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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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I have seen a post or two on how to increase the speed of marinade soaking
into meat. Right about now, someone is firing up a grill. Lighting coals, fannig the flames, and making sure the heat is just right. All the while figuratively revisiting those culinary triumphs of the past- that steak grilled to heavenly perfection or that chicken that some clamed was "a religious experience." Aficionados of the grill, the true "Grill Masters," know that gradiloquent culinary performance require intense flavor, seasoned rubs or spice mixeds on the outside and infused flavor deep inside that complement the fire and savory smoke common to great grilled foods. Traditionally, grill masters have relied on good marinades and advanced planning to allow adequate soak times fo a marinade to make food tastier, juiceir, healthier, and more tender. A good marinade flavors foos by carrying flavors inot the meat. But with thick cuts a marinade can travel only so far whne utilizing the soaking method. Worse yet, over-marinating can result in mushy food. Since acid based marinades both tenderize and flavor foods as the acids and enzymes breakdown connective tissue in meat, they also reduce the capability of meat to hold its juices thereby resulting in dry, not jicy meat. The limiitations in the soaking process- ineffective with thick cuts; mushy results when over-marinating, ecessive waste of expensive ingredients, and, worst of all, limted success in infusing flavor deep inside the meat- has resulted in a new category of injectable marinades that allow grill masters to inject specially formulated, slow-cooked, blended flavor marinades deep inside the meat. Injectable marinades infuse great flavor and eliminate the need for "soak time' and planning ahead. For best results the exterior of the meat should be first rubbed with extra virgin olive oil, then injected with marinated, and lastly rubbed with a dry rub. -- Comments Welcome, Norman S. Brown, Jr. XZealot Archon of the Swamp www.brucefoods.com |
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[snip the results of ingesting a thesaurus]
>For best results the exterior of the meat should be first rubbed with extra >virgin olive oil, then injected with marinated, and lastly rubbed with a dry >rub. >Comments Welcome, Um, soaking, vacuum pressurizing, and injecting flavoring all have their places in the repertoire, but I've got a few objections to that last 'graf. 1. rubbing extra virgin olive oil on meat that's going to be grilled, roasted, whatever is pointless. EVOO's taste should be experienced uncooked, or at the most gently warmed. You could use frickin' lard and not notice a difference. 2. EVOO and dry rub do not mix, IMO. 3. If by rubbing with EVOO you mean to seal in the injected flavoring, you obviously don't understand capillary action. When I inject flavorings into large cuts of meat I do a lot of sites, shallow and deep and let it sit no longer than 1 hour. The cooking spreads the injected flavoring as much, if not more than the capillary action. 3. It's marina_t_ing, not marina_d_ing. Marinate is the verb, marinade is the noun. 4. Marinate is defined by every dictionary, culinary or otherwise, as "soaking" meat in a fluid. >Norman S. Brown, Jr. >XZealot >Archon of the Swamp Dude, if you're actually trying to build your business here's a couple of clews: 1. You've got a website, it probably comes with a few mail accounts. Try a real name like instead of X-zealot. M'kay? 2. The "Archon of the Swamp" .sig makes you look like a total twink, lose it. Unless of course you are the ruler of a swamp, or the swampy part of ancient Athens. 3. Stop stepping on your own d*ck. The way to build a business on da Internet isn't to come crashing into newsgroups braying like a jackass. Take it soft and slow, offer a mailing list after you've made your rep. Recipes, thoughts, etc. Best wishes, Marc |
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