I was going to post earlier: "What's for Dinner"????

richard-in-cincy

Well-known member
Tonight was:

Canard à l'orange

Pomme soufflé dans la graisse de canard (Don't cry for me Argentina!--the city where I fell in love with pomme soufflé)

Haricot vert in herb butter

Leipziger Lerchen

I think I roast a duck for the beautiful fat.

 
I've been craving duck lately...

but I'm not sure I'd go as far as making the pomme souffle. Are these the precisely cut and fried potatoes that Julia made a few times on French Chef?

Her recipe that I have is done in peanut oil.

 
Fennely, lemony, garlicy pork w/ collards & provolone on Portuguese bun.

Ah do believe I am becoming a Southerner.

 
Sounds divine! M, how are you cooking your collards?

I've never had great collards - except in quiche. Not correct seasonings, I think. Definitely, not the canned ones! Colleen

 
Spaghetti Squash with homemade red sauce and Italian sausage

This was better than I could have imagined. I cooked spaghetti squash in the microwave. Meanwhile I started red sauce by cooking Italian sausage, Fennel seed, onions and garlic in a little oil on the stove. Dumped in 2 cans chopped tomatoes and a can of tomato sauce. Garlic powder, oregano, basil, pepper, bay leaves. Then a good dousing of red wine. Lid on, cooked down for an hour. I "fixed" the spaghetti squash with a little butter, condensed milk and Asiago cheese. Used it as a bed for the sauce as I am on a low-carb kick. It was delicious!

 
Simple: Steak; the store said it was from a Wagyu Cow. . .

A big, boneless NY Strip and it looked great. Thick, wonderfully evenly marbled, inexpensive, less expensive than local grocery chains' Choice strips--much tastier too. And it was good, very good, but not as tasty as the Wagyu Culotte I cooked last weekend (less expensive than the Strip above, but even more delicious.

I ate only the steak for dinner.

I must be low in iron as I am craving steak. The steak yesterday steaked me out, I think. No more beefsteak for a while!

 
Oh duh. I meant evaporated milk. It was too early in the morning and no coffee yet when I posted.

 
I swear I made these back in the 70s, but Julia cut them a different way...much more

difficult that just slicing on a mandoline. This video makes it look really easy...especially since Jacques says you can do the prep 12 hours ahead. So it's just like par-cooking french fries so they get a great crisp on the second frying. But in this case, it's triple frying.

Huzzah!

Although shaking that hot oil looked seriously dangerous.

Or am I hallucinating? I seem to recall Julia used a paring knife and cut them into small football size pieces. Or is that a different potato dish?

https://www.marthastewart.com/917415/make-souffled-potatoes-only-three-ingredients

 
Crisp Pork Cutlets with Lemon-Caper Sauce, Spring asparagus and Crispy Smashed Roasted Potatoes

Yummy meal. The lemon-caper sauce also went nicely with the asparagus and potatoes.

Crisp Pork Cutlets with Lemon-Caper Sauce

4-1/2-inch-thick boneless pork chops (about 1 lb.)
1/4 tsp. chipotle powder or smoked hot paprika (Pat’s note: used chipotle powder)
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 lemon
1/2 cup mayonnaise
2 Tbs. small capers, rinsed, drained, and coarsely chopped
2 tsp. chopped fresh thyme
1 large clove garlic, mashed to a paste with a pinch of kosher salt
3-1/2 oz. (3/4 cup) all-purpose flour
2 large eggs, beaten
1-1/2 cups panko
6 Tbs. olive oil

Pound each chop between two pieces of plastic wrap with a meat mallet or the bottom of a heavy pan until 1/4 inch thick. Mix the chipotle powder with 1 tsp. salt and 1/2 tsp. pepper and sprinkle on the chops.
Finely grate the zest of half the lemon and then juice that half. Cut the remaining half into wedges for serving.
In a medium bowl, mix the mayonnaise with the lemon juice and zest, the capers, 1 tsp. of the thyme, the garlic, 1 tsp. pepper, and 1/4 tsp. salt.
Put the flour, eggs, and panko in separate shallow bowls. Toss the panko with the remaining 1 tsp. thyme and 1/2 tsp. salt. Dredge each cutlet in the flour, shaking off any excess, then in the egg, and then in the panko to coat well. Transfer to a plate or platter.
Heat 3 Tbs. of the oil in a 10- to 12-inch nonstick skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering hot. Add 2 of the cutlets, reduce the heat to medium, and cook, flipping once, until browned on both sides and cooked through (cut into a thicker chop to check), about 4 minutes. Transfer to a plate lined with paper towels. Wipe out the skillet and repeat with the remaining 3 Tbs. oil and cutlets. Serve with the sauce and lemon wedges.

Source: Tony Rosenfeld/Fine Cooking http://www.finecooking.com/recipe/crisp-pork-cutlets-with-lemon-caper-sauce

 
Super-fast birthday dinner: steak (4 min. on each side in oven-hot cast iron pan), asparagus, frites

Czech applesauce and pudding cake for birthday dude, by request. Don't ask--there's a reason it's not in the Bohemian-Austro-Hungarian canon.

 
Love using hot iron skillet for sear & finish in oven. Perfect crust every time.

Do you use any kind of fat? Men's Health (where I learned this trick) lightly coated skillet with peanut oil. I do that then finish with maitre de (how DO you spell that word? I just kept adding/deleting vowels until it didn't underline anymore) butter.

 
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