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Showing content with the highest reputation on 04/20/2024 in all areas

  1. The brassero is good for long/big cooks, especially if (like me) you're not good at estimating how much wood you'll need. I like my grill design over Santa Maria store grills since the high back and sides help block the wind while the fold-down front makes it easier to play with the fire and is handy for cleaning ash out. I'm not sure how much heat retention is helped by the fire brick since I've not cooked without them, but the grill definitely holds heat well. The tilted Argentinian-style grates are nice but do make grilling hot dogs more difficult! This is still my favorite way to cook.
    4 points
  2. made some sauteed carabineros sauced in its own head fat and a5 yakitori's. the taste of these prawns is out of this world. it comes pre-seasoned from the sea, meaning you don't need any salt...
    3 points
  3. Had some family over for dinner tonight. Cranked out a Bistecca Fiorentina for the adults (each steak around 900gram)… sausages and burgers for the kids. Made some home made chips, salad, some no-knead bread… amazing. Everyone happy.
    2 points
  4. Yippee. Vaccuum sealing and fermenting chillis do go together, radically reducing the risk of taste tainting yeasts. So, there is a West African restaurant in London called Ikoyi and they have this recipe for fermenting chillis: Lacto-fermented scotch bonnet chillies (makes 400g) 500g scotch bonnet chillies, halved and deseeded 10g fine salt Mix the chillies and salt in a large vacuum-seal bag and toss well to distribute the salt. Make sure the chillies are evenly spaced out in a single layer. Seal the bag on full and leave to ferment for seven days at 24-28°C (75-82°F). If the bag has expanded too far, “burp” out the air by making a small incision and then reseal. Once the chillies have reached a sour, fragrant and meaty flavour profile, store them in an airtight container in the fridge and use within two months. I have tried it out and got these: They are tasty fermented scotch bonnet chillis that you can eat, sparingly, with your food. Their book also has a recipe for a hot sauce which will use these fermented scotch bonnets as an ingredient but you first have to ferment some blended chillis (I used longer, less hot chillis for this) for a couple of weeks. Watch this space. I am hoping for a delicious fermented sauce at the end of all of this.
    1 point
  5. First I must compliment Jeff for the great pics and display for what his grill is capable of...good show and that's an understatement. On the flip side though I use mine for much smaller cooks or I'll have the Kamado helping me with another entree'. When I first started out looking I had in mind something smaller, versatile and capable of doing it all. I use wood, lump coal and briquettes depending on what I'm preparing, but generally I'm tossing in wood over the top in moderate amounts because my roof line is close & made of a polycarbonate overlap. I only use on most occasions one or two grate sections or a small fire centered below when using the roto, on some occasions I've used both...however nothing like Jeff is doing although if he'd let me borrow it for a weekend I know I'd love it too. So here are a couple of pics, they're self explanatory but show the roto and coal bed grate on mine, sorry I should have done so beforehand. So, they all acomplish the task, they get you to the finish line, just in different ways.
    1 point
  6. Thanks @jeffshoaf for the intel and pic’s! Do you use a cover to keep rain out? Looks like it’s under some structure. You mention it’s your favorite to cook with. Is your KK primarily reserved for the long and slow smokes?
    1 point
  7. I've not made it from true scratch, but I buy the Wagyu tallow online then cold smoke it in the KK. Lots of uses - like cooking potatoes (looking at you @tekobo) and slathering it on steaks instead of butter! And, it's "original purpose" - to smear on briskets when you wrap them in the pink butcher paper - ala Franklin BBQ.
    1 point
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