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• #33852
Moisture transfers heat better than dry air.
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• #33853
Yeah I thought like all pro kitchen use steam ovens…
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• #33854
I’ve made this banana cake recipe a few times now and it’s an absolute winner. I used to just freeze bananas when they went brown and now just rustle up one of these. I only use 80g of sugar as I think that’s sweet enough.
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• #33855
Anyone got a good glazed ham recipe?
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• #33856
This is a hock one, but can be done for hams too.
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• #33857
Consider me corrected!
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• #33858
Going to try that. Like unsweetened almond milk over milk as I like the flavour of almonds.
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• #33859
Awkward situation in the Italian deli yesterday. Went in hoping to get some fennel pollen after the butcher recommended it for the porchetta and a quick Google confirmed it. Owner of deli looked at me quizzically, then said that I'd got the wrong word and I was looking for fennel seeds and I had to stand there and listen to him tell me how to make a porchetta while holding in the intense desire to say, akchually ....
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• #33860
hi foodies, i have no oven for christmas but 2 hobs and a microwave. I want to cook something banging, i guess it’ll be some kind of stew or a stew and a something else, in addition to yummy veggies and salad. I’m in s spain. there’s amazing produce. i don’t want to hold back. my policy is to not buy meat or fish but I might be persuaded if someone comes with something, persuasive. I was thinking something cooked in booze, or insane quantities of garlic, or something saffrony. was going to get some killer goats cheese (peyoyo) and delicious wine
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• #33861
What is the local Christmas traditions in that area?
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• #33862
Donkeys. Off church towers.
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• #33863
Bought some short rib and some chuck today (hello ragu thing) for Christmas Day from my butcher.
The use by date is today. wtf? Do I freeze it or ignore the date? -
• #33864
Cook it today. And then keep chilled until Xmas day or even freeze until Christmas Eve. See later edit as I wouldn’t want your family to risk getting unwell.
Internet has so much variation in how long a meat ragu will last in a fridge.
If you have a vacuum chamber then I’d risk vacuum packing and keeping in the fridge.
If not then let it cool and freeze so it can be defrosted Xmas Eve.
I tend to think ragu works best if cooked the day prior to eating. We made a huge batch in the pressure cooker two weeks ago. Softend the soffrito, then seared off a few kg of beef shin (with a light seasoned flour dredge) deglazed with red wine and boiled off the alcohol, added a couple of bay leaves and 5 or 6 strips of lemon zest, tinned tomatoes a mug of water and returned the soffrito and beef to the pot. 50 mins in pressure cooker. Drained off the liquid and reduced by 2/3 and while that was happening shredded the meat and removed any gristly bits of connective tissue.
We have vacuum bags of it in the freezer now.
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• #33865
At my local butcher every thing you buy comes with today's date as the use by. Arse covering I guess, and avoids them having to think about it - reckon you can keep it until it looks or smells less fresh
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• #33866
So wait until it smells bad? And then ditch it? How do you know if it will smell bad tomorrow?
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• #33867
Ha yeah on reflection this is maybe not a foolproof Christmas strategy. I would call the butcher up and ask. My point was really just that the use by date is probably not real
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• #33868
I’ll freeze it till Monday. NO TIME TO COOK.
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• #33869
Just annoyed after the conversation with the dudes and it was clear what I was doing and when.
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• #33870
I cooked mine yesterday - ate two ribs, then cut the rest up for chilli, and froze it.
That’s the weird thing about steam. I randomly add it when roasting veg or whatever and despite plumes when I open the oven, everything always browns and crisps well. Witchcraft.