chef cook

” Are Rare Steaks Really Better? A Butcher’s View “

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I found this interesting story on “Huffpost”

Are Rare Steaks Really Better?: A Butcher’s View

Plus: A guide to different cuts’ ideal doneness

by Tom Mylan  June 19, 2012

In the game of food dork one-upsmanship, the rarer you order your steak, the more of a real gastronome you are—it means you like your meat good and a little dangerous, like it was meant to be. I always took this carnal orthodoxy as gospel; I mean, people who order their steak well-done deserve their own circle of hell. But…as much it pains my old, snobby self, I’ve started to prefer some of my steaks a little more towards the medium end of the spectrum than I’m completely comfortable with.

But why? Aren’t rare steaks juicier and more tender? Well, not necessarily. I started doing some experimenting—I’m no scientist, but even a knuckle-dragging son of a construction worker like me can learn a thing or two—and it turns out in some cases, cooking your meat a little more can make for better texture and flavor. Blame fat, collagen, and chemistry.

Ribeyes, for example, are downright gross when cooked black-and-bleu. I know there are probably a lot of old French guys rotating in their graves right now, but hold on—ultra-rare ribeyes are gross because all that luscious fat that rims the meat, the best part of the steak, doesn’t really render when barely cooked, making it weird and pasty.

In contrast, the prime ribs of my Reno, NV youth were slow roasted………. Read more HERE
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” Tortillas With Egg, Chorizo & Veggies “

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If  Breakfast – Good Breakfast !

Usually I am a coffe and bananas kind of breakfast guy, but today……
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 Life is Good !     🙂

” Pommes Sarladaise, Greens & Grape Tomatoes “

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Because it was a meat free day for me, I added mushroom to the potatoes.
Wonderful, tasty, very satisfying meal.

Potatoes,
Mushrooms,
Onions,
Garlic (plenty),
Duckfat (plenty),
Salt & Pepper
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Romaine,
Grape Tomatoes,
Dijon Vinaigrette

Bon Appetit ! Life is Good ! 
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” Spatchcocked Cornish Hen “

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Last night’s  excellent dinner. 

One whole cornish hen is a perfect portion.

Bon Appetit ! Life is Good ! 🙂

Ingredients:

Cornish hen, soy sauce, kosher salt, sriracha, onion pwd, garlic powder;

Method:

Roast in oven at 420F until internal temp on the thickest part on the bone reaches 160F.
Let it rest fo 10 minutes in a warm place. Do not cover or you will loose the crispness.
Carry over heat will take it to a safe 165 and it will still have all the juices.

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” I was once asked what I could cook and I told them: everything! “

Russ Orford • @ Shelley, most “good Exec Chef” starts just there on the line. We have the burns the cuts to prove it. At 52, I can still give the young ones a run for their money, and not because I am fast but because I get it right and I know. However as A Exec chef the job has taken me elsewhere in the kitchen to oversee the prep the ordering, the following of health codes, OHSA, Inventories, and Training, costing of menus. The endless meeting that management feels I need to be at. The fixing the mixer and fridge door Because there is no money left in the R&M budget, and over a 100 other things that come up every day to keep the kitchen running, and yes I still get time to do the thing I got into this job for TO COOK on the line working one or two meal parts per day like breakfast, lunch and dinner. Really if I took my wage and divided it by the hours I work you would see a Slave wage, after all most cooks are on an hourly rate and when their shift is up it is up and they go home. Unlike a exec chef who stays until the job is done. I am first in and most time last out of my kitchen. I do not have a degree I did my Apprenticeship of 3 years working under hard talking hard drinking 1st and 2nd cooks , being trained my exec chefs who knew how to train cooks and chef and also had no degree , I have had many a “ young Chef “ who has come to my kitchen with a degree and they could not even cook an egg ! Why you may ask well as one young degreed chef told me “we were only shown how to do that one or two times before we moved on to more interesting food items!” I cannot tell you the amount of eggs I cooked before the chef would allow them to be serve to the guest, and until I could do that I was not allowed to “move on to the more interesting food items “and that in a nutshell is why we as chef are paid poorly, as most of these young chefs with degrees cannot do the basis things and so we all get batched in to one happy group. I was once asked what I could cook and I told them: everything! The person asked me how I could cook everything and that was impossible! I told him I had good training from the first day I walked into a kitchen I was taught the basis again and again until I got them right and was not allowed to move on until I got them right. Most line cooks know the food they are cooking the menu they are working on, repetition builds speed not knowledge Take a line cook off the menu he is working on and give him a new menu and he is like a duck out of water. I have seen many a “bull cook” have the wind taken out of his or her sails with a “new menu “

Read more HERE 

” Arroz Caldo “

Tonight’s Pinoy Dinner : Arroz Caldo

Arroz Caldo (literally translated as warm rice) is a type of congee (or lugaw)
that in texture and apparence somehow resembles risotto. Though this dish
is of Chinese origin, the (new) name was actually given by the Spaniards
because of pronunciation issues.

Suggested condiments :
Safflower (wild saffron),toasted garlic, calamansi, scallions raw egg yolk,
hard boiled egg are added to enhance the  flavor, color, and aroma of the dish.

I just love that stuff ! Live is Good !






” Baked Walla Walla Onion Stuffed With Chorizo & Cheese “


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No “Food Porn” here 😦
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(other than the stuff you can get anytime at home if you really want it  )
– and that ‘s usually the best ” Stuff “,  anyway.
Delicious, satisfying, exiting food. What else is there ?
Yeah, I can think of a few things, but let’s stick to food 🙂
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Bon Appetit ! Life is Good !
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” Chicken, Veggies & Potato Stew “

Skipped breakfast today, so at 11.00am, early lunch.

A friend   asked me the other day to make some stew for
him and his wife, so he’ll be happy when I show up in a while
with a steaming pot of this  🙂

Bon Appetit ! Life is Good !

 

” Sauteed Chicken Liver’s On Romaine Lettuce ”

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Tonight’s dinner, as dinner should be:

Light, tasty. fresh, “offal laden”        🙂
Enjoyed it tremendously.

Life is Good !
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” The Art Of The Snack, One Illustration At A Time “

I came across this today on  “http://www.npr.org/”  and I just had to share it.

In a food world which takes itself sometimes too serious and forget’s the pleasure
that food is supposed to give us besides nutrition, this comes across as witty,
funny, wonderfully quirky.
I just love it. Hans   🙂

Take the link to SNACK DATA and have a few (or more) moments of food delight.

Excerpt from “http://www.npr.org/&#8221; :
Next time you need some help deciding what to pick for a midday munch,
try Snack Data, a quirky, illustrated catalogue of foods. Part reference guide,
part art project, it’s the latest idiosyncratic creation of Los Angeles-based
web developer Beau Johnson. The entries are arranged by flavor, cuisine, and
type of food, making it easy to find whatever kind of snack you desire. And for foods
with more than one ingredient, the components are cross-listed to reveal
connections between foods (e.g. Spaghetti & Meatballs – see also: Spaghetti, Meatball).

As an art project, Snack Data has a primal, throw-back feel. Accompanying the
pixelated images arebits of questionable trivia and highly subjective tasting notes —
kind of like a clever middle school kid’s book report on foods from around the world,
not an authoritative reference.Johnson creates the illustrations
using Photoshop, in the blocky style of early-1990s computer games like King’s Quest.
But Johnson, 27, says it wasn’t meant to be retro.”I know it has those associations,”
he says. It’s also meant as a departure from the food photography that saturates the
Internet, he adds. For the text, Johnson pulls facts from Wikipedia or simply invents
his own, like “the hot dog bun can be thought of as an edible glove” and “taco salad
is something that happened when people in the United States got tired of eating
regular taco.” “I try to give a little bit of real background,” Johnson says,
but admits,”I don’t spend too long researching them.”Johnson has added to the
database regularly since its creation in mid-April. He’s almost done with the
primary entries, and he takesrequests through email.None of the entries are
brand-name products, although some doresemble well-known brands.
Johnson felt it was important to focus on the foods themselves.
“If you’re writing about an orange or an apple or a scallop,there’s no one to answer
for it,”he says. “You’re just kind of commenting on this thing that’s always been there.”
We’ve selected a few of Johnson’s favorites to feature in our Snack Data slideshow
above, as well as a few of our own.Naturally, we’ve included the entry on salt.

To explore the entire collection, visit snackdata.com.