Jump to content

cooking thread...


Recommended Posts

1 minute ago, akaShag said:

Looks fabulous, Brian.  I don't think I ever saw turkey thighs for sale........

Tonight here it is roast smoked pork loin, with GRAVY!!!  If you don't find smoked pork loin gravy to be one of the best things you ever ate, you are legally dead.

Doug

Well,I was in yer buddies neck of the woods ( sorry did not drop a note bud ) so hit no frills. Low and behold,30% off ,so hell ya,that be dinner tonight, since the fish didn't  bite.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, akaShag said:

In our home growing up, gravy was considered a beverage.  😁

Pop always made lots of gravy with the meat. That way we kids could eat up and fill up on gravy sandwiches. Basically bread covered with gravy but no meat  . I still do it.

Edited by misfish
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, misfish said:

Pop always made lots of gravy with the meat. That way we kids could eat up and fill up on gravy sandwiches. Basically bread covered with gravy but no meat  . I still do it.

Bread and gravy, oh yeah!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Been a busy couple of days cooking.

Smoked bacon ribs on the grill this time. On sale at Zhers. Full side for a good price. Dry rub dark brown sugar and koshar salt. In fridge for a couple of days. Turned out awesome.20220823_105839.jpg.5a5db2ef76a57dc9f906fb62429104cf.jpg

20220823_110755.jpg.027ce3968b17dc15dc0bbc604ab360c5.jpg

20220824_132717.jpg.422991ae0b7679650e7fe0930fcd6082.jpg

20220824_132849.jpg.3578484fd64e73e053b80cf9927a5790.jpg

20220824_145558.jpg.ae5916911cef12cb0aae7e6a72efb1d4.jpg

 

This morning was prepping cabbage rolls  since I bought this basketball sized savoy cabbage at Chapel farms. 3 bucks for that beast. Meat ball subs for my dinner for the weekend.

20220825_081917.jpg.404c041f9a519af0cf087c82a0c31dc8.jpg

20220825_082135.jpg.24787a8a86defe34ec6de3b955cc1ea3.jpg

20220825_092426.jpg.356f577671ecea8f0e2eb01c9ef83dca.jpg

20220825_094625.jpg.88f0bc6407921dad85b05ae400daa3d5.jpg

20220825_094653.jpg.fb7f1338e1331d2133a6fa13aece5620.jpg

20220825_095551.jpg.a313601353ba2b9a7b21f378e0c85997.jpg

20220825_095649.jpg.1172c786ec0b6b4fd1774d4a7fe5e18e.jpg

20220825_095831.jpg.605fa4c37fc66a2fede08b83fd4aca87.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

20220825_092444.jpg

20220825_094556.jpg

20220825_094605.jpg

Edited by misfish
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

21 hours ago, misfish said:

Been a busy couple of days cooking.

Smoked bacon ribs on the grill this time. On sale at Zhers. Full side for a good price. Dry rub dark brown sugar and koshar salt. In fridge for a couple of days. Turned out awesome.20220823_105839.jpg.5a5db2ef76a57dc9f906fb62429104cf.jpg

20220823_110755.jpg.027ce3968b17dc15dc0bbc604ab360c5.jpg

20220824_132717.jpg.422991ae0b7679650e7fe0930fcd6082.jpg

20220824_132849.jpg.3578484fd64e73e053b80cf9927a5790.jpg

20220824_145558.jpg.ae5916911cef12cb0aae7e6a72efb1d4.jpg

 

This morning was prepping cabbage rolls  since I bought this basketball sized savoy cabbage at Chapel farms. 3 bucks for that beast. Meat ball subs for my dinner for the weekend.

20220825_081917.jpg.404c041f9a519af0cf087c82a0c31dc8.jpg

20220825_082135.jpg.24787a8a86defe34ec6de3b955cc1ea3.jpg

20220825_092426.jpg.356f577671ecea8f0e2eb01c9ef83dca.jpg

20220825_094625.jpg.88f0bc6407921dad85b05ae400daa3d5.jpg

20220825_094653.jpg.fb7f1338e1331d2133a6fa13aece5620.jpg

20220825_095551.jpg.a313601353ba2b9a7b21f378e0c85997.jpg

20220825_095649.jpg.1172c786ec0b6b4fd1774d4a7fe5e18e.jpg

20220825_095831.jpg.605fa4c37fc66a2fede08b83fd4aca87.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

20220825_092444.jpg

20220825_094556.jpg

20220825_094605.jpg


Mmmmmm, Cabbage Rolls.  :D

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

I almost missed my annual treat of Calvatia Gigantea this year. I had seen some in a pasture but didn't get out for a tour and to ask permission till 3 days later. Right away from a hundred yards away I knew I was too late. I mentioned that to the new owner who came out and we chatted for a bit. I went to check anyway and sure enough the skin was darkening, the flesh was soft and already getting a dark yellow tinge. She told me about another one a mile up the road so I went to check and there it was just outside the fence line of a large pasture. It was real big and better colour  but it wasn't as firm as it should be. I took it anyway and plopped it on a clear section below the front lawn. Then I went to another house closer to home that I had got some from last year for the first time and knocked on the door. She said fine, I could go look. So I go back just into the bush by the long time wood storage and work space and tour around the whole area. Nothing on my inside sweep and then I swing around the back to check out the bush behind, as I got one there last year as well as another from the side lawn that I spotted driving by. Well go figure, right at the end of my walkabout, just behind an old pile of rotting wood I come across the weirdest looking Puffball I've ever seen in over 30 years of eating them. Thing is, the skin was all intact on all the strange surfaces and it was really firm, I checked before picking it. It had real good weight and had that perfect "boomp" sound when you drum on it, that's how I always test them. So I'm headed back home and I remembered another house just up the road from that had some last year for the first time ever. I check and there's 2 real big ones and a small one but they were soft already as I figured. In the end I got lucky finding that one out of seven in heavy shade.
On the culinary side of things, the quality was exceptional. I changed from my new preferred schnitzel method from last year a bit that still centers around my smoked bread crumbs. I dropped the flour dredge and and made an egg wash diluted with soya sauce of all things. Don't ask me why, it was a late night experiment that turned out real good. The bread crumbs on the counter the next morning  were funny hehe ...

I did it again the next day on a larger scale to pig out on prime beef and make extra while I could. The pieces were so crispy and light. 3/4 to 1" is just right. Just barely coat those pure white  pieces with the egg wash and then give them a good bread crumb coating. Fry in large non stick with plenty of butter until just browned both sides. They were still real good warmed up the next day too with left over steak.

Cheers.

Edited by smitty55
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...
On 9/14/2022 at 1:45 AM, smitty55 said:

I almost missed my annual treat of Calvatia Gigantea this year. I had seen some in a pasture but didn't get out for a tour and to ask permission till 3 days later. Right away from a hundred yards away I knew I was too late. I mentioned that to the new owner who came out and we chatted for a bit. I went to check anyway and sure enough the skin was darkening, the flesh was soft and already getting a dark yellow tinge. She told me about another one a mile up the road so I went to check and there it was just outside the fence line of a large pasture. It was real big and better colour  but it wasn't as firm as it should be. I took it anyway and plopped it on a clear section below the front lawn. Then I went to another house closer to home that I had got some from last year for the first time and knocked on the door. She said fine, I could go look. So I go back just into the bush by the long time wood storage and work space and tour around the whole area. Nothing on my inside sweep and then I swing around the back to check out the bush behind, as I got one there last year as well as another from the side lawn that I spotted driving by. Well go figure, right at the end of my walkabout, just behind an old pile of rotting wood I come across the weirdest looking Puffball I've ever seen in over 30 years of eating them. Thing is, the skin was all intact on all the strange surfaces and it was really firm, I checked before picking it. It had real good weight and had that perfect "boomp" sound when you drum on it, that's how I always test them. So I'm headed back home and I remembered another house just up the road from that had some last year for the first time ever. I check and there's 2 real big ones and a small one but they were soft already as I figured. In the end I got lucky finding that one out of seven in heavy shade.
On the culinary side of things, the quality was exceptional. I changed from my new preferred schnitzel method from last year a bit that still centers around my smoked bread crumbs. I dropped the flour dredge and and made an egg wash diluted with soya sauce of all things. Don't ask me why, it was a late night experiment that turned out real good. The bread crumbs on the counter the next morning  were funny hehe ...

I did it again the next day on a larger scale to pig out on prime beef and make extra while I could. The pieces were so crispy and light. 3/4 to 1" is just right. Just barely coat those pure white  pieces with the egg wash and then give them a good bread crumb coating. Fry in large non stick with plenty of butter until just browned both sides. They were still real good warmed up the next day too with left over steak.

Cheers.

I dehydrate some every year and use it in soups and sauces all winter. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 5 months later...

I had my favourite BRUNCH for SUPPER last night.  Venison tenderloin and farm-fresh eggs.  With TWO vegetables: a potato hash-brown patty (on the plate) and a bunch of celery and Cheez Whiz.  That's a comfort food from my mis-spent youth.  😉

t-loin and eggs 11 Mar 23.jpg

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...
 
 
So my wife has been away for a couple weeks, leaving me without adult supervision, and of course only cooking for myself instead of the two of us.  So I have been enjoying a lot of wild game lately:  slow cooker venison shanks last night, and before that duck sausage, ground moose and gravy, venison sausages, fresh pan-fried perch a couple days when I went fishing, and so on.  And most nights I even eat a VEGETABLE!!!!!  She is still away for another three weeks or so, and I reckon there will be more feeds of wild game and fish.  Bring it on!
 
Anyways, it is a wet dreary day here - I was up to the camp for a couple hours doing chores in the rain - and when I got home I thought to myself that I could EITHER reheat the leftover venison shank (which is delicious!!!) or I could order pizza from Big Bob's.  They make the BEST pizza!!!  I only order it a couple times a year, but it is a treat.
 
So I got to looking at their menu (which I have here on a fridge magnet attached to my downstairs filing cabinet).............and I noticed that they have a "BIG" pizza, at 20 inches.  I have often ordered the extra large, which is pretty considerable at 17 inches..........but the price differential for a BIG was not all that much, and I rang up the equation for calculating the area of a circle (my memory was correct, but it having been forty plus years since I used that factoid, I thought I should check) and the area of a 20 inch circle is almost half again the area of a 17 inch circle.  So I ordered a BIG meat lovers.
 
It was awesome.  It is not often that I can only eat TWO SLICES of pizza, but there I was.  Pictorial evidence enclosed, and that is a full size steak knife for size comparison.  <<<burp>>>  AND I ate a bunch of carrots first!  I believe I have my quota of fat and salt for the day.  😉
 
Doug

Healthy eating.jpg

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Now that is a Pizza!!!

I haven't found and old style pizza here in London for years; not since Apollo Pizza that was run by an older Italian guy closed. Pizzas now I call vegetable pies, not bad tastings but not a 1960's or 70's pie! The one's I'm talking about, you had to hold the pizza box level or all the toppings would slide off to the one side. You needed a plate while you were eating your slice. If not the grease from all the beacon, ham and peperoni would be all over the table. Napkins were a must and a nice tall pile were usually needed. The cheese was so thick and stringy that it took an arms length pull for it to break off of the slice. Was it a healthy meal NOT; but man was it so good!!!

Dan...   

Edited by DanD
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, DanD said:

Now that is a Pizza!!!

I haven't found and old style pizza here in London for years; not since Apollo Pizza that was run by an older Italian guy closed. Pizzas now I call vegetable pies, not bad tastings but not a 1960's or 70's pie! The one's I'm talking about, you had to hold the pizza box level or all the toppings would slide off to the one side. You needed a plate while you were eating your slice. If not the grease from all the beacon, ham and peperoni would be all over the table. Napkins were a must and a nice tall pile were usually needed. The cheese was so thick and stringy that it took and arms length pull for it to break off of the slice. Was it a healthy meal NOT; but man was it so good!!!

Dan...   

Come on down to Kingston and I will introduce you to Big Bob's.  Not much sauce, just lots of meat and a huge amount of cheese.  Eat it with a knife and fork.  It's good filtered try again please, mon.  😉

Doug

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recent Topics

    Popular Topics

    Upcoming Events


×
×
  • Create New...