...especially if you don't sedate the poor thing first!Amy wrote:Please tell me you are kidding about inflating the duck with an air compressorThat sounds like an awful step for a cooking process

Kidding....

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...especially if you don't sedate the poor thing first!Amy wrote:Please tell me you are kidding about inflating the duck with an air compressorThat sounds like an awful step for a cooking process
Amy wrote:If you ever share recipes, I wouldn't mind having both the pizza recipesWizzard419 wrote:The cheese used in stuffed chicken are mozzarella and ricotta, I think I will use more mozz and more crust on top next time since it wasn't as gooey as I've had in the past. For spices I used just basil and oregano, and the sauce is served on the side rather than inside (to keep it from getting soggy).
You don't taste the coffee as much when it's in the rub, the pizza uses bbq sauce on the crust rather than tomato and I used straight mozz on it but you can also mix in cheddar.
I get the purple mangosteen at the asian market. It doesn't taste like chocolate at all, with cacao plants there is fruit (similar to that) on the inside and it tastes sweet and so forth, but not like chocolate in any way. They cut the pods open, dump out the seeds and fruit, let them ferment for a while, then ship them to candymakers to be roasted, cracked to get the nibs out, grind the nibs and eventually make chocolate.
You don't need to cook mangosteens, they just look that way on the outside because of their tropical climate.
Thanks for the explanation on the mangosteen. I will have to check that out sometime and see if I can find them...maybe in Chicago's Chinatown on my next trip through...
Oh ~ I don't know that I have ever done a dry rub so I didn't realize it didn't take much....Wizzard419 wrote:Not really, it has a little but you have to remember that a batch does like 4 slabs of babyback ribs.
Interesting take on a rub. I don't use any sugar in mine. Actually I have a few different I use depending on the meat and what method of cooking I'm using. The Old Bay Seasoning is interesting.Wizzard419 wrote:Here is the dry rub rec.
Dry Rub:
8 tablespoons light brown sugar, tightly packed
3 tablespoons kosher salt
1 tablespoon chili powder
1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/2 teaspoon blackening seasoning
1/2 teaspoon Old Bay Seasoning
1/2 teaspoon rubbed thyme (any dried thyme works)
1/2 teaspoon onion powder
You apply this liberally to your baby back ribs, pork shoulder, etc. (you can save any extra), place it in a pan, add beer (or other liquid) and seal it up with foil or a lid (if using a dutch oven) and braise in a 250 degree oven for a few hours (until done) then you can throw it on the grill to get some smoke flavor in it as well.
Out of curiosity, could you substitute honey for some/all of the brown sugar?Wizzard419 wrote:Here is the dry rub rec.
Dry Rub:
8 tablespoons light brown sugar, tightly packed
3 tablespoons kosher salt
1 tablespoon chili powder
1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/2 teaspoon blackening seasoning
1/2 teaspoon Old Bay Seasoning
1/2 teaspoon rubbed thyme (any dried thyme works)
1/2 teaspoon onion powder
You apply this liberally to your baby back ribs, pork shoulder, etc. (you can save any extra), place it in a pan, add beer (or other liquid) and seal it up with foil or a lid (if using a dutch oven) and braise in a 250 degree oven for a few hours (until done) then you can throw it on the grill to get some smoke flavor in it as well.