Originally posted by teamsaint
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Poulet au riz basquais - another recipe from E. David, which I've never tried before.
Chicken pieces (rather than the whole chicken, as directed). Sautéed with onion and a spicy pork sausage, then some water and soaked porcini, garlic, thyme, bay and left to simmer. Later, sauté strips of red pepper, add tomatoes (chopped), oregano, and when cooked but not pulpy add some paprika. Boil/steam the rice, place in an earthenware serving dish, ladle out some gravy from the chicken stew, place the chicken (sliced if you've used a whole one) and sausage atop the rice and ladle the red mixture around it.
I consulted on the spicy sausage and was told (with great authority) that I would need raw sausage rather than saucisson sec which would be very hard. As it was raw chorizo, I thought that was close enough for Basque (oops, politics!), but when I got it home I discovered the country of origin was ... Wales. In fact, in prehistoric times it is thought that there were migrations from the Iberian peninsula to Wales. So that's all right, then. Should make three helpings (i.e. three days, and maybe a soup) at £2-£3 pounds per helping - I forgot to take my receipt to study the exact cost.
If you hear no more, it won't have been very nice. Just don't ask.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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amateur51
Originally posted by french frank View PostPoulet au riz basquais - another recipe from E. David, which I've never tried before.
Chicken pieces (rather than the whole chicken, as directed). Sautéed with onion and a spicy pork sausage, then some water and soaked porcini, garlic, thyme, bay and left to simmer. Later, sauté strips of red pepper, add tomatoes (chopped), oregano, and when cooked but not pulpy add some paprika. Boil/steam the rice, place in an earthenware serving dish, ladle out some gravy from the chicken stew, place the chicken (sliced if you've used a whole one) and sausage atop the rice and ladle the red mixture around it.
I consulted on the spicy sausage and was told (with great authority) that I would need raw sausage rather than saucisson sec which would be very hard. As it was raw chorizo, I thought that was close enough for Basque (oops, politics!), but when I got it home I discovered the country of origin was ... Wales. In fact, in prehistoric times it is thought that there were migrations from the Iberian peninsula to Wales. So that's all right, then. Should make three helpings (i.e. three days, and maybe a soup) at £2-£3 pounds per helping - I forgot to take my receipt to study the exact cost.
If you hear no more, it won't have been very nice. Just don't ask.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostSounds very tasty french frank and colourful too. Yum!
Anyway, a critique of the poulet au riz basquais: Yesterday, it was fine, with the Welsh chorizo giving it a bit of a kick. But on the whole I'd say this isn't a dish that reheats very well (unlike the daube or ribollita) so my chances of eking it out for 3-4 meals are zero ...
I reheated it in the oven, and the plus (for me) was that the rice was not as wet (I'm not keen on risotto), more fluffy and dry
But I ate as much of the chicken and sauce as possible because I didn't fancy reheating it again. I also ate as much rice as I could eat - so toast and jam for supper. The rest had to go in the compost bin, but rice is cheap even in Bangladesh.
I am left (unaccountably) with some of the original stock which I wasn't sure how to incoporate, and some tomato/red pepper sauce, which will go in a new pasta dish with diced pancetta. Oh, yes - and prosecco isn't the ideal accompaniment - a nice strong rioja would have done better, but I didn't have any.
I may have to rethink this recipe.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostPasta, pesto, parmesan & extra garlic!
Edit: Wot no meat?I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostNot yet, but it will be roast monkfish with roast red, yellow & green peppers with oregano, cream & wine sauce. Probably accompanied by potatoes sauteed with rosemary
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostNot yet, but it will be roast monkfish with roast red, yellow & green peppers with oregano, cream & wine sauce. Probably accompanied by potatoes sauteed with rosemary
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostSounds lovely, but maybe next time bake the monfkish instead of roasting it and park the oregano
So, while roasting and baking are almost identical methods of dry heat cooking, the terms roasting and baking apply to two different kinds of foods. You generally roast food that has structure already, solid foods such as meats and vegetables. You generally bake foods that don’t have much structure until they are baked: cakes, breads, pies, casseroles, crème brulee, etc.
In other words, you bake leavened items – items that “puff up” or “rise” during the cooking process. In baking, aside from just “cooking” the food, the goal is to either create steam or expand air pockets within the target food.
Most foods that we roast contain less “empty space” than foods that we bake. These foods are, by and large, already solid. The primary goal of roasting then becomes transferring heat from the surface of the food to the interior at a regulated pace to ensure crusty goodness outside and juicy, tender doneness inside.
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From your link, this bit is key ".........The primary goal of roasting then becomes transferring heat from the surface of the food to the interior at a regulated pace to ensure crusty goodness outside and juicy, tender doneness inside."
Let's not forget that this is not an exact science!
But, I suppose that if one wanted monkfish with a crusty exterior, then go ahead and roast it. You could set the temperature extremely high, and get it all nice and golden brown and crispy here and there on the outside, and juicy on the inside.
Going full-circle, my advice is to bake monkfish, not sod-about roasting it!
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