, they work great at preventing the bottom of the rolls to get burned. Highly recommended! I got mine at WalMart. * Heat up the oven to 225 C/450 F. * Brush each roll with egg, and sprinkle over pearl sugar. It can be purchased at IKEA, they have a section with Swedish food items in most/all international locations. * Bake for 5-9 minutes or until golden brown. Note: 1 dl = 3.4 oz = just over 1/3 cup, 15 dl = 1.5 litre = 6.3 cups
|
Ratings
0
|
John James posted a list of what food on the "Omnivore's 100" list he have eaten. So I decided to post my version of the list. The list if, as John explians it, from Very Good Taste blog who came up with a list of foods that they feel every omnivore should eat in their life time. Bold means I have eaten/tried it, crossed out means I wouldn’t touch it in a million years. So here is the list, along with my results.
1. Venison 2. Nettle tea - Had nettle soup, though. Great with hard boiled eggs 3. Huevos rancheros 4. Steak tartare 5. Crocodile (alligator counts?) 6. Black pudding 7. Cheese fondue 8. Carp 9. Borscht 10. Baba ghanoush 11. Calamari 12. Pho 13. PB&J sandwich - not my thing, but should probably try it. 14. Aloo gobi 15. Hot dog from a street cart 16. Epoisses 17. Black truffle 18. Fruit wine made from something other than grapes 19. Steamed pork buns 20. Pistachio ice cream 21. Heirloom tomatoes 22. Fresh wild berries 23. Foie gras 24. Rice and beans 25. Brawn, or head cheese 26. Raw Scotch Bonnet pepper 27. Dulce de leche 28. Oysters 29. Baklava 30. Bagna cauda 31. Wasabi peas 32. Clam chowder in a sourdough bowl 33. Salted lassi 34. Sauerkraut 35. Root beer float 36. Cognac with a fat cigar 37. Clotted cream tea 38. Vodka jelly/Jell-O 39. Gumbo 40. Oxtail 41. Curried goat 42. Whole insects (survival training in the army) 43. Phaal 44. Goat’s milk 45. Malt whisky from a bottle worth £60/$120 or more 46. Fugu 47. Chicken tikka masala 48. Eel 49. Krispy Kreme original glazed doughnut 50. Sea urchin 51. Prickly pear 52. Umeboshi 53. Abalone 54. Paneer 55. McDonald’s Big Mac Meal 56. Spaetzle 57. Dirty gin martini 58. Beer above 8% ABV 59. Poutine 60. Carob chips 61. S’mores 62. Sweetbreads 63. Kaolin 64. Currywurst 65. Durian 66. Frogs’ legs 67. Beignets, churros, elephant ears or funnel cake 68. Haggis 69. Fried plantain 70. Chitterlings, or andouillette 71. Gazpacho 72. Caviar and blini 73. Louche absinthe 74. Gjetost, or brunost 75. Roadkill 76. Baijiu 77. Hostess Fruit Pie 78. Snail 79. Lapsang souchong 80. Bellini 81. Tom yum 82. Eggs Benedict 83. Pocky - I don't eat chocolate 84. Tasting menu at a three-Michelin-star restaurant. 85. Kobe beef 86. Hare 87. Goulash 88. Flowers 89. Horse 90. Criollo chocolate 91. Spam 92. Soft shell crab 93. Rose harissa 94. Catfish 95. Mole poblano 96. Bagel and lox 97. Lobster Thermidor 98. Polenta 99. Jamaican Blue Mountain coffee - I don't drink cofee 100. Snake 52 out of 100. And there are still things on there I would like to try.
|
Ratings
0
|
I saw that Gayle shared a recipe for Almont Pork Tenderloin, and I thought I would share two of my favouite ones. One is lean and healthy, the other one not so much so. See if you can spot which one is which... But both are tasty.
Rosemary Chicken
1.5-2 lbs chicken breast/tenderloins (about 3 chicken breasts) 1 can chicken broth 4 tablespoons soy sauce 2-3 tablespoons balsamic vinegar 3 cloves crushed fresh garlic, or 1-2 teaspoons crush garlic from a jar rosemary leaves (about 1 tablespoon is good) salt, black pepper
Mix everything but the chicken in a pot and bring to a boil.
Trim any fat off the chicken and cut in smaller, bite size, pieces Put chicken into the pot.
Bring back to a boil and let it cook for 7 minutes.
Serve with rice of your choice and a mixed sallad.
Flying Jakob
2 lbs chicken breast/tenderloins (about 3-4 chicken breasts) cayenne pepper, paprika powder 1 banana 1/2 cup salted peanuts 1 pint heavy whipping creme (or for a leaner version, creme fraise) 1 bottle Heinz chili sauce 2-3 tablespoons bacon bits
Trim chicken breast from fat. Dust with cayenne pepper and paprika powder, possibly some salt.
Bake in owen until done (make sure not over done, better go a minute or two too short).
Cut in small bite size pieces. Put in oven safe deep dish.
Slice banana over it, distribute slices evenly. Sprinkle peanuts evenly over it as well.
Whip the cream, mix in chili sauce and stir/mix well. Pour over chicken. Top with bacon bits.
Bake in oven, 450 degrees for 20-25 minutes.
Serve with rice and a sallad.
Enjoy!
|
Ratings
0
|