Iron Chef WAYCT - What Are You Cooking Today
-
Looks delicious, Chief!
Thanks! Turned out great!
Great hijack! Thoroughly enjoyed following that and it looks amazing. The pureeing of the veg took me by surprise but the result is wonderful.
That's the detail that makes it a special recipe for sure. The sauce thickened up nicely in the oven for the last phase of the braise which made me very happy. I love that I don't need roux for this recipe!
Also, glad you enjoyed that. I thought I might be being annoying with the oversharing, but once I realized that, I was already committed, so I went for it
On my list to cook…..
So glad to hear! I'm sure you noticed the mashed potatoes, and that's because Mrs. Seawolf doesn't care for the texture of potatoes that have been cooked in a stew, but if that's your thing, by all means, go for it. I personally love putting potatoes, carrots, and pearl onions back into the sauce for the last phase.
-
That looks great! We do the vegetable puree thing to thicken curries and other stews, as we avoid most ingredients that thicken.
-
Damn, @seawolf, that looks amazing. You could probably cook for a living doing stuff like that.
-
That looks great! We do the vegetable puree thing to thicken curries and other stews, as we avoid most ingredients that thicken.
Piqued my interest! Which ingredients that thicken do you still use? I feel like the onions in this dish cook down to nothing and really add a lot to the thickness of the sauce.
Thanks @Chris ! I'm actively trying to avoid it at this point
-
We try to avoid wheat flour and corn starch and the like, but masa, potato starch, rice flour, and especially almond flour are some examples we use in addition to the immersion blender technique as you did here. I am interested in trying ancient grain flours (amaranth, sorghum, etc), but I have not gotten around to it.
One other thing we really love is cashewgurt (cashew "yogurt," which can be made at home but we typically just buy it). It has a thinness and a sourness that is reminiscent of crema, so we will use it in lieu of dairy such as heavy cream, and also to bind things–we'll use that in lieu of mayonnaise in a ranch dressing, for example. That can thicken or provide a base for a sauce too.
I know there's a lot of anti-gluten-free stuff going around and the science is not settled, but some of what I've read about it is enough for me to err on the side of caution at least enough to reduce our intake, particularly for possible neurological effects that would be difficult to detect until it's too late.
-
Awesome. I'll look into cashewgurt (that was a weird word to type out). Arrowroot is a really good thickener too if you're looking for something similar to corn starch that isn't corn starch.
I love how coconut milk thickens a sauce as it reduces. Such a great base for curries and the like.
Sounds like a smart and healthy approach.
-
Awesome. I'll look into cashewgurt (that was a weird word to type out). Arrowroot is a really good thickener too if you're looking for something similar to corn starch that isn't corn starch.
I love how coconut milk thickens a sauce as it reduces. Such a great base for curries and the like.
Sounds like a smart and healthy approach.
Yeah, cashewgurt is a weird word to type, read, and say.
Ah yes, interested in arrowroot but haven't used it yet. I also do use a lot of coconut products, though unlike a lot of ancestral eaters, I eschew coconut oil, as in the past it really drove my cholesterol high. Our house uses avocado oil, olive oil, ghee, and sometimes bacon fat for our lipids for the most part.
-
Arrowroot is way more powerful than cornstarch.
We primarily use olive oil, butter, and bacon fat if it's available. I have ghee on-hand, but can't be bothered most times and reach for the butter instead.
Here's the requisite Shepherd's Pie with the leftover pot roast, sauce, and mashed potatoes.
-
Shepperd's pies are awesome. This one looks delicious.
Another thickener is gelatin. You can just make chicken broth using leftover bones from everyday roasted chickens, and boil it down a bit, and it will ad a lot of body to any (wet) dish. Of course, it's not as powerful as cornstarch and arrowroot.
-
Delicious, @seawolf !!
Agreed @JDelage , we don't use it all too often, but we probably should save some when we make stock, which we always do with bones and vegetable fragments.
Speaking of stocks, we don't throw away vegetable or herb stems (like for onions or peppers, or thyme) and other supposed refuse, we instead throw them in an airtight bag or container and keep them in the freezer, as we also do with leftover bones. Those can then be used for stock. When we meal plan, we spend far less on groceries and we waste almost nothing. If we ever get into gardening and composting as we plan to do beyond the herbs we grow seasonally today, we will press this efficiency further still.