Moderator: Soñadora
Jamie wrote:Try poaching your eggs in the left over wine from the night before. With lardons on good toast with some frise it can be fancy too....
LarryHoward wrote:Jamie wrote:Try poaching your eggs in the left over wine from the night before. With lardons on good toast with some frise it can be fancy too....
What is this "leftover wine" of which you speak?
BeauV wrote:OM,
The Admiral makes various dishes with Pancetta and I love 'em all. She makes a similar dish which I've modified by using a pressure cooker. it allows me to keep most of the moisture in the pan and out of the boat's cabin. It also, due to higher heat under pressure, cooks the veggies a bit faster. My old skipper, Captn' Larson, cooked almost everything with a pressure cooker and had a 1/2" tube with a metal fitting on the end to cover the outlet for the thing and duct the moisture outside the boat, I hesitate to try that as failure could mean a big BANG when the pressure cooker blows up. That said, a lot of dishes take less time and deposit less moisture within the boat when pressure cooked. Just my 2cents.
B
BeauV wrote:Black Eyed Peas are already soaking. Ham is in the fridge waiting of the oven. Greens are in the bag waiting to be steamed and drenched in butter and bacon grease. But, my life-long favorite is the corn bread.
This is from memory, so I'm going to get it a little wrong. But, here's what my daughter is fix in'.
- Get a BIG ASS Cast Iron Frying Pan (one that is at least 12 to 14 inches across). This has to be cast iron, none of that stupid non-stick stuff, it needs a lid if you can find one. If all else fails you can use a cast iron dutch oven, but it'll be too small in diameter.
- Cook up a pound of bacon so it's nice-n-crispy but not blackened. Remove from he BACIFP and set aside. You can have a little one crumble it up when it's cool, and do let them steal a few bites; it's traditional to steal a bit. Leave all the bacon grease in the pan, put the lid on it and put it into an oven preheated to 375 deg.
- Mix up whatever your favorite corn bread recipe is. Go a little light on the butter/oil in whatever recipe you choose, you'll see why in a minute. Also, over the years recipes have increased the amount of sugar in corn bread, which I don't like. I you want it sweeter you pour maple syrup over it after it's cooked! You'll want enough batter to make a 2" thick layer in the BACIFP. Mix in the crumbled bacon (at least what's left of it after everyone stole some) to taste. I like to use it all. But I firmly believe that no dish can have too much bacon!
- Pull the hot pan (don't spill the grease) from the oven and pour the corn bread mix into it. The pan should be all the way up to 350 and the batter should spit and bitch a little about being poured into the hot oil. Wearing long sleeves and hot pad gloves helps avoid scaring.
- Return the spitting/bitching pot to the oven with the lid on it and let her bake for a few minutes ('bout 5). Then remove the lid now that the spiting/bitching is over with.
- Take it out once the toothpick you stick in the corn bread comes out clean. Try to let it cool before everyone starts stealing bits of it.
JoeP wrote:I married a girl from Oklahoma so ham, black eyed peas, greens and cornbread it has been for us for 33 years I am not about to break the prosperity juju. Rasp, the Hoppin John recipe sounds good we will have to try it. Beau, I like your ideas on corn bread.
Rasp wrote:JoeP wrote:I married a girl from Oklahoma so ham, black eyed peas, greens and cornbread it has been for us for 33 years I am not about to break the prosperity juju. Rasp, the Hoppin John recipe sounds good we will have to try it. Beau, I like your ideas on corn bread.
I wouldn't vouch for the Hoppin John recipe that I posted, I just liked the graphic. I'll go look at the lineup of emptied cans in my recycle bin and write down what I did for this years batch. I've taken a couple of nibbles along the way and other that having to add just a bit of salt, it was spot on from the get go and I'm not sure if I can wait to dig in until tomorrow. I think I jumped the gun and was supposed to let the beans soak for NY Eve and do the cooking for NY dinner. That brings up another topic. What is the difference between 'dinner' and 'supper'?
Happy New Year All!
Rasp
Ish wrote:Rasp wrote:JoeP wrote:I married a girl from Oklahoma so ham, black eyed peas, greens and cornbread it has been for us for 33 years I am not about to break the prosperity juju. Rasp, the Hoppin John recipe sounds good we will have to try it. Beau, I like your ideas on corn bread.
I wouldn't vouch for the Hoppin John recipe that I posted, I just liked the graphic. I'll go look at the lineup of emptied cans in my recycle bin and write down what I did for this years batch. I've taken a couple of nibbles along the way and other that having to add just a bit of salt, it was spot on from the get go and I'm not sure if I can wait to dig in until tomorrow. I think I jumped the gun and was supposed to let the beans soak for NY Eve and do the cooking for NY dinner. That brings up another topic. What is the difference between 'dinner' and 'supper'?
Happy New Year All!
Rasp
Socks.
Jamie wrote:Ish wrote:Rasp wrote:JoeP wrote:I married a girl from Oklahoma so ham, black eyed peas, greens and cornbread it has been for us for 33 years I am not about to break the prosperity juju. Rasp, the Hoppin John recipe sounds good we will have to try it. Beau, I like your ideas on corn bread.
I wouldn't vouch for the Hoppin John recipe that I posted, I just liked the graphic. I'll go look at the lineup of emptied cans in my recycle bin and write down what I did for this years batch. I've taken a couple of nibbles along the way and other that having to add just a bit of salt, it was spot on from the get go and I'm not sure if I can wait to dig in until tomorrow. I think I jumped the gun and was supposed to let the beans soak for NY Eve and do the cooking for NY dinner. That brings up another topic. What is the difference between 'dinner' and 'supper'?
Happy New Year All!
Rasp
Socks.
Yeah, but which is which?
Soñadora wrote:in rural areas, 'dinner' refers to the mid-day meal. 'Supper' is the evening meal.