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What are you having for dinner? (wanna share your recipe?)

@berlinda A trick with kidneys is soaking them in milk -after cutting them open /coring to drain out the held urine- to pull out the embedded Uric acids (what turns pee yellow, and gives it its scent) that haven’t been extracted into water yet... for 30-90 minutes (or overnight in the fridge). Then just rinse off under running water.

As long as you cut/core/rinse the kidneys the milk isn’t absolutely necessary, but it’s lovely. I really miss milk soaked kidneys & liver! Damn good eating.

The steak & kidney stew looks awesome!
 
I’ve yet to find a good alternative? Chemically speaking there should be one; my understanding is that the Uric acids bond to the casein protein in milk, in addition to the diffusion factor that pulls impurities out of the organs? So there should be other protein chains that mimic the reaction. But I haven’t found one, yet. Prolly because most non-dairy food research is also vegan, which means they ignore liver and kidneys. LeSigh.
 
After a big turkey dins last night, I had a hankering for soup, my Ma’s version of Kapusta, cabbage soup. Sautéed chopped onions a chopped celery stalk and a chopped carrot until somewhat softened, then a few cloves of smashed garlic and a teaspoon or so of caraway seed, plus a thinly sliced smoked sausage. Added a heaped tablespoon of flour and cooked that until it was starting to brown, then added two of those bullion pots, chicken, and water, brought that to a simmer then added thinly sliced cabbage. I had a bout a quarter of a small head taking up space in the fridge. Also a small jar of sauerkraut, rinsed and darined. Cooked that for 10 minutes or so, then added a small can of diced tomatoes, heated that through. Been noshing all afternoon. Especially good with a good quality rye bread spread thickly with butter.
 
I got my Instant Pot yesterday I am so excited. Not only that I took an offer/deal they had on Amazon and I stole the thing. I am not even kidding more than fifty percent off the first price you find. Just about exactly fifty percent off what I was going to pay. So I went on a spree and spent the money I saved! (more) : )
 
I haven't used it but can't wait I got the BIG one. 8 qt Ultra. It was intimidating at first I thought I took Robbie the robot out of the box. It says don't fill it though and the insert is not so big so I'm glad I did it. ( I'm using the oven tonight I'm too rushed to experiment)
 
Frying Pan Quiche (nope, not a frittata).

One of my kid’s favourite things since he was a toddler is bacon broccoli goat cheese quiche. I usually make crustless individual-quiches with a giant muffin tin (desperation, the mother of invention; 5 kids all wanting different toppings/fillings? Voila! Everyone pick a tin and fill it with whatever the heck you want, and I’ll pour the custard over. Mission accomplished).

No oven, at the moment, so I figured I’d give it a go in a skillet. Worked awesome. Perfect 2 inch thick egg custard! Woohoo!

- 6 inch skillet & lid
- Bacon, onion, olive oil (anything that needs frying up before cooking)
- Broccoli florets, already steamed & drained (or frozen & zapped!)
- 2 cup measuring cup + 4 eggs + fill the rest w/ half&half
- pinch of salt & pepper & nutmeg
- Giant handful shredded mexi-cheese (no chèvre today, kiddo, sorry!)


Ring the skillet with olive oil and fry the bacon, chopped onion, etc. until translucent. Whilst that’s going, crack in the eggs in the measuring cup, beat/scramble, add half & half, add pinch of salt/pepper/nutmeg , beat again, add giant handful of shredded cheese and stir slowly to completly coat the cheese with custard with minimal spilling all over ;). Turn heat down to low in pan, & add the rest of the toppings that didn’t need frying, and gently pour over egg mixture. Place lid on firmly, and allow to cook/steam itself very slowly until the sucker is completely solid & doesn’t jiggle when the pan is wiggled. If my eggs & cream are cold that’s about half an hour. If they’re wicked cold, it’s more like 45 minutes. Room temp, no idea, because I’m never that organized. I suspect less than 30 minutes. Once set, rig a spatula around the edge for good luck, invert a plate over it, & flip both upside down, so the quiche is on the plate. About 50% of the time I’ve gotten impatient (or can’t tell if it’s jiggling when I wiggle the pan because the lid is too steamed up; take the lid off, swear, put the lid back on) and turned the heat up from low = browned bottom = I then scrape that off and invert onto another plate :whistling: Cut into wedges and serve.

This is becoming one of our hour long morning mainstays, because I don’t have to remember to casserole up eggs and bread the night before for a strata (oh the difference between 1 kiddo & 5 kiddos, much less planning in advance for things to go smoothly req), and it just SITS THERE cooking away, whilst showering / dressing / finding lost homework & shoes happen, with no supervision needed.
 
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Zingerman’s Deli in Ann Arbor Michigan is my absolute, bar none, favourite deli on the planet. (Yo! @LuckiLee, next time you’re nearby, shoot me a pic and make me drool in envy). It was the mid 90’s the first time I found this place (read, was dragged by someone local, when I mentioned my Reuben sandwich kick : You HAVE to have a Zigerman’s!!! ) and ever since then made a point to divert up to Detroit any time I was in Chicago or driving the northern route X-country. 4 or 5 times a year, most years. About 10 years later I found out they would put 2 sandwiches into a cooler and onto a motherf*cking plane, just pick them up at the airport, for $80. So I also started doing that every so once in awhile. These days? For $200 they send you a whole kit, enough for 6-8 sammies, and even have a video showing you how to make it just like the do in the deli.

If I didn’t have this stupid dairy allergy? (And wasn’t sorta kinda flat broke), today is one of those days I would order up Reubans. So in the honor of days gone by... OMFG I am craving a Zingerman’s Reuben....

Sherman's Kit for sale. Buy online at Zingerman's Mail Order. Gourmet Gifts. Food Gifts.
 
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Well hell. Now I want one @Friday. I've only been there a couple of times and you're right. So freakin good! Next time we're over that way we'll stop and have one for ya. Anything for you!! ?
 
Seared Beef & Corn Grits

This is a pared down recipe from one of dozens of more complicated ones... the first upside being, it’s easy to complicate up! ;) 98% in beef prep; beef tips in gravy, beef mole, beef chili, rare sliced steak with pico de gallo or granita or chimichurri or blue cheese butter or whatever, wine soaked beef kababs, pepper steak, Moroccan spiced, list just goes on. Grilled, slow cooked, seared, whatever... the other 2% is turning the grits into polenta (either creamy with cheese and herbs, or Caribbean with coconut milk all fufu-style; kick it up a notch with chopped jalapeños &/or salsa, etc.; or solid, cut into wedges and grill marked and dolluped with harissa is my personal fav. Harissa & grilled polenta maaaaay just be synonymous with manna from heaven. Just sayin’ :D).

But I was hungry, and happened to have beef stew meat cut for tomorrow and a sack o’ corn grits... so I put the grits to boil, seasoned a handful of stewmeat, & seared it up, and voila. Happy tummy.

If you’ve never had corn grits or hot polenta plain? They’re insanely buttery, creamy, rich... with nothing added to them but salted water. All the cheese, stock, butter, etc. in Italian polenta is gilding the Lilly IMO. If I’m going to work hard on an Italian grain it’s gonna be risotto. Which is bland and boring, plain. Corn grits, on the other hand, almost feel like you’re eating a stick of butter, naughty. Corn is pretty oily by nature, hence corn oil; and sweet, hence high fructose corn syrup... so corn grits are keeeerazy luscious compared to wheat grits, or oat porridge. And very toothy. They easily make a meal in and of themselves, for breakfast with butter and honey is popular but too sweet for me. I like savory grits, with red meats, and bitter greens... or cooled solid and grilled with harissa :sneaky: really, really love that stuff. Harissa also works well just smeared on corn on the cob

1:4 to 1:6 corn grits (coarse ground cornmeal) to water.
beef cut into bite sized pieces & seasoned with steak seasoning

- Set your grits to boil in measured & generously salted water. Bring to a boil, then turn down to low and stir occasionally until they’re a soft glossy porridge. About 20 minutes.

- Sear beef (I used a frying pan & olive oil, an oven on broil would work just fine, too), until 125 for rare - 160 for well done.

- Spoon grits into a bowl or onto a plate, spoon beef over the top, & enjoy!

(Optional) If you’re feeling saucy? Spoon the sauce of your desire -Mole, adobo, marinara, salsa Fresca, red wine gravy, etc.- over the top. Grits are very neutral, like potatoes, so it’s whatever you want on your beef.

Leftover grits can be spread out on a dish to solid up into polenta to cut into wedges, or rolled in plastic wrap to make a cylindrical tube thing to cut circles off of. Can be eaten plain or grilled, fried, etc.
 
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