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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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In article >,
Joseph Littleshoes > wrote: > Wayne Boatwright wrote: > > > On Thu 29 Dec 2005 06:44:58p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Joseph > > > > Littleshoes? > > > > > OmManiPadmeOmelet wrote: > > > > > >> In article >, > > >> Joseph Littleshoes > wrote: > > >> > > >> > And of course this without even mentioning grilling oysters > > wrapped > > >> > in bacon or large prawns done the same way with a port wine > > >> > reduction sauce. > > >> > > >> <snipped cool fish recipes> > > >> > > >> One of my freinds at work suggested that I put prawns on skewers > > >> wrapped in bacon to grill. :-) > > > > > > I first ran across this dish at a local Thai restaurant, while the > > port > > > wine sauce is very good i have taken to using a Japanese sake, > > sesame > > > and soy sauce mix or a chinese mustard for a sauce with the large > > > grilled bacon wrapped prawns. > > > > > > Sometimes, i make a Chinese brown garlic sauce ala "Yan can cook" > > which > > > is just 8 - 10 cloves of peeled garlic, cooked in a couple of cups > > of > > > chicken stock and seasoned with soy sauce or other Chinese sauce > > like > > > Hosin or oyster sauce and thickened with a roux. Once the garlic > > cloves > > > are soft, they are removed from the stock, thoroughly mashed and > > > returned to the stock with the other ingredients. > > > --- > > > JL > > > > David loves the flavor of garlic and onion, but cannot abide coming > > across > > a piece of either one in a finished dish. Rather than always using > > granulated garlic or onion, I cook sliced or chopped garlic and onion > > as > > specified in a recipe, then fish it all out and put it through the > > food > > mill, returning the puree to the dish. Works for us, and most of the > > time > > I don't miss the pieces. Occasionally I will make separate versions > > for > > each of us when I simply must have the actual pieces in the dish. > > In Martin Yan's original recipe the garlic cloves are left whole to be > eaten whole but i much prefer to mash them for the garlic brown sauce. > > I know a garlicophobe that whines when the garlic is there in the dish > to be seen but complains just as much if you leave it out, when i cook > for her i often times lightly crush a clove of garlic and sauté or > otherwise cook it with whatever else i am making, this makes it easier > to remove from the finished dish yet provides a bit of garlic flavour. > Same with mustard for her, if she knows the mustard is in the dish she > wont eat it but if she does not know she raves about the great flavour. > > I have my likes and dislikes also but at least i am rational and > consistent with them. For a garlicophobe she seems remarkably tolerant > of baked garlic. I once caught her, when she spent the night, in a > midnight raid on the fridge scarfing down some home made garlic bread > she would not admit to liking when it was served with dinner, would not > even try it at dinner but when she thought she would not be found > out....kind of like the Sienfield episode with the lobsters and the > women who kept kosher. > --- > JL > > > > > > > -- > > Wayne Boatwright *¿* > > __________________________________________________ ________________ > > And if we enter a room full of manure, may we believe in the pony. > > > That's funny! :-) I'm not overly fond of mustard by itself, but it does make a nice ingredient, and I adore garlic! Anchovies add an interesting touch to some dishes as well but are vile by themselves. -- Om. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." -Jack Nicholson |
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