Learn something useful, ST: educational cooking thread

Years of practice and managing a couple restaurants didn't hurt



Real men don't base their manliness on the amount of carcinogens they can inject their meat with




:facepalm:



You provide the music, I'll get the food :p
 
hey buddy smoking meats IS barbecue.

grilling=/=barbecue

hamburgers/steaks/hotdogs are not barbecue.
 
Mmmm, tilapia, nothing like fish that feeds on the shit of other fish :ugh:

But seriously, don't bake fish, broil it. Get a good crust and cook it so that it's not dried out.

Try the following rub on white fish (like mahi and tilapia):

1 tsp. cinnamon (or cassia)
2 tsp. powdered chipoltle chiles (make it yourself...although you might be able to find it in the store now)
1/2 tsp. cumin powder
1/2 tsp. garlic powder
1/2 tsp. onion powder
1 tsp. kosher salt
1/2 tsp. freshly ground black pepper

Squeeze a little fresh lime juice on the fish (skin side down obviously) and pat on a generous coating of the rub, then grill/sear/broil
 
Recipe for my version of Minestrone alla Milanese with roasted tomato bruschetta coming tonight
 
garlic/garlic powder, seasoning salt, pepper, parsley and butter is good for almost any fish.


pics plz
 
Ask and you shall receive:

It's that time again

Minestrone alla Milanese with Roasted Tomato and Balsamic Relish and Crostini


Assemble your ingredients for the soup:

-1/2 pound of hot italian sausage (you can use prosciutto, salt pork, bacon, or any number of other cured pork products for this in place of the sausage)
-1/2 pound elbow macaroni
-Lots and lots of assorted veggies (I used sweet onion, celery, carrot, cremini mushrooms, garlic, and bell pepper)
-One carton vegetable broth and one carton chicken broth (homemade would be better, but I don't cook many whole chickens so I didn't have any bones laying around to make stock or broth with)
-28.8 ounces (two small cans) of chopped tomatoes with juice (San Marzano if you can get it)
-Small can of garbanzo beans
-Large can of white kidney beans
-Dried oregano/basil/parsley
-Dried red pepper flakes
-Spring of fresh rosemary
-Olive oil
-Salt
-Pepper


As for the crotini and relish:

-One loaf crusty french or italian bread, cut on the bias
-Olive oil
-Sea salt
-Pepper
-Four medium tomatoes
-Four whole garlic cloves
-Balsamic vinaigrette (homemade is best, of course)
-Fresh basil (cut into a thin chiffonade)

Directions for the relish and crostini:

Drizzle three of your four tomatoes as well as your garlic cloves with olive oil and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Roast in a 500 degree oven until soft. Remove the skin from the tomatoes after allowing them to cool, and try to get out as many of the seeds as possible. Chop the tomatoes and thinly slice the garlic, then set aside.

Chop your other tomato, removing your seeds first, and toss it in your bowl with the roasted tomatoes and garlic. Your chiffonade of basil goes in next, then pour on the balsamic vinaigrette and sprinkle with salt and pepper to taste.

For the crostini, simply brush the slices of bread with olive oil and either grill or broil them until crispy and browned. Sprinkle with sea salt and black pepper and serve with the relish.


Directions for the soup:

I'm going to let the pictures walk you through this for the most part. It's really pretty simple. First step is to take your sausage out of its casing and brown it in a large stock pot. Take it out, drain it, and set it aside. Sweat your carrots/celery first until just about tender, then add your other aromatics and veggies and cook until just tender with a bit of olive oil if there isn't enough fat left over from the sausage and salt/pepper. Toss in your rinsed, drained beans after this.

(A note on the beans: obviously, it would be best if you used dry beans that you cooked yourself, but not everybody has several hours to devote to this, and frankly, you're not going to notice that much of a difference.)

After this, throw in the reserved sausage, tomatoes, herbs, red pepper flakes, and broth. Let this cook for as long as you can possibly wait with the lid on. When you're close to serving time, go ahead and crank up the heat to medium high and throw in your elbow macaroni. Cook until al dente, remove your rosemary sprig, season with salt and pepper to taste, then serve.


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My plating sucks, I'm aware of this. This ain't exactly photo shoot material, though.

Enjoy
 
Hahaha I was just about to shoot you a neg about your garnishing. However props to the dishes. :tup:

I prefer keeping things a little simpler however...

beef+veggies(onions, mush)in the jucies+baked potato=nom nom nom

Chicken+seafood on top with a basic butter sauce=nom nom nom

Chicken+peppers and onions sauted=nom nom nom

I just kind of take chicken breasts and cheap sirloin steaks and mix it up.
 
damn you guys put some major effort into these posts
:highfive, accidentally thrusts palm straight through $200 moniter:
 
So when I'm rich racing Nascar in a few years how much would it cost for you to be my personal chef?
 
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