Post by Brian Reay<trimmed for brevity>
Post by Fruitiest of FruitcakesPost by Brian ReayI'm a great fan of stews/casseroles etc and shredded meat in those is
fine. I do eat things like a 'proper' steak but the idea of a huge
steak doesn't appeal. At my Club, I often ask for a half serving and
sometimes that is a tad too much. Nothing to do with quality (which is
excellent- it is essentially a dining club)- I just struggle to eat a
huge chunk of meat. As for chicken or turkey, while I like it in some
ways, a 'chunk' of chicken/turkey breast is one of my least favourite
ways to eat meat. Cut the same amount up in a casserole / stew / stir
fry.... and I'd love it.
As for 'liquid' - ie sauce (posh gravy as someone once called it), I
always ensure there is plenty.
I know exactly what you mean about large chunks of meat. They are rather
off-putting.
Restaurant steaks always put me off, and yet many people regard those as
the best thing on the menu.
I enjoy the occasional steak, even a large one (by my standards but not
by others) but it is rarely the first thing I look for on a menu.
'Senior Management' does like her steaks so we try to find somewhere
with a decent range of dishes. We both like fish and we have a couple of
favourite fish places- one in Whitstable harbour and another in Brighton
(one of our motorhoming haunts). Of course, when we visit France,
finding good places is far easier.
I remember eating in a fish restaurant in Whitstable harbour; maybe it was
the same one?
I can’t remember what we had, but it was not oysters which were
something like £1 each.
There are lots of good restaurants in Brighton. My favourite used to be a
large Italian place with a really laid back atmosphere where we could take
the children and not think they were being ’tutted’ at by pensioner or
snobby diners.
My eldest daughter is coeliac and until the recent gluten-free craze,
Brighton was one of the few towns where there was a decent choice of
restaurants we could go to, and take the grandchildren. The Curry Leaf in
The Lanes was her favourite.
Post by Brian ReayPost by Fruitiest of FruitcakesFor chicken/turkey I have always enjoyed the leg meat. I think it tastes
better and if the bird has been cooked properly, the thigh part of the leg
will not have dried out.
There we differ. Leg meat is very much second best in my view and tends
to go in either things like stews ('fancy ones' perhaps) or for soup.
Even stir fry demands white meat.
It is strange how tastes differ from person to person.
Post by Brian ReayI stumbled across a recipe for 'fake' Peking Duck using left over Turkey
(it would work with chicken or duck etc I'm sure) and is ideal for the
'little bits' that are left over, as you need shreds. I'd picked up
several bottles of Hosin sauce (much to Senior Managements annoyance, I
see things and think "I'm sure that will be useful." and buy lots, then
she has to find somewhere to store it! Anyway, you coat the (cooked)
meat in Hosin sauce, spread it on a lightly oiled oven tray, and pop in
the oven at, say 180 (Fan) for about 30mins until done to how you want
it. Give it a turn or two. Serve as usual with pancakes, spring onions
etc. You can get pancakes in a Chinese / Eastern supermarket- a local
one to us has frozen ones.
I am trying to perfect my own duck chow mien, as close to the take away
style as possible.
I make my own sauce, but it is getting the quantities right which is the
hard part. I combine dark and light soy sauce, rice wine, oyster sauce,
fish sauce and Chinese five spice powder with a little cornflower mixed in
water.
I’m almost there (well at least to my taste) but a slight change in each
ingredient to the sauce affects the finished product.
The cornflour is only there to thicken at the last minute, and coat the
stir fry ingredients rather than just boiling them.
Post by Brian ReayPost by Fruitiest of FruitcakesThe nice thing is that when the foil parcel is opened, there are all the
cooking juices which I add to the gravy.
I often cook joints in a foil parcel, at least initially, saving the
juices to make the gravey etc.
That is my preferred way now. I know it is not technically roasting, but
it bastes itself which saves a lot of effort on my part, and it doesn’t
dry out. For pork, I cut the skin off with as much fat as I can, and do
that separately as crackling.