Author Topic: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)  (Read 10050 times)

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Offline 1995hoo

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Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Topic Start: January 02, 2018, 02:29:43 PM »
Past iterations of this thread:

2009–12—http://www.wnff.net/index.php?topic=16296.0
2013—http://www.wnff.net/index.php?topic=30248.0
2014—http://www.wnff.net/index.php?topic=30500.0
2015—http://www.wnff.net/index.php?topic=32185.0
2016—http://www.wnff.net/index.php?topic=33647.0
2017—http://www.wnff.net/index.php?topic=34849.0



I'm starting the thread with a question in the "how you cook it" category. I got an e-mail from a magazine to which I subscribe with the subject line "5 Kitchen Items Worth the Splurge During Williams Sonoma’s Pick One Sale." The message contains a link to the following article: http://www.cookinglight.com/healthy-living/home/the-best-finds-williams-sonoma-pick-one-sale

The part that interested me was a reference to the Instant Pot Duo60 7-in-1 unit being on sale for $79.99 (viewing it on Williams Sonoma's website, it lists the product for $99.95 instead of $200, but the article linked above says to enter code "UPICK" at checkout for an additional 20% off, which would get you to $79.99). I've heard about the Instant Pot but don't know much about it. We already have a seven-quart All-Clad slow cooker, but from what I understand the Instant Pot is to be used for faster cooking and can do more things. Does anyone have one? If so, what do you think about it? Would you recommend it and what do you typically use it for? (Of course I would also have to figure out where to store the thing. Maybe if I donate our cast-iron tagine to the Salvation Army it might free up space.)

Thanks in advance.

Offline dracnal

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #1: January 02, 2018, 02:46:32 PM »
Past iterations of this thread:

2009–12—http://www.wnff.net/index.php?topic=16296.0
2013—http://www.wnff.net/index.php?topic=30248.0
2014—http://www.wnff.net/index.php?topic=30500.0
2015—http://www.wnff.net/index.php?topic=32185.0
2016—http://www.wnff.net/index.php?topic=33647.0
2017—http://www.wnff.net/index.php?topic=34849.0



I'm starting the thread with a question in the "how you cook it" category. I got an e-mail from a magazine to which I subscribe with the subject line "5 Kitchen Items Worth the Splurge During Williams Sonoma’s Pick One Sale." The message contains a link to the following article: http://www.cookinglight.com/healthy-living/home/the-best-finds-williams-sonoma-pick-one-sale

The part that interested me was a reference to the Instant Pot Duo60 7-in-1 unit being on sale for $79.99 (viewing it on Williams Sonoma's website, it lists the product for $99.95 instead of $200, but the article linked above says to enter code "UPICK" at checkout for an additional 20% off, which would get you to $79.99). I've heard about the Instant Pot but don't know much about it. We already have a seven-quart All-Clad slow cooker, but from what I understand the Instant Pot is to be used for faster cooking and can do more things. Does anyone have one? If so, what do you think about it? Would you recommend it and what do you typically use it for? (Of course I would also have to figure out where to store the thing. Maybe if I donate our cast-iron tagine to the Salvation Army it might free up space.)

Thanks in advance.

Yes, it's worth picking up, especially at that price. I got my wife one last year and it has seen much use. Aside from cooking things like pork shoulder to pull apart tender in 45 minutes, I used it to make a from scratch cheesecake. Basically, it's very versatile and is good for a lot of one pot meals, faster cooks for things like pork shoulder, pot roast, etc., and, several additional functions like making rice, ice cream, or steaming things.

Offline UMDNats

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #2: January 02, 2018, 02:50:53 PM »
Woah, that thing seems awesome. I cook rice and use my slow-cooker a ton and space is at a premium in my house so having one appliance can do both would be amazing.

Offline imref

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #3: January 02, 2018, 02:58:25 PM »
i've had an Instant Pot Duo 7:1 for the last 2 years or so, I used it at least 3 times a week.  I can't recommend it strongly enough.  Be sure to get onto the Facebook group which I believe is now at about 600k, members.  You'll find lots of good tips/tricks/recipes.

If you don't do facebook, start with the included cookbook or just google Instant Pot recipes, there are dozens of sites now.  This one is my favorite: https://www.hippressurecooking.com

Offline UMDNats

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #4: January 02, 2018, 03:19:42 PM »
The InstantPot is back-ordered until March 27, 2018. can't believe other people want a good product. :lmao:

Offline imref

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #5: January 02, 2018, 03:41:39 PM »
The InstantPot is back-ordered until March 27, 2018. can't believe other people want a good product. :lmao:

I read a few days ago that they were one of the top selling items on Amazon this past Christmas season.

Offline 1995hoo

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #6: January 07, 2018, 08:50:34 AM »
Have not yet gotten the Instant Pot, but Williams-Sonoma's website doesn't list them as backordered.

Meanwhile, my wife found the recipe linked below yesterday. We skipped the salmon part because we had had salmon Friday night and didn't want to go to the store to buy more, so I thawed a pound of shrimp and made just the shrimp. Instead of the seasoning blend listed here, since the recipe referred to it as "Cajun" I used five teaspoons of a Penzey's Spices Cajun blend my brother gave us for Christmas. Came out great. The shrimp had some nice flavor but were not ragin' Cajun hot. We had it with orzo (search the 2017 thread if you want my recipe for creamy orzo) and it was really good. The thing I'd add next time is some bread to mop up the Cajun sauce. I had some bread but the missus said to save it for today or tomorrow.

Here is the full shrimp (and salmon) recipe—we simply skipped the salmon part and reduced the amount of butter accordingly: https://www.lecremedelacrumb.com/salmon-new-orleans/

Offline 1995hoo

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #7: January 15, 2018, 12:40:59 PM »
With the day off, I'm braising a pork shoulder in milk in the slow cooker (will post recipe later). The braising liquid goes in a blender and then gets boiled with some cornstarch and water to make a sauce; we're going to have orzo on the side. Anyone got any wine pairing ideas? I used half a cup of Pinot Grigio to deglaze the pan, but I think that would be too light to stand up to the meal. I just looked downstairs to see what wines we have (see below) and the only one I think might go (emphasis on "might") would be the Cabernet Franc, but I'm concerned that might clash with the milk-based sauce. I'm thinking this might call for a run to the store for something like Chardonnay, Riesling, or Pinot Noir. Any thoughts? The cookbook does not suggest wine pairings with anything.

We currently have:

Two bottles of Beaujolais Nouveau (one of those is for Cornish game hens this Wednesday; we could try the other with pork but I thought it'd likely be overpowered)
Five bottles of Bishop Shiraz (too rich and heavy for pork)
Two different Josh Cabernet Sauvignons someone gave us for Christmas (doesn't seem to match the sauce)
One bottle of Gervasi Vineyards "Abbaraccio" Cabernet Sauvignon (saving that to go with steak sometime)
One bottle of Fox Meadow Chambourcin (saving that for chili on Super Bowl Sunday)
One bottle of Fox Meadow Cabernet Franc (all we have left)

We have no whites, oddly.

So I guess it's between the Beaujolais Nouveau, the Cab Franc, or something from the store. Any ideas? Thanks in advance.

Offline Mathguy

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #8: January 15, 2018, 01:30:21 PM »
Shoo - that's why I drink beer

Offline 1995hoo

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #9: January 15, 2018, 01:39:54 PM »
Shoo - that's why I drink beer

Works for me, but that won't help the missus! She drinks beer only after finishing a round of golf.

Offline skippy1999

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #10: January 15, 2018, 02:33:24 PM »

 Any ideas? Thanks in advance.

We need a way to tag people, this is a job for dcpatti. 

Offline dcpatti

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #11: January 15, 2018, 03:30:05 PM »
Lol you rang?

I’d drink the cab franc unless it’s a really big oaky one.

Offline imref

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #12: January 15, 2018, 03:49:56 PM »
Lol you rang?

I’d drink the cab franc unless it’s a really big oaky one.

I watched Sideways again last night for the 15th time.  Always go with a Pinot Noir.

Offline tomterp

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #13: January 15, 2018, 04:24:48 PM »

So I guess it's between the Beaujolais Nouveau, the Cab Franc, or something from the store. Any ideas? Thanks in advance.

I think that's a correct assessment.  Light red would be my direction.  Avoid the cab sauvs as you'd already surmised.  Pinot noir if you go out shopping.

Offline Ali the Baseball Cat

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #14: January 15, 2018, 04:53:07 PM »
MD20/20 has a nice choice of colours  :P

Offline 1995hoo

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #15: January 15, 2018, 05:05:02 PM »
Thanks to all. We went to Total Beverage and wound up picking up a Dolcetto d'Alba based in part on the idea that the recipe supposedly comes from Bologna, so an Italian wine seemed in order. I'll comment back later about how it turns out.

Meanwhile, here's the recipe:

1/4 cup olive oil
2 Tbsp chopped fresh sage
2 cloves garlic
1 tsp kosher salt
1/2 tsp black pepper
1/4 tsp red pepper flakes
Zest of 1 lemon
1 boneless pork loin roast or pork shoulder roast (2-1/2 to 3 lb), trimmed of as much fat and silverskin as feasible
2 Tbsp unsalted butter
1/2 cup dry white wine
2 cups whole milk*
1 Tbsp cornstarch
1 Tbsp cold water
Salt and black pepper to taste

Purée oil, sage, garlic, kosher salt, black pepper, red pepper flakes, and zest in a food processor; coat pork with mixture.

Sear pork in butter in a sauté pan over medium heat until browned on all sides, about 5 minutes.

Deglaze pan with wine; cook until liquid is reduced by half.

Pour milk into a slow cooker; add pork and deglazing liquid. Cover; cook until pork is fork-tender, 4–5 hours on high heat or 6–7 hours on low heat. Remove pork and keep it warm.

Purée sauce until smooth**; transfer to a saucepan. Bring sauce to a boil. Dissolve cornstarch in water; add to sauce. Boil sauce 30 seconds; season with salt and pepper to taste.

Slice pork; serve with sauce. Garnish servings with sage sprigs, if desired.

*Be sure to use whole milk—2% milk or lesser kinds are too thin.

**They recommend using a handheld stick blender for this step. We don't have one, so I'm going to pour it into the regular blender. That might be awkward, so I may set the blender itself (not the base, of course) in the sink in case of a spill. Or I may pour it into the two-litre Pyrex measuring cup and then use that to put it in the blender. As I type it, I think that second method may be best.

Offline imref

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #16: January 15, 2018, 05:13:36 PM »
i might give that a shot in the instant pot.  A loin would cook in about 45 minutes.

Offline 1995hoo

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #17: January 15, 2018, 05:17:35 PM »
i might give that a shot in the instant pot.  A loin would cook in about 45 minutes.

If you do, let us know how it turns out. The slow cooker is fine on a day off like today, but it's a little more of a hassle during the week because I'd have to get up half an hour earlier to brown the meat and start the slow cooker before getting ready to head off to work. I still haven't bought the Instant Pot because of other things that are higher priorities.

Offline 1995hoo

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #18: January 15, 2018, 07:36:42 PM »
Following up, it was outstanding. Wine went very well. The meat had the texture of pot roast and looked like barbecue when cut. We will make this one again.

Offline imref

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #19: January 15, 2018, 10:15:00 PM »
Following up, it was outstanding. Wine went very well. The meat had the texture of pot roast and looked like barbecue when cut. We will make this one again.

Good to hear.  I'll let you know when I try it in the IP.  I just picked up a couple of pork loins from Costco over the weekend.

Tonight's IP meal was this: https://sweetandsavorymeals.com/instant-pot-mongolian-chicken/ with a side of brown rice and some broccoli.  Family loved it.  It took about 10 minutes to prep and 25 to cook (5 minutes to get up to pressure, 10 minutes cook time, and 10 minutes natural cool down before manual pressure release).

Offline JCA-CrystalCity

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #20: January 17, 2018, 09:16:29 AM »
https://www.boston.com/news/food/2018/01/16/dunkin-donuts-quincy-concept-store

cue the evil empire star wars theme.

Good to see Blades, Pat, Lucky, and Cuppy just hanging out, stuffing their whatevers with donuts. 

The taps for the cold drinks look like what Commonwealth Joe's has for its nitro cold brews as well as drip coffee (not unique in industry, just among the big players). They are pushing areas for mobile picks ups inside and in the drive through.  2 lane drive through, 2 pick up windows. 

Offline imref

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #21: January 17, 2018, 10:03:05 AM »
https://www.boston.com/news/food/2018/01/16/dunkin-donuts-quincy-concept-store

cue the evil empire star wars theme.

Good to see Blades, Pat, Lucky, and Cuppy just hanging out, stuffing their whatevers with donuts. 

The taps for the cold drinks look like what Commonwealth Joe's has for its nitro cold brews as well as drip coffee (not unique in industry, just among the big players). They are pushing areas for mobile picks ups inside and in the drive through.  2 lane drive through, 2 pick up windows. 

I grew up on DD in New York and much prefer their coffee to Starbucks.  However a new DD opened near my home a few weeks ago.  I've tired it twice and both times the coffee was really weak.  The donuts aren't all that good, especially compared to Duck Donuts a mile or so away.  Back home the made the donuts in the store, those days are largely gone now.

Offline imref

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #22: January 17, 2018, 07:28:08 PM »
This is next up on the must cook list:

https://www.177milkstreet.com/recipes/chiang-mai-chicken

Offline tomterp

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Re: Food and How You Cook/Eat It (2018)
« Reply #23: January 17, 2018, 08:54:57 PM »
I grew up on DD in New York and much prefer their coffee to Starbucks. 

Have you tried Starbucks' "blonde" offerings?  Lightweight swill for DD fans, sort of entry level for real coffee.    :poke:    :P

It does sort of fill that niche, in truth.  I have a friend for whom DD is as rough as he goes and for me it's the last step down before Starbucks Via Packs are a better option.  Have you tried?


Offline Mathguy

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