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-   -   Post Your Plate/ Cooking Thread (https://www.revscene.net/forums/661026-post-your-plate-cooking-thread.html)

lowside67 03-20-2012 04:58 PM

Definitely no salt the night before... salt by design actually draws moisture out; while this is what allows a liberal salting to create a nice crust, it will also dry your meat out. Ideally the meat should be left out unseasoned to come to temperature and then seasoned at the last minute. If you are going to dry rub it ahead of time, most dry rubs do not have a high salt content for this reason.

Mark

hal0g0dv2 03-20-2012 06:06 PM

http://i41.tinypic.com/34zdq9s.jpg

Phozy 03-20-2012 06:11 PM

^Similar to what i had today, franks hot sauce all over the eggs :fullofwin:

Ran out of those meatballs, and can't find them at my local walmart anymore =(

red kryptonite 03-20-2012 06:59 PM

thanks for the tips on the steak guys, ill give it a try next time.
lol halo, u eat alot of eggs.

hal0g0dv2 03-20-2012 07:26 PM

^^^^^^ yeah my fridge is packed with them hahaha

jeffh 03-20-2012 08:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Phozy (Post 7856185)
^Similar to what i had today, franks hot sauce all over the eggs :fullofwin:

Ran out of those meatballs, and can't find them at my local walmart anymore =(

me too man!, went last week to score some morefor me and Rrxtar, sold the fuck out :rukidding:

RRxtar 03-20-2012 08:32 PM

I bought 4 boxes a couple weeks ago. :troll:

red kryptonite 03-21-2012 08:58 PM

- pan fried cajun chicken breast
- corn and peas scramble eggs
- steamed broccoli

http://i579.photobucket.com/albums/s...8/IMG_0138.jpg

Firmware 03-22-2012 08:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RRxtar (Post 7755862)
Heres the Chili Ive been making. modified recipe. make sure you have a big ass pot

https://fbcdn-sphotos-a.akamaihd.net...61177527_n.jpg


makes 8-9 servings


3.5 lbs extra lean ground beef
1-1.5 large chopped onion
2 large chopped green bell pepper (make bigger chunks)
2 large chopped red bell pepper (make bigger chunks)
1/3 cup chili powder
little less than 1/4 cup crushed chilis
2-3 cloves garlic, minced
1 rounded tablespoon ground cumin
1 chopped jalapeno pepper (partially de-seeded as i dont like super hot)
2 (28 ounce size) cans diced tomatoes
1 (23 ounce size) can Hunts thick and rich pasta sauce
2 (16 ounce size) cans kidney beans, drained and rinsed
salt and pepper to taste (my last batch i used no salt at all)

1-Fry up ground beef and onion (will take 2 pans)
2-Combine everything into extra large pot and stir well and bring to boil
3-Reduce heat to low, cover, and simmer 1.5 hours. stirring occasionally.

Making your chili right now,

put 3 jalapeno peppers in

i didnt drain the beans enough so... kinda sweet .. too sweet but spicy.

Cooking it out more

truth 03-23-2012 09:07 AM

bought a pair of these over the weekend and just tried them out
fusionbrands
can let the egg steam/poach while i get ready for the day in the morning.

GGnoRE 03-23-2012 09:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RickyChee (Post 7856185)
^Similar to what i had today, franks hot sauce all over the eggs :fullofwin:

Ran out of those meatballs, and can't find them at my local walmart anymore =(

What is the name of those meatballs? they look damn good

hal0g0dv2 03-23-2012 09:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GGnoRE (Post 7861312)
What is the name of those meatballs? they look damn good

mark angelo

DaFonz 03-23-2012 06:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lowside67 (Post 7856095)
Definitely no salt the night before... salt by design actually draws moisture out; while this is what allows a liberal salting to create a nice crust, it will also dry your meat out. Ideally the meat should be left out unseasoned to come to temperature and then seasoned at the last minute. If you are going to dry rub it ahead of time, most dry rubs do not have a high salt content for this reason.

Mark

Definitely salt the night before. The original poster was right.

The Food Lab: More Tips For Perfect Steaks | Serious Eats

Quote:

Originally Posted by subordinate (Post 7856081)
Good stuff! umm..

Just some constructive Criticism,

There's no need to s&p over night - doing it prior to placing on grill/pan is fine. And it's recommended to only flip once (the more flips, it lets more juices out).

Flipping has nothing to do with letting the juices out. In fact, it allows for move even, faster cooking.

The Burger Lab: How Often Should You Flip a Burger? | A Hamburger Today

Red Kryptonite had it right all along.

subordinate 03-23-2012 06:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaFonz (Post 7861841)
Definitely salt the night before. The original poster was right.

The Food Lab: More Tips For Perfect Steaks | Serious Eats

Interesting, I didn't know this. Thanks for the read. Even then, I'm more of a quick eat guy - rather just season it prior to cooking.


Quote:

Flipping has nothing to do with letting the juices out. In fact, it allows for move even, faster cooking.

The Burger Lab: How Often Should You Flip a Burger? | A Hamburger Today

Red Kryptonite had it right all along.
Thanks Dafonz, interesting stuff.

lowside67 03-24-2012 08:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaFonz (Post 7861841)
Definitely salt the night before. The original poster was right.

Kind of a dick move to fail me for my post... when to season meat is a HIGHLY debated topic and while you are right that some avant-garde chefs are beginning to salt earlier, the conventional wisdom and the curriculum at the top culinary schools worldwide remains that salting is to be done right before cooking.

I found this to be an interesting and informative article:
The Juicy Secret to Seasoning Meat | Food & Wine

The consensus he came to was that for some meats like pork, seasoning a day ahead was a complete fail, while other meats like chicken and lamb, it produced superior results. FWIW he found the steak virtually identical regardless of when it was seasoned.

The real difference is that when you salt something 48 hours in advance, you are not really seasoning the meat with the same goals. Covering it in salt that early is much closer to brining than it is to seasoning... you end up brining it in its own released liquids rather than in a salt-water solution, but the results are the same, which is a great product.

It is also worth noting that which salt you use will produce a huge difference in end result. If somebody tries salting their meat 24 hours in advance using common table salt they are going to get a nasty mess for the simple reason that different types of salt have highly different moisture contents. Simple table salt has virtually no moisture so it will simply pull moisture out without imparting its own. On the other hand, a high quality coarse kosher salt has a lot of moisture in it so while it extracts moisture from the meat, it also imparts its own moisture.

Mark

DaFonz 03-24-2012 11:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lowside67 (Post 7862315)
Kind of a dick move to fail me for my post... when to season meat is a HIGHLY debated topic and while you are right that some avant-garde chefs are beginning to salt earlier, the conventional wisdom and the curriculum at the top culinary schools worldwide remains that salting is to be done right before cooking.

I found this to be an interesting and informative article:
The Juicy Secret to Seasoning Meat | Food & Wine

The consensus he came to was that for some meats like pork, seasoning a day ahead was a complete fail, while other meats like chicken and lamb, it produced superior results. FWIW he found the steak virtually identical regardless of when it was seasoned.

The real difference is that when you salt something 48 hours in advance, you are not really seasoning the meat with the same goals. Covering it in salt that early is much closer to brining than it is to seasoning... you end up brining it in its own released liquids rather than in a salt-water solution, but the results are the same, which is a great product.

It is also worth noting that which salt you use will produce a huge difference in end result. If somebody tries salting their meat 24 hours in advance using common table salt they are going to get a nasty mess for the simple reason that different types of salt have highly different moisture contents. Simple table salt has virtually no moisture so it will simply pull moisture out without imparting its own. On the other hand, a high quality coarse kosher salt has a lot of moisture in it so while it extracts moisture from the meat, it also imparts its own moisture.

Mark

I failed you because you said it dries your meat out which is completely untrue in the context that you quoted the original poster. The article I linked to shows that it does only within a certain time period of which the original poster's actions did not fall into.

I also disagree with your point about bringing conventional wisdom into this. Take dieting for example - "conventional wisdom" was to eat 6 small meals a day or OMG's catabolism. Before IF was popular on these boards, people were failing me for recommending meal skipping. What's conventional now may not be conventional in the future.

SkinnyPupp 03-27-2012 06:28 AM

http://i.imgur.com/HRaz0.jpg

300g pork collar, yellow yam, okra. All thrown on grill.. nice and easy, and tasty. :sweetjesus:

tubbyboi 03-27-2012 10:40 AM

Im not too sure if its always at the pricing, but my mom came home from the states and bought 15dozen eggs for 20bucks :) at Costco that is.

subordinate 03-27-2012 04:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tubbyboi (Post 7865654)
Im not too sure if its always at the pricing, but my mom came home from the states and bought 15dozen eggs for 20bucks :) at Costco that is.

She got lucky that she didn't get caught.
Limit is 2 dozen.

ree666 03-27-2012 08:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Alar (Post 7781638)
I love this thread!

Pizza
cook first the

crust:

1.5 japanese eggplant shredded
2 cups almond flour
2 scoops plain protein powder
1 tsp baking powder
3 egg whites

Mix together, make sure to place on parchment in shape of crust at 375 for 15minutes or until dry and dough like

add whatever you like

Mine:

tomato sauce, turkey bacon, lean ground beef, onions, tomatoes, argula, spinach, fresh parsley, cheese, drizzled the top with olive oil and balsamic vinegar.

mind blown with the possibilities with protein powder. definitely gonna try it!

jack3d 03-28-2012 01:58 AM

2 Attachment(s)
2 seperate meals. steak + sweet potato fries + brown rice. hell yea bras

jeffh 03-29-2012 09:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaFonz (Post 7862422)
I failed you because you said it dries your meat out which is completely untrue in the context that you quoted the original poster. The article I linked to shows that it does only within a certain time period of which the original poster's actions did not fall into.

I also disagree with your point about bringing conventional wisdom into this. Take dieting for example - "conventional wisdom" was to eat 6 small meals a day or OMG's catabolism. Before IF was popular on these boards, people were failing me for recommending meal skipping. What's conventional now may not be conventional in the future.

Im with Lowside on this one, ive cooked alot of steaks in my day, (steakhouse grill cook for 2 years, fine dining grill cook before that)

salt happens when meat goes on the grill, i could find 7 other articles on the interwebs showing some chef agrees with me, but im too lazy.


back on topic,
ground pork, cooked and drained
saute with
chopped shallot, fresh ginger, bean sprouts
oyster sauce soy sauce

roll up in leaf of head lettuce with sirachi, WIN

ShadowBun 03-29-2012 10:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jack3d (Post 7866744)
2 seperate meals. steak + sweet potato fries + brown rice. hell yea bras

fucking great
looks yum

Mr.Money 03-30-2012 01:19 AM

http://i.imgur.com/6p7YD.jpg

all i wanted to eat was crab,i had like 2 plates tonight,other plate mixed and soaked in garlic sauce..yum.

GFunk 03-30-2012 06:23 AM

Dinner tonight

http://www.allanguan.com/places/melbourne/193.jpg


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