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    Iron Heart Fall/Winter 2025 Collection Preview - Now Live

    Iron Chef WAYCT - What Are You Cooking Today

    Hobbies and Pastimes
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    • Stuart.TS
      Stuart.T
      Raw and Unwashed
      Joined:

      Cheating…I had breakfast at a great new place in Leigh-on-sea called ' the brunch co'...It was the best bravas eggs I've eaten anywhere, and the flat white was very tasty too...

      last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • bryaneidins70B
        bryaneidins70
        Iron Heart Deity
        Joined:

        Got a friend who used to live in Leigh on sea, had a couple of good nights out there and usually hit 'Stop the world' for breakfast. Will check out your find next time i'm down.

        'Fail we may…Sail we must'

        last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • mclaincauseyM
          mclaincausey
          見習いボス
          Joined:

          Green chile pork stew, New Mexico style but with charred tomatillo added.

          Though a Coloradan, and though I prefer Pueblo to Hatch chilis, I favor the roux-less, simpler New Mexican approach to this dish, eschewing adulterants such as potatoes, tomatoes, and so forth.

          Very simple, very few ingredients (roasted chilis, pork, garlic, onion, tomatillo, cumin, salt, oregano, pepper, a few dashes of Tapatio and Tabasco green, usually chicken broth but I forgot to get some and my homemade stock was frozen) and as good as green chili gets IMO. Sometimes simplicity wins.

          Think it, be it.

          last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • JDelageJ
            JDelage
            啓蒙家
            Joined:

            Green chili rocks.

            last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • GilesG
              Giles
              IHUK Crew
              Joined:

              @mclaincausey:

              Green chile pork stew, New Mexico style but with charred tomatillo added.

              Link to a recipe?

              "OK face up to it - you're useless but generally pretty honest and straightforward . . . it's a rare combination of qualities that I have come to admire in you" - Geo 2011

              last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • mclaincauseyM
                mclaincausey
                見習いボス
                Joined:

                @Giles:

                @mclaincausey:

                Green chile pork stew, New Mexico style but with charred tomatillo added.

                Link to a recipe?

                Do you have my Instagram? @mclaincausey I have the basic recipe listed in a comment reply there.

                I cook by taste and instinct so it lacks measurements unfortunately

                Think it, be it.

                last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • JDelageJ
                  JDelage
                  啓蒙家
                  Joined:

                  Not exactly the same, but I can vouch for this one:
                  https://honest-food.net/wild-boar-chile-verde-recipe/

                  Finding tomatillos in Europe might be a challenge…

                  last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • AlexA
                    Alex
                    IHUK Crew
                    Joined:

                    @JDelage:

                    Not exactly the same, but I can vouch for this one:
                    https://honest-food.net/wild-boar-chile-verde-recipe/

                    Finding tomatillos in Europe might be a challenge…

                    Thanks. We can get tomatillos from the farm Giles & I buy from, but only in the summer.

                    last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • JDelageJ
                      JDelage
                      啓蒙家
                      Joined:

                      TBH, tomatillos are weeds, they grow pretty easy, but yes, they require hot weather.

                      last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • mclaincauseyM
                        mclaincausey
                        見習いボス
                        Joined:

                        The tomatillos are certainly optional for this form of chili. Truly what most refer to as "chili verde" requires tomatillo as a main ingredient, and what we call "green chili" or "green chili stew" in the Southwest does not and is instead centered on varieties of Anaheim chiles (Hatch in NM, Pueblo in CO). Some New Mexico-style partisans (they are very purely about the peppers) might look at the inclusion of tomatillo as sacrilege, while in Colorado, anything goes (IMO to an extreme). CO variants typically start with an (IMO unnecessary) roux and include tomato, potato, and other ingredients that I find unnecessary and distracting from the peppers.

                        Anaheim chiles thrive in challenging conditions, which is why Colorado Pueblo chiles are IMO superior to the legendary Hatch chiles of New Mexico–fleshier and a bit hotter. You can order dried Hatch chiles very easily though, and rehydrate them and roast them. And they are damn good--some of my best efforts used them as a base and Pueblo for heat.

                        You can garnish with tortilla, fresh cilantro (which reminds me, that was an ingredient I forgot to include in my Insta recipe, a handful or so of chopped cilantro), scallion, cotija, and/or jalapeno.

                        Think it, be it.

                        last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • mclaincauseyM
                          mclaincausey
                          見習いボス
                          Joined:

                          Last night's meal was cooked for service tonight (I generally do this with stewy dishes). It is by no means traditional to have it thick enough to eat off a plate with a fork, but I think I'll make it thick like this henceforth.

                          Brandi's corn cotija lime cilantro salad and roasted veggies round it out.

                          Think it, be it.

                          last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • SeulS
                            Seul
                            Joined:

                            Still trying to perfect that pesto pizza… Made a mix of tomato sauce, spicy hummus and red pesto for the ground layer... Then red onions, sweet peppers mixed with spicy peppers, layer of shaves of grana padano cheese, sweet potato falafel smeared with goatcheese with honey, brown mushrooms, egg.

                            last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • mclaincauseyM
                              mclaincausey
                              見習いボス
                              Joined:

                              Looks and sounds great!

                              Think it, be it.

                              last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • JDelageJ
                                JDelage
                                啓蒙家
                                Joined:

                                Yesterday we made a Moroccan style couscous. We had lamb 4 ways as meat: marinated skewers of leg-of-lamb, ‘kefte’ meatballs, mergiez (spicy lamb sausages - we bought those) and a fall-off-the-bone braised leg of lamb. I also made harissa (spicy sauce / condiment) from scratch. It was epic. We were 11 around the table…

                                last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • ChrisC
                                  Chris
                                  Raw and Unwashed
                                  Joined:

                                  That looks magnificent.  I could eat all of it.  It would take me days, and I would about every minute.

                                  last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • UnTuckedU
                                    UnTucked
                                    Joined:

                                    @JDelage goodness gracious that was some spread!!!

                                    In search of:
                                    IHV-04, med.
                                    IHSH-185, large
                                    IHSH-186, large (khaki, and green)

                                    last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • mclaincauseyM
                                      mclaincausey
                                      見習いボス
                                      Joined:

                                      Happy Thanksgiving!

                                      Reverse seared prime rib, medium rare, served with a pink peppercorn, horseradish, chive cream.

                                      Smoked "baconator"

                                      I don't have a picture of the smoked turkey but it was divine.

                                      Think it, be it.

                                      last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • JDelageJ
                                        JDelage
                                        啓蒙家
                                        Joined:

                                        +1 for pork at Thanksgiving. Turkey is overrated. That baconator looks dope.

                                        last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • mclaincauseyM
                                          mclaincausey
                                          見習いボス
                                          Joined:

                                          Agreed, turkey has a much lower ceiling than other meats but the dark meat was especially good. In general though I agree, outsized hype for a bird that takes a decent amount of effort to just be edible. Between brining, whiskey butter injection, and smoking we were able to get a great result.

                                          The baconator was done by a friend. He made/cured the sausage, ham, and bacon, then the baconator. The ends of it are about the best damn thing you could eat.

                                          Used a recipe on the prime rib that we developed last year. Herb paste on all sides of the meat, truss the bones back on, cook low and slow to 135F read at the center, blast at 500F for 10 or so minutes. This reduces the temperature gradient as evidenced by the dreaded gray ring normally found on prime rib such that you have a crispy exterior and medium rare flesh all the way through. Same principles as sous vide or slow smoking.

                                          You'd never know from my post, but we had a lot of great vegetables and vegetarian dishes too.

                                          Think it, be it.

                                          last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • T
                                            twin
                                            見習いボス
                                            Joined:

                                            WAYBT still at it baking pies even after Thanksgiving.
                                            Going in the oven

                                            Now done out of the oven.

                                            last edited by 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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