Ask Me Anything (A pro's perspective)

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Natasha

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Wow, your thread is popular, Tang!!! :) Here's one for ya...do you have a good stir fry sauce recipe that isn't extremely ginger-heavy??? I can deal w/ a little ginger but too much and I'm turned off. I'm on the SouthBeach Diet and would have to substitute low sodium soy sauce, but any spices are good as long as they don't have added sugar.

Thanks!!!
 
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JoeCool10

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^^^Natasha asked a really good question. Too much ginger makes me sick to my stomach.

Another one for you. I love the Terra Chips that they sell at Whole Foods stores, the ones that have slices of beets, yuca, malanga, etc. How can I make this at home without screwing up the chips, making them too soggy or too hard?
 

purpledove

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OOh, you're gonna get me on a soapbox here. I spent several years as Exec Sous Chef of a very high-end steak house, and have grilled thousands and thousands of steaks. So it's a topic I'm very keen on, and have very passionate "truths" I believe in. A grilling-related question in another thread was actually the thing that sparked the idea for THIS thread. Let me gather up some thoughts, and I will make a post that is my "Grilling Bible" soon.

For the veggies, good marinades can do wonders, and there's lots of choices. One that I've used a lot is balsamic, honey, minced garlic and salt/pepper. The extra sugars from the honey help caramelize the veggies quicker, so they are on the grill less time to get nice and brown - therefore not overcooked and soggy. Italian dressing works great. Really any combination of oil, acid and herbs. Try olive oil, lime juice and thyme, or oil, white wine vinegar and tarragon as a starting point.

OOhhhhh...I hit the jackpot Qn. Do I get bonus points? :p

Thanks for the many varieties of grilled veggie marinades. Now I can alternate them per each time i grill. Wow :eek Amazing property of honey to carmelize the veggie to prevent it from becoming soggy. That's good as i dislike veggies when overcooked :ninja

Thanks and I shall be waiting for your post on that grilled steak tips. Can't wait to take lessons from the Exec Sous Chef 1sm084thumbsup.gif
 
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Haus

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Would 1 cup of a dry ingredient in a measuring cup measure out to 1 cup in liquid measuring cup and vice versa with 1 cup of a wet ingredient be the same in a 1 cup dry measuring cup?

Cause when i cook sometimes i use a measuring cup to measure out milk or water and i heard i shouldnt do that
 

Leah Love

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Ok, I have a question... or more like, a challenge for you Tang.

What recipe would you recommend for someone on an university student budget (read none), who doesn't have any kitchen appliances and only has a hot plate available. It must be easy and delicious and not boring :p
 

USF Sam

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Ok, I have a question... or more like, a challenge for you Tang.

What recipe would you recommend for someone on an university student budget (read none), who doesn't have any kitchen appliances and only has a hot plate available. It must be easy and delicious and not boring :p


Ohhhh... "Iron Chef" in reverse. Instead of a full kitchen with $300 lobsters it's the exact opposite. This oughta be good. :nod:


On a side note... do you watch the original Japanese "Iron Chef" and do most of their seafood creations make you a little queasy too? :yuk
 

Tangerine

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Grilling Bible

The TWO Commandments

Thou shalt BLOOM thy meat
Thou shalt REST thy meat

There are plenty of other little tips and suggestion I will make, but the two cardinal rules above are the ones you should never, ever skip if you want great results in grilled meats.
So what do they mean?

“Blooming” essentially means bringing the meat to room temperature before you attempt to cook it. This is crucial if you want even cooking. Here’s the reasoning: meat cooks from the outside-in. If the steak came straight from the refrigerator, the outside parts start cooking sooner and reach the desired state of done-ness much faster. By the time the heat has reached the center to START cooking, the outer parts are already medium to well done. So by the time the center reaches medium, the outer half of the meat is completely overcooked, dry and flavorless. Some people worry about safety of meat just sitting on the counter, and I can assure you it’s FINE. Bacteria takes a minimum of 4 hours to grow to a level where there’s even a 1% chance of making someone sick. Blooming takes about an hour. No risk there. Plus, any bacteria that DOES grow is killed instantly by the heat of the grill.

“Resting” means allow the meat to sit – OFF of the heat – for a several minutes before serving it. For grilled steaks – 5-10 minutes. To know the importance of this, you have to understand how meat cooks. All muscle-meats contain water. As you cook it, the water heats up and moves through the meat transforming proteins along the way into a“cooked” state. As you flip a steak back and forth, the water is rising up – moving away from the heat source and it will tend to concentrate it self in the middle of the cut. Since meat is muscle, it will slightly contract in reaction to heat, and tighten up, pushing water through itself. Think of a sponge when you squeeze it tight – pushing water out of it’s cells. That’s what meat is doing in reaction to heat. By setting it off the heat, the muscle relaxes, the water absorbs itself back into the cells and you wind up with a tender piece of meat with the fats and juices (where all of the flavor is) still inside the meat itself.

Have you ever cut into a steak, and within a minute or so you find it swimming in a puddle of reddish liquid on the plate? We call that “bleeding out” and it’s caused by cutting into meat before it’s fully rested. All the liquids that concentrated in the center has not been reabsorbed into the meat. When it all rushes out onto the plate, you now lost almost every bit of flavor and moisture that was SUPPOSED to be in the expensive steak you just destroyed.

So those are the basic rules. Do those two things every single time you grill and I promise you will notice a big difference.

Now, a few other suggestions for good grilling. These are my personal preferences, so take them as such.

Brush your meat with a little olive oil on both sides. Then season with kosher salt and black pepper. The oil help hold the seasoning on the meat and help distribute heat more evenly along the surface. Plus it tastes good.

Turn often. Some grilling folks say the opposite, they will say cook halfway on one side, flip over and cook on the other until done. I disagree, simply because of the “moving water” I mentioned before. I find much more effective cooking if I am flipping the steaks about once a minute – moving the juices back and forth through the steak.

Undercook your steak a little. Since you now know about resting, you should also know that the hot liquid moving back into the muscle tissue are still cooking the meat – even though you’ve taken it off the grill. Everything hot continues to cook even when you remove the heat source. This is called “carryover” cooking. If you want you steak medium when you eat it, you should take it off the grill when it’s medium rare. Rest for 5-7 minutes and when you cut into it, it will be a perfect medium with all juices intact.

If you marinade something, be sure it doesn’t have a lot of sugar in the marinade. Sugars burn very quickly at high grill temps, and more than likely you will get a burned flavor on the outside of the meat before it’s cooked. This is why you often hear NOT to brush BBQ sauce onto something until right before you take it off the grill. Black, burned sugary sauce is not very tasty, at least to me.
 

Leah Love

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Ok, this is the second time you used the term. What the heck is "kosher salt" ... doesn't "kosher" mean circumcised? :wtf:
 

mazHur

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Ok, this is the second time you used the term. What the heck is "kosher salt" ... doesn't "kosher" mean circumcised? :wtf:


Yeah, I have also heard this kosher thing used in many recipes but can't figure out what the hell it is, a circumcised or a resized something??:)
 

Tangerine

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Ok, this is the second time you used the term. What the heck is "kosher salt" ... doesn't "kosher" mean circumcised? :wtf:

Sorry for the Wiki cut and paste, but there's no way I could describe it better than this:



Koshering salt, usually referred to as kosher salt in the US, is a term that describes one of the commonly used varieties of edible salt in commercial kitchens today. Kosher salt has a much larger grain size than some common table salt. Like common table salt, kosher salt consists of the chemical compound sodium chloride. Unlike some common table salt, Kosher salt typically contains no additives (for example, iodide)

The term "kosher salt" derives not from its being made in accordance with the guidelines for kosher foods as written in the Torah (nearly all salt is kosher, including ordinary table salt), but rather due to its use in making meats kosher. One salt manufacturer considers the term ambiguous, and distinguishes between "kosher certified salt" and "koshering salt". "Koshering salt" has the "small, flake-like form" useful in treating meat.

Rather than cubic crystals, kosher salt has a flat platelet shape. Salt crystals are forced into this shape under pressure, or grown flat in an evaporative process. Kosher salt is usually manufactured with a grain size larger than table salt grains.

I haven't used any regular "table salt" in probably 20 years.
 

mazHur

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:24:

No, it's not salt with the "tip snipped."

http://ask.yahoo.com/20030310.html


I couldn't find a picture of the kosher thing there..the only interesting and surprising thing about it was this oxymoron..

''The salt itself is not kosher, meaning it doesn't conform to Jewish food laws, but this salt is used to make meat kosher''

After all what are the Jewish food laws?? Are they governed by the USFDA or not??
 

Leah Love

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I couldn't find a picture of the kosher thing there..the only interesting and surprising thing about it was this oxymoron..

''The salt itself is not kosher, meaning it doesn't conform to Jewish food laws, but this salt is used to make meat kosher''

After all what are the Jewish food laws?? Are they governed by the USFDA or not??

Ehm, if you read the wiki cut and paste it says nearly ALL salts are kosher, so it is not really necessary to make a differences by "can you use it to cook or not" - rather they use this term to point to the fact that it is USED to make foods kosher. :)

Thanks Tang for the info, it was just bothering me sooo much . LoL
 
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Leah Love

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I thought a picture of it would have been worth a thousand words:)

20101116%20protips%20Salt%20Morton%20Kosher.JPG


here you go :)
 

Leah Love

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I had no idea that this type of salt has a specific name, and to think we've been using it for decades LoL It is used to dehydrate the meat before smoking it. My family smoked our meat ourself so I saw the salt many times, just had no idea it was called "kosher salt".
 
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