People who cook always say that big squashes have no flavor. Baseball-bat zucchini end up in the compost every summer in many a garden. That big jack-o-lantern never really makes a pie worth eating. . .
Well, maybe that's because we don't treat them right. Squashes seem to start out from the blossom packed with flavor which gets less intense as they grow. It's like the water that helps them balloon in size dilutes that original charge to a low and disappointing voltage. I happen to have a Prodigious Pumpkin from my friend Mike at Harvest St. Louis. . .
. . . Which gives us the opportunity to practice one of the Cook's Maxims: Remove Water to Intensify Flavor.
Will it work?
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Monday, November 18, 2013
Milestone: First Appearance in Print
Work hard enough long enough in a town of this size and people will come to know you. . .
Well, that has worked for Dave Bailey anyway whose coattails I am happy to ride on. The good thing about being one of the Go-To-Guys in the Bailey's Empire is that I get assignments such as: "submit 3 recipes representing our restaurants, have them tested, typed and sent by the end of the day."
Well, that has worked for Dave Bailey anyway whose coattails I am happy to ride on. The good thing about being one of the Go-To-Guys in the Bailey's Empire is that I get assignments such as: "submit 3 recipes representing our restaurants, have them tested, typed and sent by the end of the day."
Saturday, November 9, 2013
Non-Fancy Super-Crunchy 10 Minute Granola
Yes. You can do this.
Ever check out the Vegan or Raw Foods section of the Health Food store and come across these little snack packets of uber-granola weighing 2 ounces total and costing 9 American Dollars? I saw some the other week, and I thought: "This is it. Boutique Granola costs $56 a pound. The end of the Roman Empire (take 2) is at hand."
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)