Braised Short Ribs

Step two of Chef Keller’s Beef Stroganoff is braising the short ribs.  I picked some ribs up at West Side Market, but as I hadn’t planned ahead properly I managed to get the wrong thing. Rather than getting a whole boneless short rib, as Chef Keller calls for, I was stuck with individual bone-in ribs, but I decided to go ahead and just braise them anyway. It’s braised beef, how bad could it be?

The mise for this one is pretty simple. You chop some leeks, onions, carrots, shallots, and mushrooms, and toss in some parsley, thyme, garlic, and peppercorns.

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Put that all in a Dutch oven with a bottle of red wine (I used a cabernet) and simmer for 45 minutes to make a glaze.

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While that’s reducing, coat the short ribs in flour, season with salt and pepper and brown in a sauté pan.

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While the beef browns, chop up yet more onions, carrots, and leeks. When the reduction is ready, stir them in. Then you make a nest with some cheesecloth to place the meat on. I was running a bit low on cheesecloth so I couldn’t double it up, but close enough.

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Cover with a parchment lid and toss in the oven for a couple hours and here’s what you get:

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At this point the recipe continues a little if you’re serving the short ribs, but I was making them for the stroganoff. So at that point I simply put the meat in a bowl and strained the braising liquid over it.

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And that’s it. I let the meat to stew in the braising liquid overnight. It was tough not to eat it all immediately because it was so tasty, but being as I had much less than I wanted for the stroganoff (on account of the bones) I forced myself to let it go. In the next post I’ll tell you if it was worth it.

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Beef Stock

This weekend I started what is sure to be my most time-intensive recipe yet, Thomas Keller’s Beef Stroganoff from the Ad Hoc at Home Cookbook. It’s made in three parts (I’ve completed the first two, with the third coming tonight) and I’ll post it as such. Step one is to make the beef stock.

Stocks are all pretty similar. The main difference between them is sometimes you roast the bones and/or vegetables and sometimes you don’t. With beef stock it seems you generally do. (With chicken stocks it appears you generally do not, and veal can go either way.)

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For this one I started by roasting some neck and leg bones in my All-Clad Roaster. While the bones are browning, Chef Keller also instructs you to char half of an onion. I don’t know if this is something you can do properly in a non-stick pan (I don’t own any) but if you have one I’d give it a try because I spent longer scrubbing the resulting black marks out of my beautiful D5 sauté pan than I did charring the damned onion in the first place.

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Once the bones are roasted I set them over a colander to drain…

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and drained the fat from the pan. Then I deglazed with water.

IMG_20120114_154746I Next I put the bones in the stockpot, poured in the water and brown bits from the pan, plus another 5 quarts of cold water, and simmered along with the charred onion half for 5 hours.

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Toward the end of the simmering it was time to roast the vegetables.

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Then I added them to the stock along with half a head of garlic, some herbs and peppercorns, and simmered for about an hour longer.

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During this whole process I was skimming the stock. At first it was quite frequent, then later probably every half hour or so. When I made the chicken stock I skimmed as well, but I fished out far more impurities from this one. I was actually surprised at how much came out of there. It’s important to skim regularly since the impurities can, if left there long enough, dissolve back into the stock and make it cloudy, so even though beef stock isn’t a whole lot of work, you have to assume you’ll be spending the day at home while you make it. It’s not like a spaghetti sauce that can be left to simmer for hours unattended.

After that all that is left is to strain it a couple times…

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cool in an ice bath, and then toss in the fridge. After the stock gets cold the remaining fat will solidify at the top for easy removal. I don’t know how there could be any given how much skimming and straining I did, but there was plenty.

Overall I feel like this one was worth it. The total time was about 7 hours, though most of that was just skimming in between doing other stuff. The result was quite a bit better than than what you’d buy at the store, which is typically labeled “beef broth” and I think therefore not made from bones.

Next up, braising some short ribs. Yum.

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Marcella Hazan’s Chicken Cacciatora

This winter I took a part-time job at Williams Sonoma, entirely for the employee discount. The very first thing I bought was a set of All-Clad d5 pans, and it came with a book called Essentials of Classic Cooking by Marcella Hazan (and also a nice lasagna pan and some oven mitts). I assumed at first it was just some crap you get when you buy a set of pans, but I took a second to look up the reviews on Amazon and found that it was exactly the book I’d been looking for, a compendium of Italian recipes. I’d thumbed through Amazon looking for such a beast and somehow had missed it, in fact hadn’t found anything close, and here it had just fallen into my lap.

While not the first recipe I made from it (that was the Bolognese sauce, which I’ll post as soon as I make again and snap some pics) Chicken Cacciatora was probably the one I was most excited for. I like a good Cacciatora, but the only time I see it on the menu is the once every year or two I find myself at somewhere like an Olive Garden and it’s rarely worth eating. I knew homemade had to be much better.

The prep work was quite simple. I had my butcher break the chicken down into 6 pieces. I thinly sliced a bell pepper, then ran a carrot, half a stalk of celery, and about half of an onion through a mandoline slicer. Dice up a little garlic, measure out some wine and a can of tomatoes and you’re ready to go.

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The first step is to coat the chicken in flour and brown in vegetable oil.

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After that’s done you’re left with a light roux to cook the onion in. Once the onion is gold, you add in the wine (I used a Sauvignon Blanc, as usual) and deglaze.

Finally, you put the chicken back in . The recipe calls for keeping the breasts until 10 minutes before serving but mine were enormous and I didn’t brown them too deeply so I put them in about halfway through. Then I tossed in the vegetables and tomatoes, brought to a slow simmer, and covered. The pieces simmered for about an hour (the breasts for less) during which time I turned them and basted with the juices.

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The result is a fantastic dish that’s not really quick to make (it takes maybe an hour and a half with prep) but isn’t difficult either and only uses one pan. It’s got lots of simmer time toward the end which gives you ample opportunity to make a side dish, though I’m not sure what you’d want to serve there.

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Linguine with White Clam Sauce

Last week I decided to make my first complete item from The French Laundry Cookbook, Linguine with White Clam Sauce.

It starts off with soaking some littleneck clams in cold water with a few changes over several hours.  I tossed them in the bowl when I woke up in the morning, changing periodically and adding ice to keep cold.

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Closer to cooking time, I began the roasted garlic puree. Chef Keller’s recipe for that is quite simple to make. Rather than my normal method of submerging whole, peeled cloves in olive oil and cooking and then pureeing, Chef Keller recommends simply placing a couple heads of garlic on a pat of butter and roasting in a double thickness of foil.

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Once finished I pressed them through a chinois which left behind the skins and peel. The end result was comparable but much easier to get to, so I’ll probably use this method in the future unless I’m in the mood for some garlic-infused olive oil which is quite useful.

Next I cooked the clams. I placed them in a skillet with a mixture of white wine, garlic, shallots, thyme, and bay leaves, covered and steamed until they opened. I always love the way clams rumble a bit and then make that popping noise when they’re done. I realize that technically that’s the sound of the poor mollusks expiring due to having been cooked alive, but it’s just so cool that it has a built in doneness alarm.

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Once all of the clams had popped I passed the remaining juices through a chinois and reserved the broth. I then removed the clams from the shells, trimming away the muscle and saving the largest half-shells for presentation. A paring knife helped remove the adductor muscles from the shells. 

The sauce came next. I whisked the reserved clam broth and garlic puree together, then simmered to reduce to a few tablespoons of juice. I then added 12 tablespoons of butter, one small chunk at a time, to create a sauce that was so tasty you could drink it straight. You’d probably end up in the hospital for it, but you’d at least go to the operating table with a smile on your face.

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At this point I must admit, I cheated a little bit. I used store-bought pasta. I didn’t have a pasta maker handy and was also time-limited, so don’t judge. I pinky swear I’ll make my own next time, even if it takes all day.

I did, however, take the entirely optional presentation step of making a bed out of rock salt (thanks again Amazon) star anise, peppercorns, bay leaves and cloves. Chef Keller recommends using allspice berries but I couldn’t find any at the supermarket. The mixture was all tossed into a Pyrex dish and warmed in the oven for a few until it was giving off a beautiful, fragrant smell.

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When the capellini finished I strained it and then tossed it with the sauce and some parsley and thyme leaves. I warmed up the clams, which had been sitting in some of the sauce.

To plate I laid the half shells on a bed of the rock salt mix. I then twirled the capellini, placed it in the empty clamshell, and topped with a clam and a little bit of the sauce.

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This dish tasted fantastic, though I feel like anything with that much butter almost couldn’t possibly fail. It’s not a whole lot of work either (at least if you buy pasta). I do need a smaller fork so I can twirl the linguine less sloppily for presentation, but overall it ends up looking quite pretty.

The recipe makes enough clams for an appetizer for 6 people, but I feel like you could just feed two people as a main course if you wanted. If you skip the presentation step (beautiful as it may be) you’d reduce a good chunk of the effort and have a tasty pasta with clams main dish. I realize that Chef Keller might consider this a travesty, and if I ever meet him I’ll swear up and down that this paragraph was written by my evil doppelganger, but I may turn it into a regular dish that way.

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Crawfish Boil

Last Friday I threw my first crawfish boil for 10 people. I’d been wanting to do this for a few months, but life got in the way. By the time we were able to do it (early September) crawfish season was over so buying live ones was out, but thankfully there are plenty of places to purchase large quantities of frozen crawfish year round. I got 30 lbs. of crawfish from the LA Crawfish Company along with a few pounds of Andouille sausage.

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We took the turkey fryer out to a metro park and covered a picnic table in newspaper. I used an 80 qt. pot with my King Kooker, which ended up just barely fitting everything. I’d probably recommend going with a 100qt if you’re looking to do that much crawfish.

Chef John Besh has a recipe for a crawfish boil in My New Orleans that I decided to use. He says that you only need about 2 lbs. of crawfish per person and he isn’t kidding, I ended up having (I think) about 10 pounds left over.

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The process starts with boiling some vegetables and seasoning. I tossed 2 packages of Zatarain’s Crab Boil Spices, salt, onions, garlic, lemons, celery, cayenne pepper, bell pepper and a little bit of oil into about 12 gallons of water and brought it to a boil.

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While that was heating (the King Kooker brought all that up to a boil in about 30 minutes) I cut up some Andouille, potatoes and corn.

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When the mixture hit a boil I cut it back to a simmer for 10 minutes, then tossed the above in along with some whole artichokes and let that simmer for another 15 minutes.

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Next came the mushrooms. If I were using live crawfish they would have gone in with the ‘shrooms, but since they were frozen I waited 10 minutes. The plan was then to cut the heat off, toss in the crawfish, and let the mixture sit for 15 minutes, but after everything went in I discovered that I hadn’t used enough water, so I had to add a little more, heat it back up to a simmer, then let it sit.

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Then we dumped everything onto a picnic table.

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I gave everyone a quick primer on how to eat one.

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We had some adverse conditions to contend with for sure. The weather was extremely hot; we were sweating just standing around. We started after work so the sun went down on us right as we were finished eating but we had just enough light left to clean up. There were mutant mosquitos able to bite through clothing. But in the end most had a good time.

The crawfish came out perfect. The spice mixture made everything good. There wasn’t a scrap of Andouille left. The corn was among the best I’ve ever had for having been boiled in such a flavorful mixture. The potatoes, onions, etc. were all just incredible.

You’ll notice the picture quality on this one is much higher than usual. Our graphic designer, Eric, is a pretty good photographer and took them with his awesome camera. I’m debating getting one (even without training it has to be better than my cell phone) and maybe taking a class or two to learn how to use it.

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Filed under Cookbooks, My New Orleans

Strawberry Sorbet

This weekend I tackled my first recipe from the French Laundry Cookbook. My dad was throwing his annual cookout and asked for a dessert. I had to come up with something last minute, and I found a recipe in there for Strawberry Sorbet Shortcakes with Sweetened Crème Fraîche Sauce. I didn’t really have the time to do the whole thing, especially since the nearest store to my house that sells crème fraîche is about a half hour away, and who wants to spend time plating at a family barbecue? So I decided to just make a big batch of the sorbet.

The result was fantastic. People were asking for the recipe, which is always a good feeling, especially since it was so simple that I remembered it verbatim.

It’s really quite simple. You start off by hulling strawberries until you have roughly 2.5 lbs., which requires about 3 lbs. to start. Then you puree them and pass through a fine mesh strainer. You’re left with about 2 cups of puree.

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Then you mix in a cup of caster sugar (thank you Amazon), 1/4 cup of honey, and a pinch of kosher salt. Toss it in the ice cream maker:

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and freeze. You’re done. The whole process probably took less time than figuring out how to type the “î” in crème fraîche.

I think I’ll play around with the basic recipe quite a bit, maybe mixing in some kiwi or other fresh fruits, or replacing the strawberry with watermelon. That will require some tinkering with the amount of sugar I’m sure, but I imagine this basic recipe will work pretty well for just about any fruit.

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Long Time, No Post

I know I haven’t been keeping this updated very well. I’ve been reeeeeeally busy at work, and even my weekends have been packed with the usual combination of spring-time stuff, travel, and my other nerdy hobbies.

I have still been cooking though. I’ll admit I haven’t been able to cook as many new recipes as I’d like, but there’s much to be learned from repeating past ones.

A few have entered a sort of regular rotation. First and foremost is Thomas Keller’s Crispy Braised Chicken Thighs with Olives, Lemon and Fennel. It’s the sort of recipe that is just the right combination of tasty and easy to make. I can cook the whole thing from start to finish in under an hour.

Another is John Besh’s Belle River Crawfish Pie. I cheat a little bit, using canned lobster stock and frozen crawfish tails. I plan on using the real things at some point just to compare, but the ingredients are quite painful for me to come by. Live crawfish would have to be overnighted. I’d have to dig up crustacean shells that haven’t already been boiled somewhere. It’s probably worth it, but by using the packaged ingredients (and once even a frozen pie crust which, I know, is shameful) it takes very little effort to make a fantastic meal. Again the whole thing is ready in under an hour.

I made a deconstructed version of Todd English’s Pork Chops au Poivre with Apple Leek Puree that came out fantastic. It would be hard to have a dish with apples and Leeks that wasn’t awesome.

Some of the recipes I’ve yet to blogged include:

John Besh’s Crawfish Agnolotti with Morels

Thomas Keller’s Corn on the Cob with Lime Salt

Thomas Keller’s Poached Salmon

Jimmy Bannos’s Grilled Shrimp and Andouille with Hot Ravigote Sauce

Thomas Keller’s Glazed Ribs (the only total failure I’ve yet had, which will make for an interesting post)

Todd English’s Simple Roasted Chicken.

There are more, and most have pictures. I’ll get around to blogging them.

I also got a new cookbook: the Les Halles Cookbook by Anthony Bourdain. I’m already excited to try the cassoulet. It looks reasonably doable, though I’ll have to find a good source of duck fat. Anyone know where I might pick that up?

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Olive-Crusted Chicken with Puree of Fennel and Tomato & Chorizo and Scallion Cream Mashed Potatoes (The Olives Table)

On Mother’s Day weekend I cooked dinner for my stepmother. She’s not a really an adventurous eater so I decided to go with something everybody likes: chicken. We’d taken my parents to Olives once in Las Vegas so it seemed fitting to cook something from The Olives Table.

I started with the Olive-Crusted Chicken with Puree of Fennel and Tomato. You begin by making the puree. I fried some bacon in a pan, and when the fat started to render added garlic.

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After cooking that for a few minutes I added fennel, tomatoes, wine (I used a Chateau St. Jean Reserve Chardonnay I’ve still got a few bottles of), chicken stock, and some crushed red pepper flakes.

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I cooked that until soft and then pureed in my food processor.

While that was cooking I made the crust. I chopped up some Kalamata olives and mixed that with the zest and juice of half a lemon, some raisins, capers, bread crumbs, and parmesan cheese by pulsing in the food processor. Then I added egg, parsley, olive paste (fresh from Amazon) and oil and pulsed a bit more to mix. Chef English says to use ½” toasted bread cubes, which I did, but next time I think I’m going to crumble them into crumbs before cooking as the overall texture after pulsing came out too inconsistent.

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When the crust was ready I reheated the skillet from the puree and seared the chicken on the skin side until brown. I then patted the crust onto the chicken, put the puree back in the pan, and dropped the chicken in and topped with the remaining bread cubes.

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From there it cooked for 25 minutes on the stove-top until tender. After that I placed the pan under the broiler to brown it up a little.

While the chicken was pan cooking I made the Chorizo and Scallion Cream Mashed Potatoes. I started, of course, by boiling the potatoes and then cooking over medium until tender. While they were getting all nice and mushy I made the scallion cream by placing some heavy cream, rosemary, and scallions in the food processor (it got a good workout that day).

2011-05-08 17.13.01 In a skillet I cooked the chorizo along with some garlic in melted butter until the chorizo was nice and crispy. I apologize for the lack of photos, that’s about when my parents showed up. Once the potatoes were soft all that was left was to mash them up, stir in the cream sauce and the chorizo, and cook for a few minutes to let the potatoes absorb the liquid.

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The mashed potatoes were probably the highlight of the dish. I’m a big fan of chorizo and the sausage gave it a nice amount of heat. While not exactly health food, these might have been the best mashed potatoes I’ve ever had.

The chicken was alright. As you can see a few of the larger bread cubes burned a bit. It would have been a little easier to get a good color all around if I had just crumbled them smaller, but even still it was very little (this was the worst piece). I also felt like there just wasn’t enough of the olive flavor and that it needed just a little more of the tartness to balance out the puree. Next time I think I’d use a little more olive, a little more olive pace, and perhaps the juice and zest of a whole lemon instead of a half.

Dessert was fantastic too. I made the vanilla custard recipe from Thomas Keller’s Ad Hoc at Home, but left it unfrozen for Crème Anglaise. I then tossed some mixed berries in a mixture of rum (Captain Morgan’s Special Stock) and sugar and topped with the Crème. I even had most of the custard left over to make vanilla ice cream the next day.

All in all it was a pretty good meal. The chicken wasn’t my favorite, but it was good. I might make it again but with a few changes just to see what happens. It’s easy enough to be worth another try. And the mashed potatoes were excellent and will definitely enter the rotation.  

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Filed under Cookbooks, The Olives Table

Ice Cream Sandwiches (Ad Hoc at Home)

For Easter we decided to do a dessert for the in-laws. Since I’ve started my cooking experiment I’ve made two desserts (from the Heaven on Seven cookbook, posts for those later) and neither required any baking.

Baking’s never really been my strong suit. That’s in no small part because I’m just not that into sweets. I’ll gorge myself to death on a key lime pie, but chocolate lava cakes don’t even tempt me. So if I’m baking something, it’s probably a pot pie.

But I’ve looked through the dessert sections of some of these cookbooks just to see what’s what, and Ad Hoc at Home has a few I’ve been wanting to try. The one that grabbed me most was the homemade ice cream sandwich. The recipe essentially involves making cookies, then ice cream (which in this case is technically a custard) and then combining the two. Since I planned on doing two different bars that would be a total of 5 recipes knocked off my list just for one Easter dessert!

I realize that’s sort of cheating, since ice cream recipes are generally just throwing ingredients in an ice cream maker. But since we’re using eggs they involve a little actual cooking. And they’re all clearly delineated in the book as separate recipes so screw it, I’m counting it.

I decided to start with a classic combination of chocolate chip cookies and vanilla ice cream for the first bars. Thomas Keller’s chocolate chip cookies are certainly a little interesting. He recommends using two different types of chocolate bars cut into small chunks. I went with two organic bars I found at the grocery store, one 55% chocolate and the other 72%.

Making cookies is generally not rocket science and these certainly weren’t. You cut up some chocolate, mix some flour, sugar, salt, baking powder, butter, and eggs, then fold the chips in. Form into a ball and bake on a parchment-lined sheet.

Chef Keller’s recipe seemed to indicate you’d get 16 cookies, but I actually got 27 (and had a little dough left over). I measured out each ball to his specifications too, being my normal overly-precise self.

I would go so far as to say that the result is the best chocolate chip cookie I’ve ever tasted. I like the mix of high cocoa chocolate, it’s got a nice bitter flavor without too much sweet unlike the crap you’d typically get in a candy bar. But like I said before I’m not a big fan of sweets (and especially chocolate) so it’s still not something I’d make for myself.

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The vanilla custard was also pretty easy to make. You start by putting a mixture of half whole milk, half heavy cream in a saucepan and adding sugar and a vanilla bean with the seeds scraped into the pan so they’ll end up visible in the finished product. You bring the mixture to a simmer then remove from the heat and let it steep before fishing out and discarding the bean.

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While it steeps, you whisk together sugar and egg yolks.

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Then you whisk in the milk mix and cook over low heat until it thickens a bit. Strain into a metal bowl and place that in an ice bath to cool down.

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Then you refrigerate the custard until cool and toss in an ice cream maker. The result? The best vanilla custard you’ve ever tasted. I’ve always thought custard was just crappy ice cream for poor people because it’s always served out of a cone-shaped building on a roadside or at a carnival.

Not this stuff. It’s heavier and more flavorful than ice cream and has a velvety texture. I don’t think I’ll ever go back to it’s eggless cousin.

After that combining the two into a sandwich is a pretty simple process. When the custard comes out of the ice cream maker you pour it directly into a pan lined with plastic wrap, cover, and freeze. I wish I would have had a slightly smaller pan, I had a bit of leftovers and would have preferred the ice cream layer to be a bit thicker. I didn’t mind having to eat the remainder though.

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Then you simply use a cookie cutter or knife to cut it in the same shape as the cookies but a little smaller, make a sandwich out of two of them, and freeze.

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Next I did chocolate shortbread cookies with mint custard. The custard I won’t go into, it’s basically the same recipe as the previous one except with mint leaves instead of a vanilla bean.

The cookies, however, were almost a disaster. I made the recipe once accidentally using baking powder where it called for baking soda. The result ended up looking more like a cow pie than an ice cream sandwich.

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When I realized that something was wrong I called in the wife. She’s a much better baker than I am. She was going through the recipe with the ingredients I’d laid out for her when she spotted the error. This sort of thing is exactly why I hate baking, it often feels more like a bad chemistry lab experiment than cooking.

Assuming you use the proper ingredients the recipe is fairly straightforward too. You mix sugar, flour, cocoa powder, and baking soda(!) and then start putting in chunks of butter until the dough starts to look somewhat like damp potting soil and clings to the paddle. Then you wrap it up and refrigerate for an hour.

After that you cut it in half and roll it out between sheets of parchment.

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Then cut it into cookies. Cover it with the parchment and refrigerate for 15 minutes to firm up while the oven preheats.

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Bake it for a few minutes and you’re good to go.

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While my photography was worse on this one, it ended up being the better of the two recipes. The ice cream really had a powerful minty kick to it. Like Chef Keller says, it’s unexpected given that the color is about the same as the vanilla. The processed food industry has us all accustomed to mint-flavored things being dyed green, so this one catches you with a (pleasant) surprise roundhouse to the tongue.

All in all these recipes take a good deal of time since there’s a lot of waiting on stuff to cool or freeze, but the actual labor is minimal, especially if you know the difference between baking powder and baking soda.

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Buttermilk Fried Chicken and Pepperonata Rustica. (Ad Hoc at Home)

My first job was at a place called Isaly’s. Isaly’s was a bit of an anachronism. It was a weird hybrid of diner, ice cream shop, and convenience store. It was the sort of place where you could get a hamburger, a shake, and a dust-covered pack of some shaving cream brand that went off the market five years ago.

I got the job when I was 13. I’d met a friend there after school one day, and decided on a lark to go in and ask if they needed any help. I told the owner, Tom, that I was 14 and got the job. A couple days later my dad let it slip that I had lied about my age, but it turned out Tom had done the exact same thing when he was 13 so I think he actually liked me more because of it.

The location I worked at was one of the last remaining of a large Midwest chain that had been very popular in the 1950’s and had mostly gone out of business a couple decades after that. The few left were independently-owned units that had been purchased from the company as it became insolvent and passed down from owner to owner. Tom had worked there until he bought it from someone, and I believe still owns it today, though it’s now in a different location. Other than the couple Isaly’s diners still open, the only surviving vestiges of their empire are the Klondike Bar (now owned by Unilever) and some prepackaged meats and ice creams you can find in Pennsylvania.

Like a lot of people in food service I got my start washing dishes and cleaning floors. Eventually as it became obvious that I was unusually reliable for a teenager my responsibilities grew. I started working the short order grill, which mainly meant throwing a frozen burger or chicken breast on it until it was nearly burnt, slapping it on a bun, and smothering it in off-brand mayonnaise that came out of a two gallon jar. I made fries, again from frozen, and on the weekends (the only time I was able to work mornings) eggs and pancakes too.

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But where Isaly’s really made its money (well, other than cigarettes) was fried chicken. Weekends were wall-to-wall fried chicken dinners. I haven’t been in there in about 15 years, but I would be surprised if they’re not still doing a brisk business on Sundays. People in the area would order chicken and jojos and take them home to feed the families.

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The chicken was fried in two huge pressure cookers. You’d chop up the jojos by hand using a little tool that was basically a handle attached to a dull, wavy blade. Then you’d bread them and the chicken in a large bin similar to the one you might see a busboy collect dishes in and toss them in the hot oil. Seal the lid and in a few minutes you were ready to go. On busy days both fryers would be humming simultaneously with two to three orders each for hours.

I hated every minute of frying chicken. For one, unlike waiting tables there were no tips involved since the orders were mostly take out. If you were cooking the short order grill you were usually also waiting on the people you were cooking for, so at least there was a little cash in it.

For another, you were constantly getting burned. Anyone who has ever fried anything knows what happens when you drop cold meat into hot oil. With the volume we did there was no time to use tongs and put the pieces in one-by-one. You simply got as close to the oil as you dared before dropping them, four or five at a time, and yanked your hand away as fast as possible. You only got burned badly if you were careless, otherwise you would just get a projectile drop of hot oil on your arm here and there. It was like being stung by a bee over and over all day long.

Worst of all, though, was the cleanup at the end of the night. Our fryers were ancient. You had to get the oil out of them while it was still hot. This wasn’t too bad if you had the foresight to turn them off about an hour before closing. But if you forgot, or if it was a busy enough night that someone might order fried chicken at 8 p.m. and you had to leave them on until right before closing, it was brutal.

From what I’ve heard the good fryers you’d find at somewhere like KFC these days are plumbed straight into the grease trap. Not so with the pressure fryers of old. You had a corroded, disgusting pipe with a valve that required a special key to open. The entire inside of the unit was metal and extremely hot. Touch anything and you were getting a blister. If the pipe got clogged up a bit the oil would spurt out dangerously. If everything went well you collected about 5 gallons of hot oil in a 5 gallon metal stock pot which quickly got to be almost as hot as the oil. You then had to carry the heavy, overflowing bucket of  burning napalm to the maggot-infested grease trap and dump it in a slot that wasn’t nearly large enough, requiring you to tip it very carefully and pour slowly. If you’re 14 and you can manage this without injury you’re a better man than me. It wasn’t a question of whether or not the process would be painful, it was just how painful.

The chicken was tasty though. It was pretty much the only main course we served that was thawed before we cooked it. The jojos were even made from fresh potatoes. Together they might be the only meal we had that I wouldn’t find downright offensive if asked to eat now. 

So when I started leafing through Ad Hoc at Home months ago and saw a recipe for Buttermilk Fried Chicken it really took me back. Thankfully I’ve got a bit more user-friendly of a setup than the rust buckets I used back in the day, so I knew I had a pretty good chance of escaping burn-free.

I have a King Kooker that I love. I bought it for my dad as a gift once but he never used it and ended up just passing it back to me. I’ve used it many times since then. I’ve fried a couple Thanksgiving turkeys. I use it for making beer, since bringing a few gallons to a boil on my wimpy electric stove would otherwise take hours. I even did a crab boil in it a few weeks back.

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A lot of people are afraid of turkey fryers, but most of the horror stories come from people being stupid. You definitely need to exercise a good deal of caution when frying meat in hot oil. If you dig into most of the incidents you find that some donkey left one unattended on his wooden patio and tragedy ensued. But if you’re not an idiot, there’s no better or easier way to fry something, and there’s no tastier way to fry poultry than in peanut oil.

My wife and I were having our niece and nephew over for the night on Saturday, and the weather is finally nice enough for the King Kooker, so I decided it would be a perfect time to try out the fried chicken. I also made some Pepperonata Rustica for the adults.

The cooking started with the Pepperonata Rustica. It uses soffrito, which takes about 5 hours to cook. The soffrito was time consuming but not particularly difficult. You start by simmering some onions in olive oil for 2.5 hours.

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Then you add in some quick tomato puree, made by rubbing seeded plum tomatoes on a box grater.

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Then cook for a couple more hours. At the end you add in the garlic.

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When the soffrito is done you’re ready to move onto the Pepperonata. The peppers are a mix of bell peppers (red and yellow are recommended, but the yellow ones at the market looked pretty shabby so I went with green) and piquillo. The bell peppers need to be roasted and peeled. Then they all three are torn by hand, added to the sofrito with some chicken stock, seasoned with a little salt and some piment d’esplette, and simmered for about a half hour.

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After starting the onions I worked on brining the chicken. This I foolishly did indoors. I probably could have saved a half hour by heating the brine in the King Kooker as well. I had to boil 2 gallons of salt, water, honey, lemons, garlic, parsley, thyme and bay leaves. It smelled so good I debated trying it out as a soup.

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I then put the stock pot in my standup freezer to get it cool enough to put the chicken in. That unfortunately took about 2.5 hours, leaving me only about 2.5 more hours of brining time before the chicken had to be removed. Next time I’ll be sure to make the brine the night before.

When the soffrito was nearly done simmering I started the oil for the chicken. I like to start my oil well in advance so I can get a feel for exactly how far I need to jack up the dial to maintain the exact temperature I want. Once I’ve marked the position on the dial I turn it up just a little bit. I like to get the oil about 20 degrees hotter than the desired temperature since it will drop rapidly once the meat hits it. I keep it there until ready to cook and then drop in the meat, which lowers the oil to below the cooking temperature. I then jack up the heat until the oil heats up top where I want it (in this case 320) and then set the dial to just apst the marked position. Starting in advance also gives you time to pull the pot off the oil to let it cool down if you overshoot your temperature by a little bit.

While the oil was starting to heat I dipped back in to get the sofrito simmering and the coating ready. The coating is a mixture of flour, garlic powder, onion powder, paprika, cayenne, salt, and pepper. Chef Keller recommends splitting the mixture into two bowls. You dip the chicken in one bowl, dip it in buttermilk, then dip it in the second bowl. My wife did most of the breading while I tended the oil.

After that I simply fried the meat together. Chef Keller has some recommendations for frying the pieces in batches if you’re using a small indoor fryer, but the King Kooker can easily accommodate two birds at once. I just added the dark meat first, waited a few minutes, then added the breasts, waited another minute, then added the thighs. I jiggled the basket a little in the oil to help the chicken to cook evenly. Then I just removed the chicken and let it cool and crisp up on a rack for a few minutes.

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The results? The adults liked the Pepperonata Rustica. My niece, Danielle, said she liked it but definitely didn’t go back for seconds, and my nephew just ate two ears of corn instead. I didn’t expect either of the kids would love it which is why we made the corn on the cob.

Everyone loved the chicken though. Danielle said it was the best fried chicken she’s ever had.

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Both recipes were definite winners. The Pepperonata Rustica takes some planning, since you have to start it off 6 hours early if you don’t have some soffrito laying around, but it’s very easy. The chicken takes even more planning, though you could skip the brine in a pinch.

Next time I think I’ll make some extra breading and cut up some jojos to go along with the chicken.  I just need to get one of those handles with a wavy blade.

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