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Those lamb shanks
Holy Cow!! They were great. There were three lab shanks in the pack. I
browned then in a pan with a bit of olive oil. I took them out and put them in a pie pan in a warm oven while I sauteed to diced carrots, celery onion and garlic. The shanks went back into the pot with about two cups of beef broth and bottle of beer then into a 300F oven for 2-1/2 hours. The shanks were taken out and put into the warm oven while I pureed the veggies in the liquid, reduced and then thickened it. They were incredible. My wife went for vegetables and came back with corn on the cob. I tried the microwave method that everyone was sending the YouTube link for, where you nuke it for 4 minutes per cob, slice of the talk and and pop out without silk.. not quite as easy as it appeared on the video, but it worked well. We had some leftover butternut squash to nuke. Garlic mashed potatoes.... never did them before. We had some red fingerling potatoes. I boiled enough for the two of us. When they were done I crushed two small cloves of garlic and tossed in some butter and about 14 cup grated Parmesan and then beat them a bit with the electric mixer. They were great. |
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Those lamb shanks
On Sep 23, 3:55*pm, Dave Smith > wrote:
> Holy Cow!! They were great. There were three lab shanks in the pack. I > browned then in a pan with a bit of olive oil. I took them out and put > them in a pie pan in a warm oven while I sauteed to diced carrots, > celery onion and garlic. The shanks went back into the pot with about > two cups of beef broth and bottle of beer then into a 300F oven for > 2-1/2 hours. *The shanks were taken out and put into the warm oven while > I pureed the veggies in the liquid, reduced and then thickened it. They > were incredible. > > My wife went for vegetables and came back with corn on the cob. I tried > the microwave method that everyone was sending the YouTube link for, > where you nuke it for 4 minutes per cob, slice of the talk and and pop > out without silk.. not quite as easy as it appeared on the video, but it > worked well. > > We had some leftover butternut squash to nuke. > > Garlic mashed potatoes.... never did them before. We had some red > fingerling potatoes. I boiled enough for the two of us. When they were > done I crushed two small cloves of garlic and tossed in some butter and > about 14 cup grated Parmesan and then beat them a bit with the electric > mixer. They were great. yum. got any leftovers, I'll be right over.... ;-) |
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Those lamb shanks
On Sep 23, 3:55*pm, Dave Smith > wrote:
> Holy Cow!! They were great. There were three lab shanks in the pack. I > browned then in a pan with a bit of olive oil. I took them out and put > them in a pie pan in a warm oven while I sauteed to diced carrots, > celery onion and garlic. The shanks went back into the pot with about > two cups of beef broth and bottle of beer then into a 300F oven for > 2-1/2 hours. *The shanks were taken out and put into the warm oven while > I pureed the veggies in the liquid, reduced and then thickened it. They > were incredible. > > My wife went for vegetables and came back with corn on the cob. I tried > the microwave method that everyone was sending the YouTube link for, > where you nuke it for 4 minutes per cob, slice of the talk and and pop > out without silk.. not quite as easy as it appeared on the video, but it > worked well. > > We had some leftover butternut squash to nuke. > > Garlic mashed potatoes.... never did them before. We had some red > fingerling potatoes. I boiled enough for the two of us. When they were > done I crushed two small cloves of garlic and tossed in some butter and > about 14 cup grated Parmesan and then beat them a bit with the electric > mixer. They were great. Why add beef stock? After all, this is a lamb dish and beef stock is very strongly flavored and changes the flavor drastically. Lamb shanks do not need added stock, they produce enough during the cooking process. (If you have to add something make is low key like chicken or veal.) http://www.richardfisher.com |
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Those lamb shanks
On 25/09/2012 12:15 AM, Cheryl wrote:
>>> Garlic mashed potatoes.... never did them before. We had some red >>> fingerling potatoes. I boiled enough for the two of us. When they were >>> done I crushed two small cloves of garlic and tossed in some butter >>> and about 14 cup grated Parmesan and then beat them a bit with the >>> electric mixer. They were great. >> >> Try roasting the garlic that you put it in the mash. >> >> Trust me. ;-) > > I was thinking the same thing! I'm not a fan of raw garlic after the > pesto I made. Very hot! > > My thinking was that it was a small amount of crushed garlic tossed into the potatoes immediately after pouring off the water, so there was enough heat in the potatoes to cook it a bit. We were very pleased with the results. |
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Those lamb shanks
On 9/25/2012 8:03 AM, Dave Smith wrote:
> My thinking was that it was a small amount of crushed garlic tossed > into the potatoes immediately after pouring off the water, so there was > enough heat in the potatoes to cook it a bit. We were very pleased with > the results. We never cook lamb here at home, but last week I had lamb shanks while on a cruise (Oasis of the Seas). They were delicious... well seasoned and fall off the bone tender. One of the food highlights of the week. George L |
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Hummus ....was Those lamb shanks
On 25/09/2012 10:01 AM, sf wrote:
>>> Try roasting the garlic that you put it in the mash. >>> >>> Trust me. ;-) >> >> I was thinking the same thing! I'm not a fan of raw garlic after the >> pesto I made. Very hot! >> > There's such a thing as too much roasted garlic too. I did it when I > made hummus the first (and only) time. Kinda put me off making > hummus. I still eat hummus, but I won't make it. Trader Joe's has > one that's perfect, IMO - so I buy that. Roasted garlic in hummus? I use one clove of raw in mine. My SiL likes hummus and (said) she really liked mine. She specifically mentioned the garlic flavour. I had been to talk her into making it herself because she buys it frequently and I was astounded at the price they charge for a small container of it at the deli counter. It was over $3 for a container that held about 1/4 as much as I get in a batch form one can of chickpeas, and I figure it costs about $1.50 for the ingredients, and a couple minutes work. |
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Those lamb shanks
On 25/09/2012 10:01 AM, George Leppla wrote:
> We never cook lamb here at home, but last week I had lamb shanks while > on a cruise (Oasis of the Seas). They were delicious... well seasoned > and fall off the bone tender. One of the food highlights of the week. Being a lamb lover, I don't really understand what it is about lamb that so many people seem to dislike, and to dislike it intensely. But FWIW, any lamb shanks I have had don't really taste like lamb. They have always been braised in something very flavourful and have absorbed great flavours. |
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Hummus ....was Those lamb shanks
On Tue, 25 Sep 2012 15:52:35 -0400, Dave Smith
> wrote: > Roasted garlic in hummus? Yes, I had some leftover roasted garlic and I used that. -- I take life with a grain of salt, a slice of lemon and a shot of tequila |
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