Springtime BBQ

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Sometimes it’s funny how things work out.  Not really here, though. We just started thinking that we should introduce a new outdoor space and instead decided to fix up an underutilized one.

There’re two things you need to know about outdoor furniture. It’s expensive and, it’s generally pretty ugly. We drove around last Saturday trying to put something together searching yard sales, antique shops, and eventually ending up in Target curled up sleeping in a corner.

Then we remembered we already had a table and two chairs.  The yard sales were great to find more ceramic planters, and Target was great for more cheapo plastic ones.  We built up some legs for a couple with some wooden dowels.

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Maggie’s sister and kids were coming over Sunday and we wanted to make the space nice before that.  We’ve still gotta make our lives seem good enough that she abandons her child’s school and moves closer into the city, so we don’t have to drive as much.  We were going to grill some wrapped zucchini, artichoke spread, mushroom spread, eggplant, tomato and then eat the spiral with a blob of mozzarella.  We were jokingly calling it our Pinterest dream dinner.

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We also got some corn and decided that the kids would probably like eating chicken wings more than veggie wraps, so we got tons of wings too. Quantity seems to be key with mid-size children.

I prepped it all in a circulator. It’s nice to not have to worry about much other than getting your cheapo tiny grill as hot as possible and searing everything like crazy. Especially if you’re cooking for a crowd. I like to do corn with some of the husks, butter, and salt. I did the wings at 70C for 4ish hours, one buffalo spicy and one garlic herby. We tossed in some spices and sauce, but it got a bit diluted with the chicken juices. Next time I’d leave a little more time to make a final sauce with the cooking juices, but sometimes it’s better to cut your losses and enjoy the good weather with family.

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ON ASIAN NOT-TACOS

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They’re not on tortillas. I’m pretty sure that’s a requirement for being a taco.

It was a pretty lazy morning and I saw a video of a lady making moo shu pork. I was in the mood for pancake food, and it looked pretty easy, so I thought I’d make that for dinner. I had some other stuff to do and thought it would take about an hour for an informal dinner we were hosting. Then I saw another video where people were eating yakitori and started thinking about chicken wings.

So I ditched the moo shu pork and decided to make a vaguely asian tacoish dinner instead. I thought I’d bone out some chicken wings, layer them with thai basil and glue them together into a vaguely rectangular block to slice off onto the pancakes. Add leeks, jalapeno, and kimchi. Use the chicken bones to make a stock. Mix some dashi stock that with the chicken stock and reduced into a sauce. Ideally, I’d have liked to set the chicken block overnight and then cook in the reduced dashi sauce, but I didn’t have time and had to let it set in the circulator instead.

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It took a bit of time to debone the three pounds of chicken. I’m hardly an expert at this, but by the end I was getting pretty quick. Chop out the cartilidge from the connected end of the wing bones, run the knife through one side of the skin along the smaller bone, unfold, then run the knife around the bone by the meat and spin it out. Attempt to repeat for the other side. I don’t think I had much of a strategy for the drumsticks. Just try to make the meat as much like rectangular sheets as you can.

Then start to layer wings. I tried to keep skin sides on the top and bottom. Just layer, dust with activa rm, layer, dust, etc. I think I ended up with 5 layers of chicken. Hopefully you’ve got bags bigger than I do. Getting the chicken rectangle into the bag was a pain. I considered tubing it and slicing it on a bias. That may be easier. Mine went straight into a bag and into the circulator at 70C. Yours should go into the fridge overnight.

Put the bones go into a bag with some water, then into a 70C water bath for as long as you can stand, preferably 6 hours. After 6 hours, make a dashi stock. Soak kombu, simmer for 10 minutes, add bonito, strain. Strain chicken stock and mix with dashi, about 50/50. Add soy sauce, mirin, rice vinegar, liquid smoke to taste. Reduce by ~80%. Store in fridge.

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About an hour and a half before serving, start to make the pancakes. I followed the method from here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ge03lCabmZM. Get four cups AP flour in a bowl. Add two cups boiling water and stir. Add cold water until dough comes together. Let rest one hour. Roll dough into a tube and roll out half dollars. Coat one side in sesame oil and roll out. You will cook them in sets of two. Get a pan fairly hot and they’ll take about a minute. Just enough time to roll the next one.

Heat a water bath to 70C. Cut open your chicken bag and reseal with half the sauce. Cook for 6 hours.

Once the chicken block is done, sear the hell out of it on your hottest pan. Let rest while you prep the leek and jalapenos.

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I used a Rene Redzepi technique to cook the leek and jalapeno. I think I saw it on that David Chang TV show. Slice a leek and a jalapeno in half. Get a heavy skillet as hot as you can. Add sesame oil and cook until black. It should take less than a minute. You want to burn the outside but leave the insides mostly raw. Then seal the vegetables in a bag or in a quart container or something for about 10 minutes. They will continue to steam and cook themselves the rest of the way, making them right on the edge of raw and cooked but still with a nice charred taste. I’ve had pretty great luck with doing vegetables like this.

Slice up the vegetables, cut slices of the chicken and layer onto pancakes. Add kimchi and sauce. Serve with some sriracha.

These were crazy good. All of us were licking our plates. The chicken turned out great., the thai basil really seasoned it well. I got the feeling that I got from eating a pork bun for the first time, where I was worried about running out after the first bite. These were enough to make me dream about making a tacoish shop next.

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We had a lot of pancakes left over, so we decided to make a mushroom stuffing for them.

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Shittake mushrooms, butter, onions, spices, 75C for an hour or so.

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This is mainly here because I like this picture.  It looks like a Rorschach test.

 

ASIAN NOT-TACOS
 
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
 
Author:
Recipe type: Entree
Cuisine: asian
Serves: 24
Ingredients
  • 3 lb chicken wings
  • 1 bunch thai basil
  • sprinkles of activa rm - meat glue
  • 1 leek
  • 2 jalapenos
  • some kimchi
  • about 4"x4" Kombu
  • ½ cupish bonito
  • 2 T soy sauce
  • 2 T mirin
  • 1 t rice vinegar
  • 1-3 drops liquid smoke
  • 4 cups AP flour
  • 2 cups boiling water
  • 2 cupsish cold water
  • sriracha
Instructions
Day One
  1. debone chicken wings
  2. layer ⅕ of wing meat into rectangle, skin side out
  3. sprinkle activa onto chicken with a strainer and layer in thai basil
  4. repeat layers until you run out of chicken
  5. put chicken into vacuum bag, or wrap tightly in saran wrap. you want to compress it together
  6. put in fridge overnight
  7. take chicken bones and seal in vacuum bag, or ziploc bag
  8. cook in circulator at 70c for 6 hours
  9. simmer kombu in water for 10 minutes
  10. take off heat, add bonito, let sit 10 minutes then strain
  11. strain bones from chicken stock
  12. mix stocks, add soy sauce, mirin, rice vinegar, and liquid smoke to taste as you reduce by 80%
  13. put in fridge
Day Two
  1. cut open your chicken block and reseal with about half the sauce
  2. cook for 6 hours at 70C
  3. watch that youtube video on how to make these
  4. put AP flour into a bowl
  5. add two cups boiling water and stir
  6. add cold water until dough comes together
  7. let rest one hour
  8. roll dough into tube and cut half dollars
  9. roll out and do the sesame oil sandwich thing
  10. cook in hot pan for about 1 minute, then separate
  11. reserve in oven
  12. cut jalapeno and leek down the middle
  13. sear jalapeno in very hot pan with sesame oil until blackened
  14. seal leek and jalapeno in tupperware or vacuum bag
  15. once the chicken block is finished, sear the outside of it
  16. slice up leeks and jalapenos
  17. put a slice or two of chicken block onto flour shell
  18. put some sliced up jalapeno and leek
  19. put on some kimchi
  20. drizzle some sauce
  21. drizzle some sriracha
Notes
I made these a while ago, and kept track of what I did and what ingredients I used, but not specific amounts of things especially for the sauce, so use your best judgement on some of it.

ON THE WARM ISLAND BREEZE (French Fry Test 2)

IMG_4608-Edit-thumbsI have a hard time with tropical cooking. That feeling of fear when you know you’re intentionally leaving the burger on the griddle too long. Cause, there’s nothing more tropical than burned food. You’ve gotta time it right though or that shit gets gross. Plop some pineapples on it and you’re in the tropics. Great way to pass winter. I prefer to eat mine in front of a fan with a space heater and a humidifier behind it, with Men at Work blasting. I call it the warm island breeze

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