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PastaLover wrote: Damn, you just made me hungry! Cast iron is a great thing. I hereby nominate it as at least one of the ten best things ever invented. Well, I think we would have to call cast iron aircraft less than successful. ;-) Rusty |
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"jmcquown" wrote in message .. . Some very nasty storms blew through here early this morning but I wanted some biscuits. I was fully prepared for the electricity to go out so I put a few (very few) coals on the grill and got out my trusty cast iron skillet. snip story of Pioneer Jill Jill Good for you!! Successes like that make us feel we can do anything. Janet |
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jmcquown wrote:
OmManiPadmiOmelet wrote: jmcquown wrote: Some very nasty storms blew through here early this morning but I wanted some biscuits. I was fully prepared for the electricity to go out so I put a few (very few) coals on the grill and got out my trusty cast iron skillet. Biscuits: 2 c. flour 2 tsp. baking powder 1/4 tsp. baking soda 1 tsp. salt 1/4 c. vegetable shortening 3/4 c. buttermilk Blend dry ingredients together. Cut shortening in with a fork until the mixture is sort of crumbly. Gradually add buttermilk and stir until you have a soft dough that doesn't stick to the sides of the mixing bowl. Turn the dough onto a lightly floured board and knead very briefly (too much kneading and you'll wind up with baked hocky pucks!). Lightly roll out the dough with a floured rolling pin to about 1/2 inch thick. Dip a 3-inch diameter drinking glass in flour and use it to cut out rounds of biscuits. Scoop up the remaining dough and gently roll it out to cut the remaining biscuits. Place the biscuits in the cast iron skillet. Check to see that the coals are ashy and there's no flames. Place the skillet with the biscuits on the grate of the grill. Cover the grill and run back inside (because now it's raining like mad!) Wait about 8 minutes. Run back out with an umbrella and lift the lid of the grill to peek at the biscuits. Good, they are nicely risen but need to brown a tad bit more on top. Run back inside and wait 2, 3 minutes. Run back out, take the lid off the grill and grab the skillet (remember to use a hot pad!). Run inside because it's still pouring down rain and the lightening is terrible. The power didn't go out but I got some really nice biscuits; had a couple slathered with sweet butter. Oh yum! And here I thought I'd lost my knack for biscuits. Turns out all I need is bad weather and a grill ![]() Jill Can these be done on a stovetop? :-) Actually, they can be done on the stovetop over very low heat. Grandma Brown used to do her scones on the stove top on a cast iron griddle; she turned them after about 5 minutes. Probably would be the same with biscuits. Jill Sounds cool, thanks! |
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jmcquown wrote:
PastaLover wrote: Damn, you just made me hungry! Cast iron is a great thing. I hereby nominate it as at least one of the ten best things ever invented. The first would probably be fire; second, the crossbow ![]() No, first would be the wheel...... G |
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Michael "Dog3" Lonergan wrote:
OmManiPadmiOmelet hitched up their panties and posted : I suppose you never use schmaltz either. Your loss. ;-) Schmaltz is one of my best friends ![]() Michael Do you make it yourself? Mom taught me how to do the rendering. |
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Michael "Dog3" Lonergan wrote:
OmManiPadmiOmelet hitched up their panties and posted : Michael "Dog3" Lonergan wrote: OmManiPadmiOmelet hitched up their panties and posted : I suppose you never use schmaltz either. Your loss. ;-) Schmaltz is one of my best friends ![]() Michael Do you make it yourself? Mom taught me how to do the rendering. I don't make it. Steven makes it and it is fantastic stuff. When he makes it he makes a lot at a time and we always have it in the freezer. Michael Cool beans! :-) If you get whole chickens, there is usually those nice big fat pads right inside of the body cavity. That's what mom used to make it. |
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OmManiPadmiOmelet wrote: Rusty wrote: OmManiPadmiOmelet wrote: Food Snob wrote: jmcquown wrote: Some very nasty storms blew through here early this morning but I wanted some biscuits. I was fully prepared for the electricity to go out so I put a few (very few) coals on the grill and got out my trusty cast iron skillet. Biscuits: 2 c. flour 2 tsp. baking powder 1/4 tsp. baking soda 1 tsp. salt 1/4 c. vegetable shortening 3/4 c. buttermilk What the **** is wrong with you, posting recipes that have a quarter cup of vegetable shortening? The fact that you have that in your pantry brands you as trash. Jill --Bryan The fact that you'd post something like that proves you have no taste. It may hint at me being an asshole, but it says nothing negative about "taste." Bug off Brian! I have no respect whatsoever for "food snobs". :-P Give me a break. I suppose you never use schmaltz either. I never throw out those big clumps of fat on the leg quarters. That gets rendered. My comment addressed vegetable shortening, something that any idiot ought to know better than to use in 2006. Your loss. ;-) Vegetable shortening or lard are classic ingredients for biscuits. It wouldn't be a real biscuit without one of those. For 100+ years, the food industry passed of hydrogenated shortening as a better alternative to lard. Some people are still stupid enough to buy into it. -Rusty I agree but if you _ever_ have the opportunity to make biscuits or a pie crust with schmaltz, I dare you to try it. G I think lard works better for that application because it has a slightly higher meltpoint, but someone more skilled than I at baking could probably compensate. Tell you what schmaltz is best for, frying chicken. Back when I was more disciplined about carbs (read: thinner) I used to fry chicken with no breading in rendered chicken fat that was at least an inch deep. The pieces--even the breasts--stayed nicely moist. Mom used to make it just for seasonal pie crusts. It was WONderful. Flavor-wise, I'd say that poultry fat is second only to butter, tame duck being my favorite. Oh, and every time I see someone post something calling for cooking with trans-fats, I'm going to be an asshole, as well I should. If people want to hate me or killfile me, sobeit. There just isn't any excuse for recommending something that is nearly universally agreed to be unsafe to eat by people who know about such things. I'm not saying that schmaltz, lard, or especially beef fat or butter is particularly good for you, but those fats' affect on plasma lipids must be balanced against their aesthetic appeal. Not so for shortening, which is FAR worse health-wise, and has no advantage whatsoever over naturally saturated fats. --Bryan http://MySpace.com/BoboBonobo |
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On 21 Apr 2006 20:47:47 -0700, "Food Snob" wrote:
I never throw out those big clumps of fat on the leg quarters. That gets rendered. My comment addressed vegetable shortening, something that any idiot ought to know better than to use in 2006. Some vegetable shortenings, such as Crisco, have versions with no trans-fatty acids. I think those are supposed to be the culprits. Christine |
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jmcquown wrote:
PastaLover wrote: Damn, you just made me hungry! Cast iron is a great thing. I hereby nominate it as at least one of the ten best things ever invented. The first would probably be fire; second, the crossbow ![]() That's why I said "one of the ten best" because obviously there are other really great inventions.... |
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Some vegetable shortenings, such as Crisco, have versions with no
trans-fatty acids. I think those are supposed to be the culprits. I thought I'd jump into the fray here. I looked up the Crisco web site and found the information on their new product. Crisco 0 Grams Trans Fat Per Serving All-Vegetable Shortening Ingredients SOYBEAN OIL, SUNFLOWER OIL, FULLY HYDROGENATED PALM OIL, MONO- AND DIGLYCERIDES, TBHQ AND CITRIC ACID (ANTIOXIDANTS). First, Unsaturated fats are liquid at room temperature, and saturated fats are solid at room temp. Soybean oil with 58% Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids (PUFA) and 23% Monounsaturated Fatty Acids (MUFA), and Sunflower oil with 40% PUFA and 45% MUFA are both liquid at standard room temperature (SRT). To make a solid product you need a higher concentration of Saturated fat, which is solid at SRT. Crisco has chosen Fully Hydrogenated Palm oil to solidify this product. Natural Palm oil has about 50% Saturated fat, which is still too low, when added to the liquid oils they're using, to make a product that is solid at SRT. Therefore they're using FULLY HYDROGENATED PALM OIL to boost the Sat fat concentration. Now to the problems with Trans fats. When nature makes an unsaturated bond in a fatty acid, it uses an enzyme to do the work, and the product is almost always a Cis fatty acid, never Trans. When man chemically hydrogenates a polyunsaturated fat a mixture of Cis (good) and Trans (bad) fats are generated in addition to the saturated fats which are the goal of the process. FULLY HYDROGENATED PALM OIL contains 88% Saturated fat, leaving 12% which contains a mixture of Trans and Cis fats. Now this is the third most abundant ingredient on the list, and it only contains a small amount of Trans fat, but there will be some Trans fat. Quoting from the FDA website (http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/qatrans2.html#s3q3) "food manufacturers are allowed to list amounts of trans fat with less than 0.5 gram (1/2 g) as 0 (zero) on the Nutrition Facts panel. As a result, consumers may see a few products that list 0 gram trans fat on the label, while the ingredient list will have "shortening" or "partially hydrogenated vegetable oil" on it. This means the food contains very small amounts (less than 0.5 g) of trans fat per serving." So I suspect this product will still contain some Trans fat, even though it falls below the FDA sights. If you're trying to eliminate all Trans fats from your diet, as we all probably should, this is a better alternative than regular Crisco. But there are other, natural products, that are lower in Trans fats. Just my 2 cents. DreamSong |
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On Thu, 20 Apr 2006 11:26:56 -0500, "jmcquown" wrote:
Some very nasty storms blew through here early this morning but I wanted some biscuits. I was fully prepared for the electricity to go out so I put a few (very few) coals on the grill and got out my trusty cast iron skillet. .. . . Cover the grill and run back inside (because now it's raining like mad!) Wait about 8 minutes. Run back out with an umbrella and lift the lid of the grill to peek at the biscuits. Good, they are nicely risen but need to brown a tad bit more on top. Run back inside and wait 2, 3 minutes. Run back out, take the lid off the grill and grab the skillet (remember to use a hot pad!). . . .Turns out all I need is bad weather and a grill ![]() Good for you, Jill! We're heading into the time of year (in AZ) where baking is almost out of the question. I use a solar oven for lots of things in the summer, but at 275F (135C) tops, it simply doesn't get hot enough for baking, so this idea is much appreciated. |
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On Sun 23 Apr 2006 08:20:24a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Sunrat?
On Thu, 20 Apr 2006 11:26:56 -0500, "jmcquown" wrote: Some very nasty storms blew through here early this morning but I wanted some biscuits. I was fully prepared for the electricity to go out so I put a few (very few) coals on the grill and got out my trusty cast iron skillet. . . . Cover the grill and run back inside (because now it's raining like mad!) Wait about 8 minutes. Run back out with an umbrella and lift the lid of the grill to peek at the biscuits. Good, they are nicely risen but need to brown a tad bit more on top. Run back inside and wait 2, 3 minutes. Run back out, take the lid off the grill and grab the skillet (remember to use a hot pad!). . . .Turns out all I need is bad weather and a grill ![]() Good for you, Jill! We're heading into the time of year (in AZ) where baking is almost out of the question. I use a solar oven for lots of things in the summer, but at 275F (135C) tops, it simply doesn't get hot enough for baking, so this idea is much appreciated. I live in Apache Junction. I can get accurate baking tempeatures in my gas grill, and have baked cakes and pies in it. Otherwise, for short baking endeavors, I just crank up the A/C and use my kitchen oven. -- Wayne Boatwright @¿@¬ _____________________ |
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