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From Talk

Cranberry sauce can be good? Really? Show me how, please!

The only way I've ever liked it is the following rough recipe:

1 bag of cranberries
1 orange (flesh + zest)
a bunch of sugar (1 cup, I think).

From Serious Eats

Serious Beer Pairings: Thanksgiving Desserts

The St Bernadus Abt 12 sounds similar to the Southampton, and is pretty tasty - so that might be another alternative. Gulden Draak is another Quadrupel that I like, but it's got a much heavier kick than the St Bernardus (and presumably the Southampton).

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

My favorite is, a couple years after graduating college, my not-yet-wife and I had a potluck dinner at our apartment. We invited a bunch of people, assuming everyone would flake out. We ended up with 20+ people in a small one bedroom apartment eating, being harassed by the cats, and watching my friend's television debut (his band was on some makeover show).

From Serious Eats

The Food Lab: Turkey Stuffed Turkey

Kenji, chefRobert -

Thanks for the info - I don't have a meat grinder (yet), but at least this gives me a goal for the next time I do a turkey.

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Recent Posts

From Talk

BBQ in/around Hickory, NC?

From Talk

Butchers near Trenton/Princeton, NJ?

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Recent Comments | Response to Comments

From Talk

Cranberry sauce can be good? Really? Show me how, please!

The only way I've ever liked it is the following rough recipe:

1 bag of cranberries
1 orange (flesh + zest)
a bunch of sugar (1 cup, I think).

From Serious Eats

Serious Beer Pairings: Thanksgiving Desserts

The St Bernadus Abt 12 sounds similar to the Southampton, and is pretty tasty - so that might be another alternative. Gulden Draak is another Quadrupel that I like, but it's got a much heavier kick than the St Bernardus (and presumably the Southampton).

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

My favorite is, a couple years after graduating college, my not-yet-wife and I had a potluck dinner at our apartment. We invited a bunch of people, assuming everyone would flake out. We ended up with 20+ people in a small one bedroom apartment eating, being harassed by the cats, and watching my friend's television debut (his band was on some makeover show).

From Serious Eats

The Food Lab: Turkey Stuffed Turkey

Kenji, chefRobert -

Thanks for the info - I don't have a meat grinder (yet), but at least this gives me a goal for the next time I do a turkey.

From Serious Eats

The Food Lab: Turkey Stuffed Turkey

A question about the temperatures: I always assumed (and have read) that the 165° mark is about food safety, i.e. killing bacteria. While the turkey breast may appear 'done' at 145°, that's still a 20° margin.

Having had a bout of food poisoning (not from anything home-made, fortunately) that resulted in losing 10 lbs over Christmas one year and fever-induced hallucinations, you'll forgive me for be cautious about undercooked food.

My own preference is to either break up the turkey, or to flip it. I've never made a bird heaver than 15 lbs - and that's easy enough to flip.

From Talk

Use for pork bones?

I've also been told pork stock makes excellent french onion soup.

From Talk

Pumpkin pie Cheesecake

You could also use a no-bake "cheesecake" filling, if you know a decent recipe that will firm up enough.. Bake your pie as chiffonade suggested above, but without unsnapping the pan. Once it's chilled mix the "cheesecake" filling and pour it on top. I also second chiffonade's suggestion about the chopped nuts.

From Serious Eats

The Food Lab: Turkey Brining Basics

Thank you for pointing out the minimal role that osmosis actually has in this, and describing the actual workings of osmosis correctly - something nearly everyone on television has screwed up (even Alton Brown got it wrong on his brined turkey episode, I think... though it's been a while).

That said, I've done his brine for every turkey I've cooked in the last 5 or 6 years... and it's been awesome.

From Serious Eats

Serious Beer: Tasting Belgian Dubbels

Allagash (from Maine, I think) makes a pretty good Double as well. On the Belgian side, Corsendonk's Brown Ale is also nice.

From Talk

Cookie Spreading Panic

I've never chilled my baking sheets, but definitely my dough. Also, it does depend on the fat you're using. I know you said you followed the recipe to a tee, but you definitely didn't substitute out butter for margarine, or something of that nature?

From Talk

Cooking or Pastry classes you'd like to take

I'd love to take a general pastry class - my stuff tastes good, but I can never get a flaky crust, or one of many things that goes slightly off (but never affects the taste).

Also - cake decorating. I can use a pastry bag. Sort of. And I can get a cake iced. Sort of. But beyond the basics, I know nothing.

From Talk

Beef short rib help

You don't really need to trim them unless there are huge hunks of fat. The only thing I ever trim is the membrane on the back of the ribs, but that's only after cooking. I don't recall that specific recipe - but every recipe I've done for short ribs, that's worked, involves about 3-4 hours of cooking (simmering, smoking, etc) which renders out the fat. How long did they cook for?

You might just be getting bad ribs. You said you got these from a local farm. Is that your regular source? I've seen some short ribs that are all fat - and others that are skinny little things. The best I've found are at an H-mart (Korean supermarket chain). Local? No, but damn good. They've got a good amount of intramuscular fat, without looking like a solid block of fat.

Also, I have to ask (because my wife often reminds me of it)... are you sure you're not just used to extremely lean meat? My wife doesn't generally like fatty meat, so if even a little of the fat isn't rendered (i.e. bacon has to be CRISPY), I hear about it... so lets also make sure that your expectations aren't too out of line.

From Talk

Pages rolling down then up.... Make it stop

It's a 970x66 banner, but it's sitting out to the right of the page, instead of its proper location underneath the orange logo section.

I know these new OPA pushdown units are popular (I've made a few at work) - and you can specifically require them to only open on interaction... not automatically.

As far as the people using adblockers... sites like this are free because of advertising. Please don't block the ads on your favorite free sites.

From Talk

Poblano Chiles

First, they'll freeze perfectly well - wash, dry and toss in a ziploc bag.

Second... green chili, green salsa, and pretty much anything you'd use a bell pepper for. They're not really that spicy, so you just get a tiny kick from them.

From Serious Eats

Ed Levine's Serious Diet, Week 86: Is 200 Pounds Out of My Reach?

While charts aren't 100% accurate, I remember the chart you posted earlier accounted for various builds. Are you still 'overweight,' even if you add 10% on to the heaviest build for your size? As much as everyone like to say "I have a heavy build" or "I'm big boned," normal variations in bone density are only going to count for a couple percent of your total weight. And if you have enough muscle to really throw the chart off, you're probably not looking at the chart in the first place.

Also, the last 10-15 pounds ARE the hardest to lose. Part of it's mental - you're more prone to slacking/backsliding. Part is that, at his point especially, you need to spend as much time building muscle as doing fat burning aerobic exercising. Part is that you're probably in much better shape, and simply need to do more/harder exercise to get more benefit. The last part is the simple embedded imperative to always have a fat store against "lean times" - and you're fighting deeply imbedded behavior - even to the point of hormones telling you to eat more.

It's hard, but it's doable. But I think at this point the worst thing is to get frustrated and give up.

(Note: I am not a doctor. But I've talked with doctors and personal trainers and compiled the above information in my own quest for weight loss. Like Ed, I'm stuck... I'm at 200 lbs, down from 245 lbs, about 10 months ago. I'm 6'2", and it IS obvious that I should lose more weight. Do I need to? No. But I'm not going to stop working towards my college weight - 190 lbs).

From A Hamburger Today

Classic Sliders at White Rose System in Linden, New Jersey

Lvn -

I agree totally. The plate photo doesn't do anything for me. All of the others? I'm glad it's lunchtime soon, because I'm hungry now.

From Talk

Leftover Spareribs

They also make an excellent sleep aid if eating cold, late at night.

From Talk

BBQ in/around Hickory, NC?

Thanks Alaina - I remember seeing the BBQ Trail site, but couldn't remember the name of it to find it in Google. I was about to say that Statesville is probably too far to go (we're driving down from NJ)... but it's actually right on the way. Guess we just found a pit stop!

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Serious Barbecue' by Adam Perry Lang

Greatest grilling success story? Smoking my own bacon, then smoking a pork butt for pulled pork a couple weeks later. The wife looked at me when I was discussing future smoking/grilling plans and said, "I may die weighing 300 lbs, and if I do, you are to blame. And I mean that in the best way possible, because I will die happy and full. And probably asleep from eating too much."

I'm pretty sure she meant it to be loving/romantic.

From Recipes

Serious Heat: Roasting Chiles the Alton Brown Way

Instead of the steamer, you can also go to the grill section and look for grates or something of that nature.

@mwainer - you'll have to throw them under the broiler, turning repeatedly. it's not as easy, but it works.

From Serious Eats

Ed Levine's Serious Diet, Week 59: How Much Should I Weigh?

Ed - I'm 6'2", and am down to 210 lbs (from 235-240 in November) thanks to a martial arts class I started taking, and slightly more careful eating. Will I hit my 'ideal' weight of just south of 180 lbs? Probably not. My goal is to hit 200. If I hit 190 (my college weight), I'll be ecstatic.

But the important thing is to be happy with what I've accomplished... but to remember that I can still do better.

From Talk

Homemade liqueurs

Dissolve skittles in vodka overnight. Strain. I've never tried it myself, but friend swear it's good. Though I wouldn't use the super cheap stuff on it.

From Talk

Cheesecake dilemma!

I actually use a recipe from a Williams-Sonoma book someone bought me as a gift (only adaptations have been increasing the butter and decreasing the cooking time for the crust). There are 4 packs of cheese (I think), in a 9" (I think) pan. I can't recall time/temp specifics either, but I believe it cooks @ 350 degrees for 1 hour 15 minutes. As Jerzee said, it will jiggle, but will set once cooled. No foil tenting, water baths or temperature changes.

Puffing, I've found, is a sign of overmixing - make sure your cream cheese, eggs, and whatever else is being added to the filling is room temperature - otherwise, it will take longer to mix, and you'll incorporate more air, causing it to puff and/or crack. As soon as it's incorporated, stop mixing.

Also, take it slow when cooling - like Jerzee, I let mine cool to room temperature prior to wrapping it and putting it in the fridge.

From Talk

Ordering sushi: how much?

Also, at Morimoto's - you can simply hang on to your menu, and order more as your meal progresses. I've done this several times there, and I highly doubt they mind you spending more money on a meal, and not wasting any of the food.

From Talk

What food will you not compromise on? Even if it means mucho $$$

Beer. Other than the occasional glass of wine (even then, I go for the semi-cheap stuff), it's the only alcohol in the house that we actually drink. The other stuff is basically for cooking only (and when drinking it, even the good stuff, all I taste is alcohol).

Fish. I tend to buy cheaper cuts of meat, and the organic chickens I can buy aren't THAT much more than the Perdue/Tyson chickens... but I've noticed a huge difference in fish with texture, flavor, etc... and as much as I love Wegmans, they have way too much 'colored' fish.

Otherwise... we've found 'good enough' olive oil, vinegars, canned tomatoes, canned tuna, etc in our local shops that don't break the budget.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

My husband and I decided to start dating on Thanksgiving, so it will always be a special day to me.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

My friends and I started the tradition of having an "orphan Thanksgiving" for all of those in our circle who can't be with their families on the day. Everyone brings their own side dish of choice, so you always end up with a wide variety of flavors....everything from squash casserole to spicy rice to grape salad. Yummy!

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

As long as my parents were alive my family went to their house for Thanksgiving dinner. It was always great fun; a full day of cooking, watching the parade on tv, telling great stories, having good wine, sneaking bits of turkey in the kitchen as my father carved it. Such delightful memories. One year my kids (37 and 39 now with families of their own) who were 14 and 16 at the time were seated across the table from each other. I was seated next to my daughter, with my son directly opposite her. There was a big table surrouned by family, filled with wonderful food, loud with sounds of laughter and stories. Suddenly my 14 year old son stops smiling and looks horrified. Only my daughter and I had noticed. His hand goes up to his mouth, where he discretely removes some offending morsel. We quietly looked quizically at him and he reached slowly under the table, as did my daughter. Their hands met and he places the item into her hand. She brings her hand up to her lap and opens it and we look down discretely, only to discover bandaid that had been on my mother's finger earlier in the kitchen as she was making the dressing. To all of our credit, no one screamed. We all quietly stopped eating the dressing.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

Going over to my uncles where his wife was trying to cook a turkey for the first time. She put it in the oven still frozen and upside-down - no turkey was to be had that night....

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

Well it's not a very exiting story, but my favorite thanksgiving memory is rolling up those crescent rolls from the tube with my mom back when I was little. Those things are so good!

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

Back in my very early 20's.... My friend's mother was in the hospital, so she and I were going to cook Thanksgiving dinner for all the family and friends...

We did the dips & apps... the veggie side dishes.... turkey in the oven looking wonderful... things are all coming together at the right time and we are doing a great job!

Then somehow the rolls catch on fire while I am making the gravy... I think I have completely repressed the memory of how that happened??? All I remember is the fear that the curtains would catch next and the kitchen was going to go up.....

So there is this whole slapstick routine with the flaming rolls, the water, the smoke & steam and the floating ash... Finally we get back to business. I whip up some bisquick drop biscuits to fill the gap left by the rolls and we get dinner on the table...

It wasn't really until after everyone had plated up and put the gravy boat to work that we realized the skillet had been uncovered during our little diversion and a lot of ash had floated into the gravy.... mmmm mmmm mmm, creamy ash gravy.... a family favorite to this day....

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

The first year I knew my husband, he was a dedicated vegetarian. As soon as Thanksgiving came along and the possibility of not being able to have turkey occurred to him, he decided poultry was acceptable food.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

One Thanksgiving I did my best mise-en-place thing, loading up my kitchen counter with all the stuff I'd need to make pumpkin pie. Unfortunately, the can of pumpkin got shoved behind my cookbook stand, and the pumpkin never got included in the pie. I thought the mixture seemed a bit light in color, but all those spices cover a multitude of sins. We discovered the problem during clean up.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

In our family, the "cookers" don't have to do the cleaning....so one year my son volunteered to peel the potatoes- and thought that offset the 2 days we spent cooking, thusly no longer having to clean. Ha!

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

my first thanksgiving away from home, i decided the day before to throw together a full feast with my two university roommates (neither of whom can cook). it had all the fixings - a 12lb turkey, sweet potatoes, cranberry sauce, stuffing... everything turned out amazing and the turkey lasted less than 48 hours before we had eaten every last scrap

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

Last year I got to spend thanksgiving with my dad. It was his last. Love you dad.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

Bob Evans once sold my brother the plastic display pie instead of a real pie-and non of us realized it until we tried to cut into it! They were very happy when he called back and returned it for a real pie-apparently the fake pies are very expensive!

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

the year I was in london and ate a turkey sandwich from starbucks for my thanksgiving dinner :(

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

the first time that I was allowed to sit at the adults table for thanksgiving with the extended family, I ended up between my great-grandpa, who couldn't hear, and my uncle, who got really loud when he had a drink or two. This ended up with my uncle trying to talk to me, and my great grandpa asking "WHAT" every time I tried to answer. I shut up after about 2 minutes.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

After a painful Thanksgiving with my inlaws I decided that I would make our own family dinner. It turned out great until it was time for desert. The dog had decided she had enough of us ignoring her and jumped onto the table. Pies and whipped cream went everywhere. It was the first and last time our dog ever got on our table.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

My first Thanksgiving! I was 24 and all of my fiancee's relatives came to my tiny apartment. There were about 12 of us crammed around a card table trying to eat. The food was good, but it was hard to eat, no one could move! Aaaah the good old days!

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

One year, my sis and I decided to do a "dishwasher turkey". She had read about it, seen it in one of the numerous food shows she'd watched, etc., and we just "had to do it". So, with two other turkeys and several other types of meats being brought by the 30 some crowd expected at the Orphan's Thanksgiving (at her place that year), we attempted the dishwasher turkey. She had read that the steam from the dishwasher cycle steamed the turkey perfectly, as long as the turkey was wrapped tightly in aluminum foil. Eagerly, her husband gathered around after the cycle ended to tastle this magnificent bird. One problem... it wasn't done. Not even close, actually. So, she put it in for another round. Still not done. Time was starting to run out, so she shoved it in the oven, praying that it finished in time for dinner. It wasn't. Her husband gleefully ate from the plethora of others foods available, including two other turkeys, and was very pleased when he had a whole turkey for "leftovers" the next day. For years after, we asked her if she wanted to wash the food in the dishwasher before she cooked it. After all, one can never be too careful.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

the first Thanksgiving dinner I prepared I made two colossal mistakes: every dish was a recipe I had never made before & every recipe had some difficult prep or cooking techniques ~ it was handsdown the most streeful & exhausting cooking experience I've ever had ~ I got the meal on the table & then excused myself and took a long nap. Needless to say I learned a valued lesson ~ only one new recipe & only one dish with a difficult prep or cooking techniques per meal.

From Serious Eats

The Food Lab: Turkey Stuffed Turkey

Kenji,

The second I saw this I was a man possessed. Just a perfect way to cook turkey, makes so much sense. I ran out, bought a meat grinder and got to work on Sunday. Probably excessive, but I brined the turkey after I broke it down. Used the carcass for a stock for gravy later. Monday, I rinsed off the brine and cubed the dark meat. Tuesday, ground the meat and began my attempts to roll the breast. I had a difficult time with this step for some reason, took me 3 or 4 attempts to get this correct. I suppose if I had a thinner breast this would have been easier. I found using a more traditional tying method worked better for me than using a series of string like you did. After roasting I seared it in some rendered turkey fat. Beautiful looking roast and it tasted as good as it looked.

I only had 5 people over for Thanksgiving Eve and I got away with using one of the roasts. I have a backup for Thursday's impending doom at my friend's house.

I don't think I'll ever cook a turkey another way again. Thank you very much for the inspiration and the foolproof instructions.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

Every other Thanksgiving we visit my grandparent's ranch in south Texas. Eating the traditional dishes that my grandma makes is a great annual activity. We usually end up with lots of extended family over, including a couple that owns a vineyard and brings their wine with them. They always arrive with the air that they've been tasting it already...

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

We have a big family and cook 3 turkeys to feed the crowd. One of them is cooked outdoors since we run out of oven space. The first time I fried a turkey on my own I couldn't seem to get the oil hot enough. After a while, I finally noticed the probe wasn't far enough in the oil. After a frantic attempt to now cool down the pot (setting it on bricks in the grass and hosing the outside with water - not too smart), it finally cooled down enough and when we finally checked the bird, it was perfect.

These days I now cook the bird on my Weber. It's way more predictable!

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

Every year I grab whomever is in my unit at Dland to treat them to a Thanksgiving dinner. The reason being that for about 4 years I had to work on Thanksgiving and Xmas and know what its like trying to find somewhere to eat on that day. So it has become a tradition to invite all the guys who had to work that day and couldn't go home.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

My story is; I was born on Thanksgiving. No one had dinner that fateful day!

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

Story, story, story, story. I wish I had a good one for you. All I know is that the best food always was done by my Grandmother. Southern cooking and all. She learned from the best. Her dumplings are legendary.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Good Eats: The Early Years'

My mom made really good gravy. I think I was in second grade. I was so excited about it, I got up in front of my class and told them about it. Not much of a story unless you know my mom and her cooking repertoire.

Recent Posts

From Talk

BBQ in/around Hickory, NC?

From Talk

Butchers near Trenton/Princeton, NJ?

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About stratusgd

Website: http://www.danielboyle.net

Location: Hamilton, NJ

About: A web designer who works in NYC.

Favorite foods:

Last bite on earth: