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| 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. |
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On Apr 4, 12:09 pm, "Nunya Bidnits" wrote:
wrote: My chili base is the red chili ancho paste I posted earlier. Its still not the spicy brown broth of the traditional chili, but makes a rather thick chili. I brown onions, ground pork, ground beef, (or cubed pork and beef), add the red sauce, green chilis, chicken or vegetable broth, maybe some beer, garlic, comino, lime juice, some pinto beans, oregano (mexican or greek), salt and pepper. Maybe some roasted poblano, maybe some chopped serranos or japs. Maybe some chorizo to make it interesting. Oh yeah, and a few chopped tomatoes. I'm just checking here... one more time.... are you sure you aren't from Texas? Maybe even from the panhandle? There's got to be a connection somewhere looking at your ingredient selection. I am suspicious; you eat serranos and toast cumin... Or, I modify and use grilled chicken, less red chile, more green chile, plus poblanos, more chicken broth, black beans, and the other stuff for chicken/black bean chili. And whatever else of the stuff above smells good at the time. That's the fun of non competition chili. You do whatever you want with it based on what is on hand. All chili used to be like that, just basically a stew. You would have had a great time here when chili cookoffs were in vogue and held for charity events. About 30 years ago when I started going to the first ones, there were NO rules about ingredients, judging, or anything else. The judges were local celebrities, and they walked the fair grounds and tasted and drank beer. Which ever one they liked won. So there was judgin' chili, and there was eatin' chili. Besides beef and pork chili, I have had chili made from bear, possum, squirrel, rattlesnake (largest yearly rattlesnake hunt in the world is an hour and a half from my house), elk, goat (actually cabrito) and all manner and mix of those ingredients. Most of the contestants were hunters, and they felt like their "camp chili" was the best ever, so they were the contestants. Some of it was perfect it was so good. Some of it was inedible. *If chili was supposed to be tomato based, it would be called tomati.* I like that one! That abuelita principle actually describes how I cook pretty well. I don't use that many hard and fast recipes, but rather, I learn the basic techniques involved in creating a particular type of food construction, with the whys as well as the whats, and then I find I can create around that basic knowledge without scaring myself very often. I cook the same way as well. I enjoy cooking, and have gone through several phases of traditional Italian, Chinese (had to take a class on that one), of course traditional Mexican, and traditional Southern style cooking. You could spend your life doing nothing but Southern cooking and never get it all. I am like a dog with a bone when I make up a batch of homemade cornbread with smoked ham bits and jalepenos in it. I branch off, though. Last week we had cheese tortellinis with sauteed eggplant and spinach, tossed with smoked shrimp, tossed with garlic infused olive oil. The week before I made a grilled chicken breast entree by marinating the chicken breasts in balsamic vinegar and spices, then slit them open and stuffed them with ricotta cheese, bread crumbs and chopped spinach with lightly toasted garlic. The smoke added the right touch. A spinach/egg salad with homemade dressing, and a quick side of linguine in marinara, and that was good as well. That's probably why I don't bake much, a rocket science which requires precise adherence to recipes. At least for me. I started making all kinds of breads a few years ago. I tossed, threw, kneaded, proofed, and did all kinds of things for about 5 years. During the winter I was making as much as 8 loaves a weekend, and we never had any left. Homemade bread ALWAYS has a home. I probably put on 15 pounds, so I stopped. I have a killer recipe for a traditional white Italian, but I only make that once in a while. But did I mention chili ancho chocolate chip cookies? g Waitin' to see that recipe... ;^) The pork steaks have the characteristic T shaped bone from the pork butt. If pork butt goes on sale there cheaper than pork steak, just ask them for some sliced pork butt. g I don't know if they would slice them and sell them as something else or not. Frankly, I hadn't thought of that. I have a standing arrangement with a couple of my friends, and we meet once a week and have dinner and a few beers. Here's something we have gone back to: lately our local supermarket has been having the packages of "mixed chops" on sale pretty cheap. I like to cook them the way I used to when they were really cheap and you could buy a bucket of them for nothing. These guys are about 3/8" or so of an inch thick, and some not even that much. I spray them with quick dose of cooking spray, then coat them with tabasco flavored lemon pepper and garlic granules. We make a nice oak fire in the grill, and put these as far away from the fire as we can to let them smoke a bit. I put a ton of them in there, and leave them for about 45 minutes or so, moving them only once to make sure they all get equal oak smoke. Then I move them closer to the actual fire, and brown them for another 15 - 20 minutes. We pull them off and eat them like fried chicken, usually several per person. Add some garlic and onion mashed potatoes, homemade ranch style beans and beer right out of the ice and you have one hell of a meal. I really have the best of the deal, too. None of my friends cook, and they claim they never have home cooked meals, so they buy everything, and all I have to do is show up and cook! They all like to eat though, and they are in a great mood knowing they are going to be fed well. I usually chip in if they will let me, but they buy enough so that they have a lot of leftovers so they feel like they are the ones getting ahead. Someway it all works. Robert |
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On 02 Apr 2008 07:51:38 GMT, Nick Cramer
wrote: Most politicians are whores and whore mongerers. I know a number of working girls who'd be VERY offended at that comparison, Nick. "Every single religion that has a monotheistic god winds up persecuting someone else." -Philip Pullman -- -denny- (not as curmudgeonly as I useta be) |
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On 12 Apr 2008 23:14:03 GMT, Nick Cramer
wrote: wrote: On 02 Apr 2008 07:51:38 GMT, Nick Cramer Most politicians are whores and whore mongerers. I know a number of working girls who'd be VERY offended at that comparison, Nick. Denny. Prostitutes make a (usually verbal) contract to do certain things for a certain price. Whores promise and take a lot and give little. Sounds like most politicians to me! If ya make that distinction (I don't; nobody I know IRL does), then I go along with ya. "Every single religion that has a monotheistic god winds up persecuting someone else." -Philip Pullman -- -denny- (not as curmudgeonly as I useta be) |