[blindcooks] Re: What have you been cooking lately?

  • From: "Jonathan Rawlings" <twosocks76@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <blindcooks@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sun, 26 Feb 2017 07:42:55 -0800

Rob:
Where do you find the ATK recipe where ribs are cooked over tea leaves in the oven? I haven't come across that one yet. I tried the rib recipe I mentioned because it seemed a good starting point in my quest to make perfect ribs. I was wondering if I could cook the ribs much the same way on my smoker, but begin smoking them heavily once they come out of the foil. My concern is that the top cooking grate on my smoker is just a little under two feet in diameter, which is shorter than a slab of ribs. If I am able to get two slabs of ribs on there at all, I'd have to cut them in half at least to get them to fit. My ultimate goal is to get all the cooking done outside, so this recipe seemed a good place to start. The fried chicken recipe you mentioned, is that ATK as well? I have a similar recipe from them that is my standard recipe for fried chicken. The chicken pieces are marinated in a seasoned buttermilk mixture, then coated in seasoned flour, fried in a skillet long enough to form the crust, then finished in a hot oven. I love it, but I also want to try making deep fried chicken with the hot sauce coating that has been so popular the past 10 years or so out of Nashville. The skirt steak also sounds great. I love marinating it in lime juice and seasonings before grilling or searing it. Great stuff!
  Jon

----- Original Message ----- From: "Rob" <captinlogic@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <blindcooks@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2017 6:54 AM
Subject: [blindcooks] Re: What have you been cooking lately?


I saw that recipe in that ATK book. I'm not sure I'd ever make ribs that way. The one where they smoke the ribs over tea leaves in the oven is much better.
Let's see. As far as stuff I've been making. Oil to oven fried chicken is on the list. You brine the chicken pieces batter them, then fry the pieces in a little oil for a few minutes to get the crust started, and then finish them in the oven. The chicken comes out pretty damn good, and you don't have as much of a mess to clean up as you do with regular.
Indoor steak fajitas. Since it's been super windy up here I'm hesitant to use my charcoal grill and have the flames flicker so much. So I got a piece of skirt steak, and I will preheat my cast iron skillet in the oven for a while before popping it on the stove burner. This will hopefully replicate the direct heat of the grill and give the steak a nice char.
Today I picked up some spicy italian sausas from the meat market and I will be trying those in a spaghetti sauce with mushroom, onion and a tiny bit of sugar as the base. Dried oregano to begin with and some fresh oregano from my herb pots will finish it up, along with some italian parsley, red pepper flakes and Parmesan cheese to give the sauce some tang.
Also on the future list is another smoked brisket. I find that the little briskets in the store have a really thin fat pack so it doesn't hold the rub very well. I will have to order a whole brisket from the meat market and make it that way. Maybe even do some burnt ends. The problem is distributing the 10 or 12 pounds of smoked meat. Probably what i'll do is freeze some of it and use it for sandwiches.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Jonathan Rawlings" <twosocks76@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Blind Cooks List" <blindcooks@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Sun, 26 Feb 2017 06:36:22 -0800
Subject: [blindcooks] What have you been cooking lately?

I have been making and eating some good food here over the past couple weeks and was wondering what some of you cooks have been making that turned out especially well, or that you at least made a good effort to make. Yesterday, I finally, finally got around to making a huge package of spareribs my Dad gave me a few months before he passed away. His hope was that I'd smoke them on my smoker and share them with him. Last Wednesday would have been his 76th birthday, so I finally decided to take the plunge yesterday. I found the recipe in one of my cookbooks from "America's Test Kitchens" titled "Steaks, Chops, Roasts, and Ribs". It's a unique book in that each chapter is based on a certain cut of meat you want to make, but may not know how. This chapter was called "I want to make spareribs". The method was to apply the rub a day or so before and refrigerate them to let the rub really work its magic. Then, the ribs were set on cooling racks set inside rimmed baking sheets, covered tightly with foil, then baked at 300 degrees for an hour. Then, the foil is removed and the ribs are baked another hour. Then, you apply a very-generous amount of barbecue sauce and put them back in for another hour and a half. And then the quirky part, you wrap them in foil and slide them into a large paper bag, close the bag, and let them stand for an additional hour. The ribs were very tender, but I wish I had gone with my gut to brush them with more sauce and run them under the broiler for a couple minutes before serving, as I found the outside to be more dry than I prefer. But, the rub formed a very good crust on the top, and as I said, the ribs were so tender that you could almost seperate them by just using your hands. It is definitely a recipe I'll make again. Other good recipes I have made lately were the skillet pork chops with a honey and soy glaze that I flavored heavily with garlic and ginger, served along brown rice and a salad of fresh spinach, strawberries, and red onion and dressed with a sweet and creamy poppy seed dressing. I also made some excellent barbecue chicken sandwich filling in the slow cooker on a day when Emily and I were especially busy, so that worked out very well for us that day. I also tried a recipe for taco chili in the slow cooker, but while it was good, I found it somewhat underwelming. I also made one of my favorite recipes - Firehouse chicken. If I haven't mentioned that one on list before, and you like chicken with a crispy skin and flavorful, juicy meat, be sure to ask. We also had a picnic with some friends at the park last week where we tried to replicate the Bonseye burger from Red Robin. For those who aren't familiar with it, the burger is glazed with teriyaki sauce and includes grilled pineapple along with all the other usual burger toppings. Those burgers were outstanding, especially with all the chips and baked beans our friends brought to share. Some recipes in the works include a simple French toast casserole, an Asian chicken noodle soup in the slow cooker, pizza buns, which are made much like cinnamon rolls except you fill the inside with tomato sauce and cheese and pepperoni before rolling, cutting, and baking. I'm also planning to make chicken pot pie, a great recipe I came across for chicken thighs, chunks of Italian sausage, potatoes, peppers, and onions all cooked together in a large roasting pan, and Cobb Salad. OK, not everything I make every day is necessarily gourmet, but those are the things that stand out. Not every day lends itself to cooking for a couple hours in the kitchen what with an adorable but demanding toddler in the house. We have our share of nights with just plain BLTs, crunchy tacos, or humble wraps for dinner. So, what are you all cooking or planning to cook?
   Jon




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