plonq: (Entertain Me)
[personal profile] plonq
I am becoming a better cook lately in spite of myself.

Last last week, [personal profile] atara reminded me that I still hadn't used a red onion I'd picked up the weekend before. I'd bought it with no immediate plan for it other than that, "Red onions have many uses."

I mulled on it over the weekend and decided that while I was using the onion, I could also go through some of the brown lentils and black beans we have in our pantry that are not getting any fresher with age. I cut up the onion into a sauté pan with some olive oil and pondered on what to do while it softened a bit. I noticed that we had a head of garlic that was getting up there, so I minced up a few cloves and tossed those in when the onion was almost done. Once it smelled pretty good I dumped in 3/4 cup each of Basmati rice and brown lentils. I stirred it all together and let it cook for a couple of minutes before I poured in a can of black beans (along with its liquid) and then added 2 cups of hot water with some powdered chicken stock stirred into it.

I added the usual spices one would add to these things: chilli, salt, pepper, red pepper flakes, cinnamon, cumin (whole and ground), garam masala, ground coriander and smoked paprika. And a bay leaf, of course. I also added a small can of crushed tomatoes when I realized it would need more water.

Some of these spices were to try and compensate for a major derp on my part; I grabbed the wrong container and dumped in a big whack of cinnamon when I meant to add more chilli powder. I had not wanted the cinnamon to be such a dominant flavour in the dish, so I added other things that I hoped would compliment it. My efforts worked overall, but it ended up not quite being the flavour profile I'd wanted.

I dished out a portion and tossed a fried egg on top so that I could call it breakfast.

20200601

It still needed ... something. I cooked up the rest of the ground pork in the fridge with some ginger, garlic, salt, pepper, tomato paste and a dash of dashi. It definitely improved the dish.

I made some Irish soda bread last week as well. I followed a recipe, but it's still a bit nerve-wracking for me when I try making a new dish for the first time. I followed the recipe exactly, but when I pulled it out, a quick test with a toothpick showed that it was not entirely cooked in the middle. At [personal profile] atara's advice, I set the oven to 350, put the break back in, then shut off the oven and let it coast for a bit. Worked like a charm. I will know next time to test it before taking it out of the oven.

20200529

I have come pretty close to perfecting my home-made breakfast sausages. The next time I make these I will add a bit less sage, but otherwise the balance of ingredients is spot on.

One other trick that I have employed is weighing out the individual sausages to ensure they are all the same size, and then pressing them out in a round cookie-cutter to get them all the same shape and thickness.

The ones in this picture were weighted out, but I had not thought of the cookie-cutter trick when I made them, so they're a little uneven.

20200526
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