Poultry

Chanterelles

Posted in Mushrooms, Poultry on August 1st, 2009 by ExtremeCook – 1 Comment

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Went up into the National forest again looking for Boletes, but instead found a bunch of small chanterelles – about 1.5 pounds. Made chicken with chanterelles and marsala:

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I wish I could find more Boletes, but I’m not complaining. These chanterelles are awesome.

Roast Chicken and Peaches on Forbidden Rice

Posted in Asian, Poultry on July 29th, 2009 by ExtremeCook – Be the first to comment

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This dish was fun and delicious. The black rice was dressed with a bunch of SE Asian ingredients. Peaches from the garden and chicken pieces were mixed with a bunch of other SE Asian spices. Made a sad day just a wee bit less sad.

Nigella Rocks!

Posted in Pasta, Poultry on June 10th, 2009 by ExtremeCook – Be the first to comment

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Nigella Lawson is not a writer that seems to get as much attention as the celebrity chefs. But her words and recipes most appeal to me, resonate within me, and inspire me more than any other. I guess if I had a fraction of the talent of Jacques Pepin, I would aspire to his level of artistic greatness. But Nigella totally lacks any kind of cheffy (is that a word?) pretense. It is all about simple recipes to deliver as much pleasure and satisfaction to the people we care about.

Based on one of her recipes, today we had a simple, but deeply satisfying, lunch using the leftover brick-oven chicken from yesterday. Spaghetti, chicken, raisins, toasted pine nuts, rosemary, parsley. NO CHEESE. The light smokiness of the chicken added a wonderful additional layer of flavor.

Many of my favorite dishes are based on her recipes. I’ll cover them in future blog posts.

Grand Slam – Four Courses in One Firing of the Brick Oven

Posted in Poultry on June 9th, 2009 by ExtremeCook – 3 Comments

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My previous record was three. Today:

  1. Roasted a de-boned chicken
  2. Baked some loaves of Struan bread
  3. Baked an Asparagus alla Valdostana casserole
  4. Baked a cherry pie

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Thai Duck Curry – Sweet, Salty, Spicy Heaven

Posted in Asian, Poultry on June 3rd, 2009 by ExtremeCook – Be the first to comment

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Roughly based on a recipe in Thai Food, by David Thompson (one of my favorite books), this duck curry blew my socks off with the combination of intense, but delicate, flavors with an intoxicating balance of sweet, salty, spicy, and greasy. Ingredients included:

  • coconut milk
  • coconut cream
  • lemongrass
  • kaffir lime leaves
  • chiles
  • garlic
  • palm sugar
  • raw and fried shallots
  • thai basil
  • fish sauce
  • coriander seeds
  • cumin seeds
  • cloves
  • nutmeg

You can imagine how the house smelled while all this was cooking. Tasted even better!

My Shrimp Poaching Broth is 10-years-old

Posted in Pasta, Poultry, Seafood on May 27th, 2009 by ExtremeCook – 2 Comments

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What happens if you create a broth from shrimp shells and then use the broth for poaching jumbo shrimp for cocktails. And then you freeze that broth and use it for poaching the next batch of shrimp? And what do you think it will taste like 10 years and a few hundred pounds of shrimp later? Intense and unlike anything I’ve ever tasted. The idea came from a Mark Bittman recipe in Cook’s Illustrated back in July/August 1997. I continue to use this broth for poaching, but I also use a little bit here and there to add a deeply satisfying brininess to other seafood dishes.

Today we had spaghetti with crab based loosely on a recipe from Reed Hearon’s Rose Pistola Cookbook. This recipe calls for fresh dungeness crabs and uses the cooking liquid from the crabs in the sauce. All I had was a can of Costco crab (very good wild stuff from, of all brands, Chicken of the Sea). About 1/4 cup of the ultra-concentrated shrimp broth was all that was needed. My taste buds are is still singing.

On a similar note, I have a batch of chicken poaching broth that is several years old. It’s been through maybe 40 or 50 cycles and gets better and better each time. I very, very gently poach the chicken until just done – no more. Full of flavor and juicy, it makes a great light meal.