Posts Tagged ‘gourmet’

How To Use Dairy Produce: Part 4 – Eggs (cont).

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Preparation Of Basic Foods: Dairy Produce.

Eggs: Part Two

Poaching: boil 40mm water in a frying pan; add a teaspoon of salt and a teaspoon of vinegar. Crack egg into cup, inspect and tip into water. Turn down the heat. Gather the white around the unbroken yolk with a spoon and simmer for 3-4 mins. Lift out with a fish slice, drain and serve on hot buttered toast.

Scrambling: beat the eggs well; add salt, pepper to taste and a dash of milk. Melt enough butter to cover the bottom of a frying pan. Cook the eggs slowly, stirring constantly. Cook in a basin floating on boiling water, if preferred. Dish up when almost completely set, in about 5 minutes.

Fried Eggs: Melt enough butter to easily cover the bottom of a shallow pan. Tip the egg(s) in gently and fold the whites around the yolks. When the white has solidified, baste the yolk to your preference and remove whole with a draining spoon.

Baking: lightly grease a fireproof dish and slide eggs into it. Sprinkle with salt, pepper and butter. Bake in a moderate oven and serve in the same pan after the whites have set.

Omelette: buy a pan and keep it only for omelettes! The base should be smooth and clean. Allow two eggs per person; beat lightly and add salt and pepper to taste. Heat enough butter to cover the base of the pan. When the fat is hot, pour in the eggs; as it sets, raise the handle up and draw set mixture up, allowing the liquid egg to run down onto the hot pan. When all is set, tilt the pan forward and roll the omelette over. Serve immediately on a hot plate. It can be filled with almost anything, before being rolled over.

Pouring Custard: beat 2-3 eggs per 1 pint of milk lightly. Heat the milk and pour gradually over the eggs; add sugar and flavouring; cook in a double pan or jug and hot water until the required thickness has been reached. If it is not to be served immediately, pour a thin layer of water onto the top to prevent a skin forming.

Baked Custard: proceed as above and then pour the custard into greased dish; sprinkle with nutmeg; and place dish in water to halfway up its sides. Bake at 350 F for 35-45 mins; test by inserting a knife – it should be clean on removal.

Steamed Custard: as above, but cook in a steamer or pan of boiling water. The cooking time is about the same too.

Custard Tarts: pour a little pouring custard into each unbaked pastry case and bake in the oven for around 40-50 minutes. A little strawberry jam can be placed at the base of the pastry case first, if desired.

For deliciousgourmet Traditional Welsh Recipes, go along to our website at http://welsh-recipes.the-real-way.com/

The Traditional Use Of Dairy Produce: Part 3 – Eggs

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

The Basic Preparation Of Foods: Dairy Produce.

EGGS: Part 1

Eggs can be fresh or dried, the latter being only hens’ eggs without the shell and water. Dried egg should be stored in a cool, dry place – do not put it refrigerator! Store eggs for several or a week in a cool place away from strong-smelling foods. An egg stand is ideal for this purpose. If the eggs are soiled, wipe them clean – washing will remove the natural oils which help to preserve the eggs.

Pickled Eggs: eggs laid in the Spring keep longer than those laid in the other seasons. Eggs that can not be cleaned-up, must be refused. Waterglass or the other special preparations should be used. If an egg floats to the surface, use it at once. Try to maintain the room temperature around 2-8 C and they should remain edible for 6 to 9 months.

Preparing Eggs for Cooking: break each egg into a cup on its own, before adding it to the other ingredients to ensure that it is still fresh. If you wish to separate the white from the yolk, tip the contents of the egg back and forth between the two egg shell halves and the albumen (white) will separate from the yolk. Beat the eggs with a whisk or a fork in an appropriate bowl. Egg whites should be whipped with a knife on a plate – a tiny amount of of salt will help.

Raw eggs used to be prescribed for invalids as they are easily digestible, but this not recommended these days due to the ubiquity of salmonella and other diseases. One method, retold here for the curious was to strain a beaten egg into a mug and slowly add a cup of hot milk (or tea, coffee or lemon water; add sugar to taste. Sherry was often added too.

Cooking Eggs: eggs should be cooked very slowly because the albumen cooks at a temperature which is lower than that of boiling water and becomes ‘tough’ at higher temperatures. By the same token, if you use raw egg to thicken a sauce and the liquid is allowed to boil, the sauce will ‘curdle’, i.e. the egg will solidify into small specks, spoiling its texture.

Coddling: produces easily digested egg-whites, making it an ideal meal for invalids and children. Lower the eggs into 75mmof boiling water; replace the lid and remove from heat. Let it stand for: 7 mins for medium-, 5 mins for soft- and 20 mins for hard-boiled eggs .

Boiling: lower fresh eggs gently into 75mm 3″ boiling water with a spoon. Replace the lid and boil gently for 3-3″ mins for soft-, 4-5 mins the medium- and 10 mins for hard-boiled eggs.

Place the eggs in eggcups: tap the shell to crack it, pemitting the steam to escape and so preventing further cooking. For sandwiches, salads etc: boil egg for 12 mins and plunge into cold water. This enables the shell to be easily removed and discourages a black ring around the yolk.

Would you would like to read more about food in general or Traditional Welsh Recipes in particular, please pop along to http://welsh-recipes.the-real-way.com/

How To Use Dairy Produce: Part 1 – Milk

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

Basic Preparation Of Foods: Dairy Produce.

These basic tips may seem unnecessary for most modern households with a refrigerator, but modern devices can make people lazy and it is well-worth while knowing ‘why’ we must do certain things. It is also worth remembering these tips when refrigerators are not at hand or are so small that they will not hold everything, such as when camping or boating or on holiday in some parts of the world.

MILK:

Milk is known as ‘nature’s perfect food’, because no other food, consumed on its own, can support adult human life. It is of the first importance for the growth and development of young people, but it must be clean as bacteria also find it very nourishing and quickly grow in it. If your milk was not bought pasteurized, then it should be scalded and cooled quickly before consumption.

How To Scald Milk: Rinse a clean saucepan with cold water, pour in the milk and apply heat until bubbles form around the side of the pan. Keep it at this temperature, that is not letting it boil, for 3 minutes. Do not overheat, as milk burns easily. Pour immediately into a clean jug and place in a basin of cold water and cover with a fine cloth to prevent the ingress of flies and dust.

How To Keep Milk Fresh: If milk is not be kept in the containers in which it was bought, transfer it to a clean jug, which has been rinsed with cold water. A warm container will cause milk to stick to the sides and go off more quickly. Keep milk in the coolest place in the larder and always covered. it is worth remembering that draughts are often at ground-level and that hot air rises. Never keep milk in an airless cupboard and in hot weather stand the jug in a bowl of water with the cloth covering dangling in the water. The cloth will soak up water, which will evaporate, which uses up heat, ensuring that the containers remain cool. Keep milk away from strong-smelling foods, as it absorbs odours easily. Never mix new milk with old.

Sour Milk: When milk comes straight from the cow, it is a little alkaline, but as time passes, lactic acid is created and it becomes what is called ’sour’. Pasteurizing or scalding the milk retards this process. Milk which is just “on the turn” can be rejuvenated by boiling with a pinch of bicarbonate of soda to restore its alkalinity. However, once the milk has gone too far and has curdled, it can be strained through (cheese) cloth, thus separating the curds from the whey. The curds can be used as a filling for cakes, tarts, scones etc and the whey can be used as the liquid for making scones, cakes and soups etc., because it still retains a lot of goodness.

Evaporated Milk: Evaporated milk is ordinary milk, which has had some of its water content driven off by heat in some way or another before being canned. Once reconstituted by adding water, it will last only slightly longer than fresh milk.

Condensed Milk: This form of milk is merely evaporated milk to which sugar has been added before being placed in its container. The sugar acts as a preservative and preserve the milk for about a week. Do not keep in the tin, but decant it into a jug or bottle.

Dried Milk: Dried milk comes in a variety of forms and particular attention should be paid to the instructions on the label. Specialized products can be bought for babies, invalids, convalescents and dieters, all of which contain varying amounts and types of added vitamins and minerals. Usually, they are very much lower in fat content than ordinary milk.

If you would like to read more about food in general or Traditional Welsh Recipes in particular, please pop along to http://welsh-recipes.the-real-way.com/

How To Use Dairy Products Correctly: Part Two – Cheese

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

The Basic Preparation Food: Dairy Products.

HARD AND SOFT CHEESES

Cheeses are manufactured from milk which has been naturally or artificially turned sour. The first method is achieved by standing the milk in a warm place and allowing natural, beneficial bacteria to convert the milk’s natural sugars into lactic acid. The second method is effected by adding an agent, usually rennet.

Colouring and salt are frequently put in too. The whey is then drained off and the curds are pressed into moulds where they are ripened or cured. Some cheeses are subjected to pressure; soft cheeses are not. Curds are ripened or cured by various means. The way it is done, the quality of the milk, the breed of cow, sheep or other animal and the quality of its pasture and the type of bacteria all govern the final product.

Some local conditions are unique and those areas produce cheeses that are not successfully reproduced elsewhere: cheeses like Gruyere and Camembert, although factories do try. Some even have some success, just think most of the world’s Cheddar cheese now derives from the USA and Canada.

The constituent parts of cheese are roughly: 33% fat, 33% protein and 33% water with salt, colouring, sugar etc making up the other 1%. These proportions do vary from area to area as some manufacturers use full cream milk, others skimmed milk and yet others add extra cream. Yet others add extra sugar, although most do not. All cheeses have a high calcium content and can be considered ‘concentrated milk’ and stored in the same way.

Many people say that cheese should not be kept in a fridge and while storing in water, as for milk, is not an option, a cool larder is ideal. Try the traditional method of hanging it up in cheesecloth in a cool, airy place. If the weather is hot, dampen the cloth with water to which a little vinegar has been added.

in Europe, cheese is frequently served with a salad or/and bread and is often presented after or instead of the dessert course. Hard cheese can be nigh-on impossible for children to digest and grating it first will make it more edible for them. After being grated the cheese can be scattered on vegetables or fish soups or sauces; combined with egg, pasta, rice and oatmeal dishes; put on baked potatoes or pastry; toasted on bread or put in sandwiches or salads.

How To Cook Cheese: A little known fact is that many people find cooked cheese indigestible. The reason lies in its molecular structure. This is why: cooked starch can be digested by the saliva in the mouth but other foods must pass to the stomach or intestines for this process. They are, however, broken up in the mouth. Digestion of protein begins in the stomach and is completed in the small intestine, while fat is not rendered soluble until it reaches the small intestine.

Cheese possesses a high fat and protein mixture, but in melting, the fat often covers the protein and prevents the digestive juices reaching it in the stomach. Therefore, its digestion is delayed until the fat has been absorbed in the intestines. Cheese can be rendered more digestible by:

1] Combining it with some starchy food, because the starch will absorb the fat, not allowing it to cover the protein.

2] Using seasoning: Cayenne Pepper or mustard will irritate the intestinal lining, causing the release of extra digestive juices.

3] Cooking rapidly. This has the effect of preventing the protein from becoming tough and stringy and so, harder to digest. You could also add the cheese late to sauces.

4] Adding alkali: so, generous pinch of Bicarbonate of Soda per 75g (3 ozs) will help neutralize the fatty acids and make the proteins easier to digest.

For the best gourmet Traditional Welsh Recipes, go along to our website at http://welsh-recipes.the-real-way.com/

Barbecue Grills | Great Barbecue Cooking Options For Your Outdoor Living Area

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

When you eat foods cooked on a barbecue grill, they just seem to taste better than those same foods cooked in your traditional kitchen. Expanding living space into the great outdoors is a growing trend in living today. When you have a barbecue grill in your backyard or on your patio, your outdoor living space can expand to include an outdoor kitchen area, as well.

Barbecue grill manufacturers offer models with many different designs. They are available in a wide range of prices, and different fuel options are also available. In addition, there are a great many accessories available to make your barbecue grilling experience even more enjoyable.

Homeowners have a wide variety of barbecue grills that they can choose from which include pedestal, portable gas grills and even drop in top grills. Depending on your outdoor patio plan you can choose the built-in grills that give it a great modern personable BBQ experience. There is a wide choice of different types of fuels that can be used for these outdoor kitchen cooking areas such as charcoal, propane, natural gas and electricity.

Accessories for barbecue grills include smoker boxes and warming ovens. In addition, you can get rotisseries to roast food on a spit. And you can also get side burners, perfect for cooking your side dishes while your main dish cooks on the grill.

Like anything else, if you want to get the best barbecue grill for your money and your family, you should do a little research before you make your purchase. Consider all of the different accessories and options available. But also consider your particular family and your needs. What will you use your barbecue grill for the most?

Some options on barbecue grills may only be used sporadically. Other decisions that will lead to the selection of the perfect grill for you are essential to your enjoyment of your purchase. For example, the size of the grilling surface is one of the most important decisions to consider when making your choice. Likewise, what kind of fuel it uses is also important.

Decide for yourself which features are optional and which are essential to your purchasing decision. Make a list in advance before you start comparing models and prices. Consider whether you will use your barbecue grill for a few summer months or year round, as well. Some of the most important standard items to look for include:

High quality materials and sturdy construction

Built-In Thermometer You May Not Need This at the Time but It May Be Convenient

Rust proof components

Easy Remove and Replace Drip Pans and Ash Removal

Having At Least Two Heat Zones on Your Gas Grill

Using your patio furniture set as a great relaxing area your barbecue grill will just enhance the overall experience for everyone to enjoy fine food and laughter. If you use some of the tips within this article you will be sure to find great barbecue grills that will suit your outdoor living area plans

Creativeoutdoorfurniture.com will supply you with information and resources to help you discover the best Barbecue Grills, patio furniture accessories and Patio Furniture Sets so that you can create a great outdoor deck area for friends and family.

Dessert Dishes You Might Enjoy Cooking

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

There is an art to dessert making, and if you get it exactly right, it will be that course that you remember most about a meal. Forget the Cheese and biscuits; a delicious dessert really finishes of a meal in style.

There are a great variety of desserts to enjoy, and whether you prefer hot and cold, you will always have a great choice. You may have guessed by now that I love my desserts, these are some that I’ve sampled recently.

There are some classic desserts here; along with others you may have heard of but haven’t yet tried. If you don’t eat out often, some of these are very easy to create yourself.

If you like mousse made from regular chocolate, try it for a change using white. There is a long standing debate between brown and white chocolate, but I personally find them to be equally delicious.

Be a bit more adventurous with your chocolate mousse next time you make it. Most of us like summer fruits like Raspberries, so why not drizzle some into the mousse to give the chocolate a bit of fruitiness.

If you think along the same lines like me and want your dessert to look great, you can create wonderful cocktail from ingredients like ice cream using a martini glass.

These look amazing at a dinner party. Your guests won’t take any notice of how simple the recipe is; they will be blown away by the presentation. Put in other stuff like fruit and trimmings to really impress.

The internet is great for showing us how things that look complicated are really quite easy to do. This dessert is a prime example, an ice cream filled mango that has been cut into the shape of a rose.

If you are a mango fan you will love this, and the combination of the mango flavor with either sorbet or ice cream is sublime.

Read more of this author’s articles about subjects including hand painted children’s furniture and cheap jewelry armoire buying tips.

The Tastiest Pizza Varieties You’ve Never Tasted

Saturday, March 6th, 2010

Living in New York is a great thing, especially since I have easy access to what so many people say is the greatest pizza in the entire world. Just about every commercial neighborhood has a pizzeria every two or three blocks.

As a result, I’ve had the privilege of enjoying a very wide variety of slices and styles. During my time spent eating this delicious treat, I’ve come across some pretty interesting types and I’d like to share a few of them with you today.

Perhaps you yourself would like to make these or you want to find an establishment near you that has them on the menu; if you are someone who really likes to try creative food dishes, then you will definitely want to sample these kinds of pizza.

Have you ever gotten to try a slice of mac and cheese pizza? If not, you should absolutely give it a try. I know that it probably seems a little unusual, but it tastes so awesome. When the slice has the macaroni breaded on top, it is even more yummy.

Then there is the pizza that is called the spinach artichoke, which is extremely popular at every one of the top pizza joints in the city. It resembles the normal spinach style that you might have tried, but also features artichokes and creamy cheese blends all through it. Numerous people say that it is the best.

Finally, you have got to try a buffalo chicken pizza if you are like me and really like buffalo chicken. It is a hot crust with the chicken on top and I know you are going to find it to be super good.

If you want to have more flavor on it, then just add some blue cheese or have a separate dip. The crust is going to taste good with it also.

Hopefully one of these three creative pizza ideas ends up inspiring you. I love each of the three, and I’d love to see you enjoy them all as much as I do.

Aside from food, this writer additionally frequently shares writing regarding cheap maternity clothes and maternity swimwear.

How To Avoid A Kitchen Mess

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

Cooking is one of our favorite hobbies, we love going into the kitchen and creating tasty meals and treats fro our loved ones. What we don’t love, however, is the trail of destruction that we leave behind. How come there’s so much mess?

This has bugged us for generations, well, since the days of masters and servants ceased to exist. At one time, all our ancestors had to do was sit at the table, have their meals brought to them and then retire. The staff downstairs had to worry about all the tidying up.

The lesser classes didn’t suffer from this problem either as they could afford neither servants nor expensive meals.

Those energy saving devices that we all have in our kitchens; mixers, blenders etc add to this problem even more. These all need to be carefully cleaned too as well as all the pots and pans that are stacked by the sink.

Of course, you may well be very wealthy and not have a clue what I’m actually talking about, but I’m guessing not. Ok, you may have a cleaning lady a couple of times a week, but a bombsite kitchen isn’t really something you want to leave for her.

I’ve tried various things over the years, mostly unsuccessfully. The one I’m going to tell you about now however seems to have made life an awful lot easier, so why not give it a try yourself.

Clean as you go is now my kitchen motto. Keep a bowl of hot, soapy water and wash each piece as soon as you’ve used it. Then when you’ve finished, there will only be the last couple of things that you’ve used, so much better than a teetering pile of dirty dishes.

So in future, no more stacking up dirty dishes and leaving them until the end. Facing a pile of dirty pots and pans can be soul destroying, so make life easy for yourself and clean as you go. Now when you’ve finished whatever you have made, you can sit down and relax, not be stuck at the kitchen sink for a good hour.

Enjoy more of this writer’s advice on things including residential metal roofing and metal roofing prices.

Fun Ways To Cook Chicken

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

One of our favorite meats is Chicken. It is incredibly versatile, very lean and incredibly tasty.

When starting a new diet, chicken is the meat of choice. You can do so much with it and it provides us with the valuable protein that we need.

Although a lot of people think that chicken is very boring and find it rather dry, I’ve personally never found this as I tend to make a lot of different dishes and include various ingredients so that even if I had chicken every day it would always taste different.

By experimenting with different recipes you will make sure that you aren’t going to get bored. This is the scourge of the dieter; when you eat so much you just can’t eat any more and fall back into your old and unhealthy eating habits. There’s nothing worse than dreading eating something that you used to thoroughly enjoy.

Here are a few ideas for chicken that both taste delicious and will ensure that the boredom never sets in. Theses recipes have the added bonus of being very healthy, so you can rest assured that although you have made the Chicken taste different, it is still good for you.

The simplest way to liven up Chicken is a sauce. As we are looking for a healthy option; I recommend a sauce which consists of orange, honey and raisins. If you like nuts, throw in few almonds too. The sweetness of the sauce should ensure that you won’t want a dessert either.

Bring a boring chicken salad to life by adding a low fat dressing and tarragon to create a tasty and satisfying dish. Low fat varieties of soured cream or mayonnaise can give this dish richness while still keeping it healthy.

People tend not to realize that it is the bland taste of the chicken which makes it so versatile. You can create a dish using practically any fruit, veg or other flavors and it will be successful.

This writer also regularly shares knowledge on topics such as stainless steel shelving and glass bathroom wall shelves.