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• #29752
With just from the garden ingredients I enjoy good olive oil and lemon juice with a little zest.
Sometimes it can be nice to blend an emulsion or oil, vinegar and herbs.
But default setting is oil, vinegar, mustard and honey.
Pretty much some combination of oil, acid, sugar and a flavour
Oils can be argan, olive, sesame, groundnut, oilseed rape, walnut etc etc
Acid - vinegar (wine , balsamic, cider or some fancy flavoured one if I am given some) or citrus juice
Sugar - fruit juice, honey, sugar, pomegranate molasses
Other stuff - mustard, wasabi, herbs, zest, chilli, herbs
Seasoning
Sometimes shaken, sometimes just mixed with the salad, or emulsified with stick blender.
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• #29753
Vinaigrette made with balsamic or sherry vinegar, olive oil, crushed garlic, french mustard, salt, sugar and pepper.
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• #29755
I just have a few of the clear squeeze bottles for sauce/dressings
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• #29756
Doesn't everyone use one of those milk frothers for emulsifying dressings?
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• #29757
My mums classic is sunflower oil, white wine vinegar, mayo, salt and pepper. Occasionally crushed garlic. Emulsified in a glass jar
It’s the one I make nine times out of ten
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• #29758
It doesn’t deal with fresh herbs as well as a stick blender
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• #29759
Not using a hachoir smh
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• #29760
Fuck
Food overdose, it was awesome
2 Attachments
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• #29761
Which reminds me, I need some tartiflette, stat.
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• #29762
That would be ideal, need to get one.
@dancing james stick blender doesn't work on small quantities of dressing tho. -
• #29763
Was it salty? I am always a bit wary of cooking parma ham/prosciutto
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• #29764
OMG, total food envy.
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• #29765
Thankfully not, I didn’t salt the sauce which was a good move.
Cooking with foil and then grilling to finish was a great tip.
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• #29766
One you learn after messing up several times ;)
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• #29767
Dressing:
Olive oil, white balsamic, Dijon, salt, pepper, occasionally Tabasco.
Shaken, nor stirred.
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• #29768
Dressing:
Red wine vinegar, mirin, sesame oil, soya sauce, salt pepper, occasionally a bit of Dijon mustard.Or
Red wine vinegar, olive oil, Dijon mustard, salt, pepper.
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• #29769
Any recommendations for a good sausage making recipe book?
Ideally with good recipes using weights not volumes for quantities. I fucking loathe volumetric measures, so inaccurate and given the ability for spices, salt etc to settle in transit they seem totally inadequate.
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• #29770
Make your own book? ;)
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• #29771
Dressing -
Olive oil, wine or sherry vinegar, sugar, Dijon mustard. I use a whisk to emulsify. -
• #29772
Where is that ignore button?
The sausage I want to make first is the Italian one with fennel for going on top of pizza
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• #29773
Experiment. It's cooking. Enjoy the process.
Then scale up & binge in volume.
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• #29774
Nice, it'd be ace to use finely chopped wild fennel for that.
Also, not all the Italian sausages are like that. For example what you call sausage where I am from has no fennel at all, minimal or no herbs and seasoning, almost like a Chipolata, but with just pepper, salt, nutmeg and a bit of red wine (Sangiovese/Montepulciano). You travel 50km in any direction and the recipe changes again.
I was half serious when I said to make a book about it, by trial and error, it'd be quite easy to make small variations on seasoning and protein mix even during the same batch.
One good dish is "Salsiccia Cruda" - raw sausage - typical from tuscany, nice with freshly ground pepper and a dust of parmesan on top, to eat as a spread
Also dibs on both sausages and said pizza.
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• #29775
^^ I make a fennel sausage sauce to go with pasta - not sure how well it would sausage though
For a 400g pack of pork mince, I'd be thinking 2 decent sized fennel, sweated right down, and 3 - 4 tablespoons of fennel seeds (yeah - volumetric. Because they don't settle) dry fried off a bit.
Plus other sausagey type bits & bobs.
I could live off luke warm quiche lorraine from French bakeries. Heston Blumenthal has a quiche recipe where he puts it in the fridge for 24 hours before serving, closest I've come to the quiches you get in France.