![]() |
|
Welcome to FoodBanter.com forums which provide access to the finest food and drink related newsgroups. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most newsgroup discussions and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics to the food related newsgroups, communicate privately with other FoodBanter.com members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact support. |
|
|||||||
| Barbecue (alt.food.barbecue) Discuss barbecue and grilling--southern style "low and slow" smoking of ribs, shoulders and briskets, as well as direct heat grilling of everything from burgers to salmon to vegetables. |
|
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
|
|
|||
|
wrote Like Shawn said, try a laurel, or bay laurel plant. I got mine as an old ugly one for $4 in a 5 gallon pot at the nursery at the end of their season a few years ago. It is still in the pot, and you can't kill it. It has survived our 100+ degree summers, our droughts, and even two ice storms last year. It is a pretty plant, and likes its pot, and makes more bay than I can use. You know, I never thought about growing cumin. Around here so many Mexican/latin dishes use it, that I always have on hand. Have you actually harvested and ground the seeds before? THAT seems like a lot of work. Comino (cumin) just doesn't want to grow for me around here. I use tons of it in my sauces and seasonings and I buy whole comino seed by the pound from Planter's Seed Co. in KCMO. (see below) I tried that growing coriander. Chinese parsley (from one species or another) is used as celantro around here in South Texas. But when it goes to seed, it makes a little round ball, and is the seeds are called coriander. I like both, the bite of fresh celantro in sauces and on tacos, and the perfume of toasted coriander on pork. Coriander likes cool weather, and bolts very easily. So if you start it in warm weather, it never gets very large before it bolts and makes just a few seeds. It can even take a bit of frost so I start it real early and keep trimming it to get fresh cilantro, which makes it branch with each trimming. Then when it bolts there are lots of coriander seeds on the many branches. To stay in fresh cilantro in the summer, new plants need to be started every couple of weeks, but when its really hot they bolt almost instantly. I use a lot of coriander too, year round, so I don't worry too much about trying to harvest the coriander seeds, I buy them whole by the pound too. But the ones grown at home are the most flavorful of all. But getting those damn seeds and drying them was a pain. And then getting enough to do anything with was worse. The Chinese market has them fresh and cheap, so I eat the celatro and buy the coriander. Just wait till the whole plant goes to seed, pull it up, and hang it upside down outside till the coriander seeds are dry. Note that dried cilantro leaves are almost flavorless and pretty much useless. Don't know how many seeds it would take to make a bottle of ground cumin up... How big a bottle? g I grind cumin and coriander both, usually toasting about 1-2 cups at a time, and grinding them in batches in coffee grinders. (I have four, three of which never grind coffee.) It usually takes me 3-4 batches. Don't overfill the grinders and take special care with the coriander to make sure its well pulverized, otherwise unground seed husks will mess up the texture of whatever you are making. Both these spices in particular will benefit greatly from being toasted in a skillet over medium heat till they barely start to brown and become fragrant. Don't let them burn or they turn bitter. Let them cool just enough to handle, and grind away. The aroma of the freshly ground warm comino is mind-altering. Toasting and grinding them yourself gives far better flavor than buying it already ground. Once ground up they start losing flavor potency. Most seed and spice shops buy it from their big suppliers either ground or whole, and very few grind their own because that requires a commercial food preparation license. So the pre-ground stuff is somewhat stale by the time it gets to you, even from most shops that import their own. The worst are the pre-ground spices and herbs at grocers, regardless of brand. I don't buy any spices or herbs already ground unless there is no other practical way, for example, ground ginger. (But I freeze whole ginger root for asian cooking, and just slice dimes off the root as needed for fresh ginger flavor.) I forgot to mention earlier, but rosemary also yields some nice woody stalks if it gets mature enough. I can now get rosemary varieties that are hardy here for several seasons before some really severe freeze kills them off. They give up some great woody stalks which also make some tasty smoke. My favorite herb, spice, seed, and garden store on the entire planet: http://plantersseed.com/ They have even more than is shown on the web page spice list. That includes a couple interesting rubs not on the web page list, Applewood Smoke rub, and Apple Rib Rub seasoning. The dry beef soup and french onion soup bases are fun to experiment with in rubs. Ask them to fax or mail you the complete list of seasonings, mixes, bases, and blends. They offer a big wholesale discount on pound sizes and up if you have a tax ID #, and they also give the discount to barbecue teams. If that is the case ask them for a wholesale price list. MartyB in KC |
|
|||
|
Nunya Bidnits wrote:
snip I forgot to mention earlier, but rosemary also yields some nice woody stalks if it gets mature enough. I can now get rosemary varieties that are hardy here for several seasons before some really severe freeze kills them off. They give up some great woody stalks which also make some tasty smoke. Huh. Never thought of that. I've used the woody stalks as kabob sticks, though. My oldest rosemary plant made it through 5 winters. The sixth winter I got all conscientious and raked away all the dead leaves and spent foliage in the side garden and the poor thing croaked, probably due to lack of insulation. |
|
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|