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ToiletDuc's Journal


ToiletDuc's Journal

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5 entries this month
 

May I suggest the Wild Berry Blue?

22:33 Nov 19 2009
Times Read: 1,115


In one of my classes this semester, our final exam is 100% practical. No written exam at all, just cooking.



It's done kind of like Chopped, but we have more time to cook, and more time to prepare. We were each given four ingredients. We have to prepare an eight piece hors d'ourves using at least two of the ingredients, an appetizer/soup/salad using at least three of the ingredients, and an entree using at least three of the ingredients.



We had a competition the first day of class to determine who would be working as sous chef for the events we put together, and I won.



Chef decided that meant I needed more of a challenge for the final.



My ingredients are bacon, raspberries, NY strip........... and Fruit Roll-Ups.



This should be fun.



I'm thinking about doing a steak carpaccio, and rolling each piece up with a piece of Fruit Roll-Up, and putting it back in the package.



Or maybe cubes of the steak wrapped in Fruit Roll-Up, then wrapped in bacon and deep-fried.


COMMENTS

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atyourwindow
atyourwindow
22:36 Nov 19 2009

id go with the steak carpaccio, sounds yummeh!





 

Custards

04:21 Nov 10 2009
Times Read: 1,131


Creme Brulee, Creme Anglaise, Creme Caramel, Quiche Lorraine, ice cream. They're all easy, and they all use the same basic recipe.



Start with Creme Anglaise.



2 cups of dairy. You can use whole milk, cream, or a combination. Don't even think about using reduced fat milk of any type. Not only would it just be sacrilegious, it won't thicken right or set up either.



4 ounces of egg yolks. About 8 yolks from large eggs, but you're better off weighing it. A decent digital scale is your best friend, especially for baking. A cup of flour can vary in weight by over an ounce depending on how it's scooped out.



4 ounces of sugar. About half a cup.



One vanilla bean, split lengthwise, or about a teaspoon of vanilla extract.





Yep, just four ingredients.





And not much harder to make. Bring the dairy to a simmer over medium-low heat, stirring often to prevent scorching and keep a skin from forming. Add the vanilla at the beginning if you're using a whole bean, but if you're using extract add it at the end.



Add the egg yolks and sugar to a bowl and whisk until well combined and lightened a bit.



Once the dairy comes to a simmer, add a little at a time to the yolks and sugar, whisking constantly. After adding about 1/4 of the dairy, you can start adding it faster. This is just to keep the eggs from cooking before they're combined with the dairy. Add the vanilla now and mix well if you're using extract, otherwise remove the bean, scrape out the seeds, and add them back in and mix well.



What you do with it from here depends on what you want to do with it.



For Creme Anglaise or ice cream, put the bowl over a pot of simmering water and whisk constantly until thickened to desired consistency, which should be just thick enough to coat the back of a spoon and leave a clear line if you swipe your finger through across it. Chill with an ice bath, whisking a bit, then cover and put in the fridge. And you have Creme Anglaise. Use it as a dessert sauce, really good with fresh berries, or pour it into an ice cream machine and let it go for french vanilla ice cream.



For Creme Brulee, pour it into individual ramekins, it should make four, and cover with foil. Put the ramekins into a pan, fill with water to about 3/4 of the way up the ramekins, and bake at 325 for 30-45 minutes until the center has just begun to set up. Remove from the water bath, let cool, cover, and put into the fridge.



For the brulee, take them out and let them come close to room temperature before uncovering. Pour a tablespoon or two of sugar into each one, swirl around to coat the top, and pour out the excess.



Use a blowtorch to caramelize the sugar, let cool a bit, and serve.





For Creme Caramel, use 8 ounces of yolk instead of four for the base recipe. Make caramel by heating sugar in a pan until melted and caramelized. Add about a tablespoon of caramel to the bottom of each of four ramekins and put in the fridge for a few minutes until hardened. Pour in the base custard and bake just like Creme Brulee. After cooling, run a knife around the sides and invert the ramekins onto plates. The custard should come out cleanly.



For Quiche Lorraine, again use 8 ounces of yolk instead of four for the base recipe, but also leave out the sugar and vanilla and add about a teaspoon of salt. Saute bacon until crisp, add onion and saute until transparent.



Line a ring mold on a sheet pan, springform pan, or pie dish with pie crust or pate brisee and blind bake. Add the bacon and onion, pour the custard in, cover with foil, and bake in a water bath for 30-45 minutes until the center has set up. Remove, let cool for a few minutes, cut and serve.



There are infinite possibilities for variations on these. Cut the vanilla a bit, add some nutmeg and rum extract and you've got an eggnog sauce, custard, or ice cream.



Toss some chunks of day old bread into a baking dish, pour the custard base over it, and bake for bread pudding.



Skip the sugar and vanilla, cut the dairy by 1/2 a cup and add a diced red pepper and a bit of salt, and puree in a blender before adding to the eggs for a pepper custard.



Or use the same idea, but leave the sugar and a bit of the vanilla and use fruit instead of peppers.







COMMENTS

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MysticalChild
MysticalChild
15:18 Nov 10 2009

yums. you are bad for my disease



i'ma make some cream brulee and sit here with my sugar and torch and just eat the crust over and over :D~





 

Requests?

05:28 Nov 08 2009
Times Read: 1,148


I'm kind of enjoying making these little videos, it pushes me to get a little extra practice in.



If anyone has any suggestions or requests for future videos or how-to entries, let me know.


COMMENTS

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NightBlossom
NightBlossom
15:31 Nov 08 2009

Yeah, I got a request. CLEAN THE FRIGGIN KITCHEN WHEN YOU'RE DONE DESTROYING IT!





Oh and make those chicken crisper thingies.





 

Cooking vid #2

05:25 Nov 08 2009
Times Read: 1,149


This is the most efficient way to dice an onion. Forty seconds, and a fair bit of that was because the peel wanted to be difficult. Cut off the stem end, roll it over so the root end is pointing up and make one cut straight through. Then remove the peel, lay the halves cut side down and make a few horizontal cuts without cutting all the way through the root. Make vertical cuts in the same fashion, making a grid of cuts not going quite all the way through so it all holds together. Then just cut like you're taking slices off and it comes off in a nice even dice. You control the size of the dice by how far apart the vertical and horizontal cuts are.




COMMENTS

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Vampirewitch39
Vampirewitch39
14:51 Nov 08 2009

Well that might keep me from having blood in my onions. :)





 

Breaking down a chicken

22:23 Nov 07 2009
Times Read: 1,161


in three and a half minutes. A few of my knife cuts were a bit sloppy, but I wasn't going for perfection since this is mostly just to make stock.







Definitely not Martin Yan, but he's just insane.... he can break down a chicken in 18 seconds.


COMMENTS

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NightBlossom
NightBlossom
01:36 Nov 08 2009

You're insane.



For taping a video of you breaking down a chicken and putting it on youtube. Freak.





NightBlossom
NightBlossom
17:17 Nov 08 2009

PS: Chickens are gross.








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