November 10, 2009

How to Filet a Fish Like a Pro – How To

Category: Uncategorized — Brian @ 9:06 am

I saw this on Lifehacker.

Lifehacker – How to Filet a Fish Like a Pro – How To.

Reminded me of a Good Eats episode I watch over and over again called Fishin Whole

Fishing Whole : Good Eats : Food Network.

Either way I am still very interested in buying and cooking a fish whole.  Has anyone done this?  What should I get started with?  I was thinking catfish?  I have a salmon filet that has been waiting for some grill time for a while.  Perhaps this weekend?  (After Scott and I make brats of course…but thats another post)

Real Root Beer

Category: Beer, Beverages, Brewing — matt @ 9:06 am

I found this and thought it was rather intriguing. Real root beer using sugar from malted grains. It really puts the BEER back into root beer. It also cool that you can either ferment the resulting wort to make a true beer, or bottle it as a soft drink. I’ll have to give this a shot.

Real Root Beer | Beer Recipes.

9 DIY Beer Brewing-Rigs – Homebrewing Beer Instructions – Popular Mechanics

Category: Beer, Brewing — matt @ 9:05 am

“Brewing beer is neither complicated nor expensive. It’s the responsibility of the brewer to make it as complicated and expensive as their wife will allow.”

9 DIY Beer Brewing-Rigs – Homebrewing Beer Instructions – Popular Mechanics.

August 28, 2009

The Golden Age of Home Brewing – HomeBrewing.com

Category: Beer, Beverages, Brewing — matt @ 1:39 pm

This is a good article about how the explosion of homebrewing in the early 80’s (thank you President Carter for making homebrewing legal again in 1978) has led to the expanding microbrewery industry in the United States.

In 1979 there were 44 breweries in the entire country. Now there are close to 1500 as well as nearly 1000 brewpubs.

The Golden Age of Home Brewing – HomeBrewing.com.

July 22, 2009

Low and Slow Ribs

Category: Grilling, Smoking — Brian @ 12:56 pm

I purchased Low and Slow when I saw it sitting in my neighborhood costco.  There are few books that draw me in and cookbooks on BBQ can do it with just a great tagline like “Everything you know about BBQ is wrong”.  There was another book I read that was like this The Book Of General Ignorance and I learned quite a bit from that book so after flipping through Low and Slow I took it home with me.

Learning BBQ for me has been a journey.  One that started with baby back ribs and has taken me from a trashcan smoker through a Walmart electric smoker I returned because it didn’t work well (they don’t sell it anymore or I would have linked to it) to Smoking on my gas grill to a $50 craigslist purchase of a used offset smoker.  There are certain arts which have become lost in this age of McDonald’s and Whole Foods and Mac and cheese.  If you are able to make anything (and I mean anything) you are revered these days and everyone looks at you like if there is an apocalypse and they are choosing teams you would get picked a lot sooner because you can cook.  My brother and I make our own bratwurst, I brew my own beer, he makes his own salsa, among many other edible projects.  Homemade is a treat that people love and with my brother and his cabinet smoker and edible treats as inspiration, I expanded into the world of BBQ.

I love ribs and used to only get them once a year, when the Naperville Exchange Club hosts its Ribfest event.  You could always count on qualitry and variety and there really is no comparable way to have ribs.  If going to a restaurant for their ribs is like visiting a vineyard to try their wine, Ribfest is like having all those vintners bring their wares to one place to compete for your wagging tongues.  This year I sampled 8 vendors and based on their smokey flavor, fall off the bone quality and slab quality Texas Outlaws was the best for 2009.

But I digress, this is supposed to be a post about making ribs, and I am doing pretty good at avoiding the topic.

The first time I made ribs they were amazing.  The second time they were jut as good.  After that I have gotten progressively worse at making them and no cookbook has been able to rescue me thus far. Everything else I have gotten better at, from burgers, to chicken, to any other grilled or BBQ fare, but the ribs remain a mystery.

Low and Slow is a 5 lesson approach to attain BBQ glory and after reading all the preface about don’t use briquettes and don’t skip chapters…I used briquettes (just as the firestarter…hey I will not just throw them out but I WILL NOT BUY ANY MORE) and I read Lesson 1 about chicken and lesson two about fire control before skipping to lesson 3 about Ribs.  Its possible the author of Low and Slow (Gary Wiviott) will see that I linked to his cookbook with this post, read it, and be dismayed that I didn’t follow his plan exactly.  If you are reading this Gary, please know that I fully intend on completing your course in the fashion you lay out in the book, I just had a hankering for some ribs and could not wait through that much chicken to get to it.

The book is clever in the way it tailors recipes exactly to three types of cookers, the Weber Bullet, The aforementioned offset smoker, and a standard weber grill.  These tailored recipes are intended to teach you about how your smoker cooks, and after you master how your cooker cooks it is up to you to tailor other recipes for your cooker.

I made ribs, used Raichlen’s basic BBQ rub on them, used applewood splits and turned out some decent ribs on my first try.  I say decent because on this go round I learned that the fire can reach its way out of my firebox and burn some bark onto your ribs.  I plan on doing some more BBQ this weekend or next week and trying again, maybe some more ribs or back to lesson 1 for the chicken.  Either way if you want to learn BBQ this book is a good read and it basically hammers home that in order to be great at something practice and repetition is the key.  If you want to be great at cooking BBQ you have to cook a lot of BBQ.

I think I am fine with doing just that.

July 1, 2009

Cook the Book: Perfect French Fries | Serious Eats : Recipes

Category: Frying, Pan Frying — Brian @ 10:03 am

I came across this site which says it has the best way to make home fries.  I have some potatos that need cooking so I might give this one a try to celebrate our independence from the british.

Cook the Book: Perfect French Fries | Serious Eats : Recipes.

June 29, 2009

How to rate a beer

Category: Beer, Beverages — matt @ 10:14 am

Here’s a good article on how to rate a beer based on appearance, aroma, mouthfeel and flavor.

Even if you don’t go full on and take written notes, doing this as a mental excersize will help you know more about the beer you’re drinking and learn what kinds of beers you enjoy most.

How to rate a beer.

June 17, 2009

Costco – Trident Wild Alaskan Salmon Burgers

Category: Barbecue, Grilling, Pan Frying — Tags: – Brian @ 12:39 pm

I was at Costco a few days back and saw these in the freezer case.  Now I will admit I generally avoid the frozen pre-packaged anythings (with the exception of the quick and cheapo burgers since some days you just want a BBQ burger with no prep time) but these Salmon burgers caught my eye.

Costco – Trident® Wild Alaskan Salmon Burgers

I picked up a bag for $12 I believe, and I put two on the grill last night.  They were…interesting.  I like salmon, but I have never had a salmon burger.  I was confused on even how to eat it becuase salmon generally is not served on a bun…ever?  So I put the burger on a bun because thats what burger means to me…”put on bun to eat”.  With a hamburger you put cheese on it, do you put cheese on a salmon burger?  With a fish filet you put tartar sauce on it and a burger you put ketchup…what do you put on a salmon burger?  All these questions led me to just put it on a bun plain and dig in.  It tasted like salmon, but on bread.  I will say that it was kind of confusing for my palate, that whole salmon on a bun thing.

I ate it but it wasn’t very satisfying…I can imagine it would be great if I had a condiment to put on top or if I had used my coal BBQ and given it some smoke instead of my gas grill (it was raining and I was tired).

So my review on these is if you are adventurous with condiments try them out and tell me what I should or shouldn’t put on the rest of these when I cook them…otherwise I think I will just cook them and eat them on a plate like a salmon pattie.

June 12, 2009

Bison Brewing Company : Honey Basil Ale

Category: Beer, Beverages, Brewing — Tags: , , – matt @ 2:54 pm

Does this sound good or horrible? I’m tempted to try making some myself. They don’t mention what kind of hops are used (maybe they don’t use any?)

Bison Brewing Company : Honey Basil Ale.

June 11, 2009

20 Smart Tips for Everyday Grilling | Food & Wine

Category: Barbecue — Brian @ 4:05 pm

Scott sent me this.  Some of the tips are pretty good, like buttering the burgers and cook the ribs low and slow.  Definitely use real wood too…

20 Smart Tips for Everyday Grilling | Food & Wine