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-   -   The Home Gourmet thread (https://www.miataturbo.net/insert-bs-here-4/home-gourmet-thread-54319/)

Erat 03-06-2019 01:35 PM

You'll love it, and you'll wish it was full size. Like a regular convection oven.

Joe Perez 03-06-2019 08:40 PM

I've been eyeballing air fryers of late. Most of the situations I see them being used in seem to involve either pre-prepared foods that come in bags in the freezer section of the supermarket (pre-breaded meats, pre-cut french fries, etc.) or reheating leftovers. How do they do with things like freshly-battered tempura, where it's still wet and drippy when it goes in? This is an area of cuisine I'd like to explore more. At present, the best I can do is parchment paper placed on one of the racks in the conventional oven. (Without a baking sheet. Just paper on rack.)



Anyway, continuing the theme of "simple yet delicious."

https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...9f655b1416.png

The salmon is pan-seared on medium flame for about 4 minutes per side, with a little olive oil. No marinade. I started it skin-side-up, and lightly sprinkled a bit of garlic powder on the skin. After the flip, nothing.

The glaze on the salmon is a mix of honey, miso paste, lemon juice, lime juice, and very finely minced ginger. (In truth, I used ginger paste in a squeeze tube, as I was out of fresh ginger and didn't realize it until I went to reach for it, and I have had a tube of Gourmet Garden brand ginger paste sitting in the fridge, unopened, in case of just such an emergency, for months.) I poured it over the fish during the last few seconds in the pan, then plated the fish, then poured the pan-drippings over it.

The asparagus is just asparagus, cooked in a skillet for about 10 minutes. I made the mistake of buying frozen (as the store was out of fresh) and it came out limp and soft. First and last time I do that. Should have taken the time to drive to another store. (Seriously, why would anyone buy this product more than once? How do the companies making it stay in business?) It's topped with a mix of Greek yogurt, a little lemon juice, and Sriracha. I did a poor job (aesthetically) when applying the dollop. It was too cold, and didn't come off the spoon well. Didn't affect the flavor, but little things like that annoy me. For the second helping, I'll warm the small bowl containing the leftover in a larger bowl of hot water before dolloping it.

There were a couple of disappointments along the way, but this is still definitely a winner. The aforementioned tweaks will make it perfect next time.

Cooking is like that. Sometimes you make mistakes. You learn from them, and apply that knowledge the next time around.

SchmoozerJoe 03-06-2019 08:53 PM

Joe, convection ovens/air fryers won't work with well with those things without a few extra steps.

Namely, freeze the battered shrimp.
Then lightly toss with oil after they're frozen and into the air fryer.

The results are pretty good. I've done battered tofu and chicken before successfully doing the coat/freeze/"fry" method.

sixshooter 03-06-2019 09:13 PM

Valentina is better than sriracha, if you get a chance to try some.

SchmoozerJoe 03-06-2019 09:20 PM


Originally Posted by sixshooter (Post 1525711)
Valentina is better than sriracha, if you get a chance to try some.

Especially for durritos... and popcorn. (Pay no attention to the Tapatio. Tapatio is not the right sauce for the wagon wheels!)

https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...7c6686febe.jpg

concealer404 03-07-2019 10:19 AM

I can't think of a scenario where i'd "cross shop" Valentina and Sriracha.... Completely different sauces.

turbofan 03-07-2019 10:25 AM

Agreed. Valentina is better than Sriracha for things that Valentina tastes better with, but some things need Sriracha. Completely different flavors.

portabull 03-07-2019 12:33 PM


Originally Posted by sixshooter (Post 1525711)
Valentina is better than sriracha, if you get a chance to try some.

plus, i found valentina at walmart for $0.79.

sixshooter 03-07-2019 01:23 PM


Originally Posted by portabull (Post 1525793)
plus, i found valentina at walmart for $0.79.

Such a win.

Braineack 03-08-2019 10:10 AM

speaking of.


https://target.scene7.com/is/image/T...=488&fmt=pjpeg>https://target.scene7.com/is/image/T...=488&fmt=pjpeg

Joe Perez 03-08-2019 10:50 AM


Originally Posted by sixshooter (Post 1525711)
Valentina is better than sriracha, if you get a chance to try some.

And a 10mm socket is better than a 3/8", assuming that you're looking at a bolt with a 10mm head.

Different dishes call for different hot sauces. In my kitchen, I have two different Srirachas (Huy Fong and Fix, which is more garlicy), two Tabascos (original and smoked chipotle), Frank's Red Hot (original), Pepper Plant, and Cholula (chipotle).

Which one gets used depends upon my mood at the time, what (if anything) it's being mixed with, and what the final dish is going to look like.

You wouldn't put sriracha on a burrito, for example. That's what Cholula or Tabasco (chipotle, in either case) is for. And, likewise, you wouldn't put Tabasco into a southeast Asian dish. You pick one of the srirachas for that. Doing a Buffalo-style sauce? Frank's gets used as the base for that one.


https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.mia...4b6d36d4d2.png

Erat 03-08-2019 12:21 PM

I've for about 10 different hot sauces in my kitchen.

I should feel ashamed.

SchmoozerJoe 03-08-2019 02:14 PM


Originally Posted by Erat (Post 1525916)
I've for about 10 different hot sauces in my kitchen.

I should be proud.

Fixed that for you.

Erat 03-08-2019 03:56 PM

Thanks for not correcting the autocorrect mistake.
90% of my collection i have gotten from "hot ones".

The hot wing eating / interview youtube show.

https://heatonist.com/collections/all


The last dab reduxx is not as hot as you would think.

Edit* This one is the best. Though i haven't sampled their entire selection.
https://heatonist.com/collections/me...12102226837620

sixshooter 03-10-2019 09:25 PM

Looking for tried and true recipes for cooking octopus (not baby calamari style, but the full size 3lb adult). Please advise. Considering grilling.

z31maniac 03-11-2019 10:19 AM

El Yucateca green habanero hot sauce is also amazing.

sixshooter 03-11-2019 10:33 AM


Originally Posted by z31maniac (Post 1526157)
El Yucateca green habanero hot sauce is also amazing.

I wish it didn't have blue food coloring in it.

z31maniac 03-11-2019 11:19 AM


Originally Posted by sixshooter (Post 1526159)
I wish it didn't have blue food coloring in it.

Guessing you have an allergy to that?

EDIT: according to the almighty Reddit, they took out the food coloring around a year ago.

EDIT EDIT: Looks like a rep of the company posted and confirmed the Yellow and Blue food coloring has been removed.

sixshooter 03-11-2019 11:33 AM

Excellent. The blue gives me headaches. Same with Gatorade.

portabull 03-11-2019 01:18 PM

ooh-ooh! the "hot sauce salsa picante de chile habanero black label reserve" by el yucateco is amazing. it is not only named black label reserve, but the sauce itself is black. i put it on a sandwich from firehouse subs and enjoy.


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