Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff
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Okay, wife finally finished work said, wait, disappeared up the road to the local and came back so I had to delay putting the steaks on but in the end, totally worth it.
Now, in a food and drink coma...
The steaks cut up, sorry not a great view but a full spread view. And yes, this was just for two people.
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Proper frosty day here so I've decided we are having a roast this evening! Yaaay. Not sure which meat yet,can pop the butchers after home schooling.
Have we talked Gravy on here before?? I've been thinking a lot about gravy lately, my gravy game isn't that strong, rather average to be fair but I'm no Aaaah Bisto girl. So does anyone have a favourite method of gravy making, favourite thickener? One of my friends uses a potato to thicken hers!?
Nothing like a good gravy though, just completes any roastie meal. -
@R-L flour, butter, pan juices, stock and a little wine
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@R-L said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@canefan OK.. No secret ingredients?
A little garlic or some onions? You can use roasted bones like chicken necks and stuff to add flavour before straining
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@R-L my gravy game suuuuucks. It kills me. Always comes out oily. I have a great butcher though who stocks a packet gravy that is awesome.
Shhhhhh
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@R-L said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
Proper frosty day here so I've decided we are having a roast this evening! Yaaay. Not sure which meat yet,can pop the butchers after home schooling.
Have we talked Gravy on here before?? I've been thinking a lot about gravy lately, my gravy game isn't that strong, rather average to be fair but I'm no Aaaah Bisto girl. So does anyone have a favourite method of gravy making, favourite thickener? One of my friends uses a potato to thicken hers!?
Nothing like a good gravy though, just completes any roastie meal.Key thing is get rid of the right amount of fat from the pan juices. Too many people try and get rid of every single ounce of fat. Each bit of fat is flavour.
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@MajorRage said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@R-L said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
Proper frosty day here so I've decided we are having a roast this evening! Yaaay. Not sure which meat yet,can pop the butchers after home schooling.
Have we talked Gravy on here before?? I've been thinking a lot about gravy lately, my gravy game isn't that strong, rather average to be fair but I'm no Aaaah Bisto girl. So does anyone have a favourite method of gravy making, favourite thickener? One of my friends uses a potato to thicken hers!?
Nothing like a good gravy though, just completes any roastie meal.Key thing is get rid of the right amount of fat from the pan juices. Too many people try and get rid of every single ounce of fat. Each bit of fat is flavour.
See I can't get this balance between fatty flavour and orrible oiliness
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@voodoo said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@MajorRage said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@R-L said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
Proper frosty day here so I've decided we are having a roast this evening! Yaaay. Not sure which meat yet,can pop the butchers after home schooling.
Have we talked Gravy on here before?? I've been thinking a lot about gravy lately, my gravy game isn't that strong, rather average to be fair but I'm no Aaaah Bisto girl. So does anyone have a favourite method of gravy making, favourite thickener? One of my friends uses a potato to thicken hers!?
Nothing like a good gravy though, just completes any roastie meal.Key thing is get rid of the right amount of fat from the pan juices. Too many people try and get rid of every single ounce of fat. Each bit of fat is flavour.
See I can't get this balance between fatty flavour and orrible oiliness
I put it all in and strain it when I'm done
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@R-L Learned from my Mum, make a roux and add it to the pan juices.
To make a roux use 1 measure of unsalted butter to 2 measures of plain white flour.
Melt the butter over medium-low heat, then add the flour. Stir constantly with a wooden spoon in a figure-eight motion for even cooking. In 3 to 5 minutes, you'll have a light roux that should puff slightly. Add salt and pepper to taste once the roux is added to the pan juices.
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@RoninWC said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@R-L Learned from my Mum, make a roux and add it to the pan juices.
To make a roux use 1 measure of unsalted butter to 2 measures of plain white flour.
Melt the butter over medium-low heat, then add the flour. Stir constantly with a wooden spoon in a figure-eight motion for even cooking. In 3 to 5 minutes, you'll have a light roux that should puff slightly. Add salt and pepper to taste once the roux is added to the pan juices.
Then I add meat stock
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@R-L said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
Proper frosty day here so I've decided we are having a roast this evening! Yaaay. Not sure which meat yet,can pop the butchers after home schooling.
Have we talked Gravy on here before?? I've been thinking a lot about gravy lately, my gravy game isn't that strong, rather average to be fair but I'm no Aaaah Bisto girl. So does anyone have a favourite method of gravy making, favourite thickener? One of my friends uses a potato to thicken hers!?
Nothing like a good gravy though, just completes any roastie meal.Put some roughly chopped up vegetables in the bottom of your roasting tray to lay your selected joint on. Onions, carrots, celery (tomatoes if roasting beef) whole garlic if you like it. They act as a flavouring for the pan juices and keep the bottom of the joint off the tray to allow more even cooking. Can also add bones or giblets too. When your meat is resting (which is NOT optional), skim off some of the fat if too oily, add some wine and reduce slowly. Strain the juices pressing all the liquid out of the vegetables. Discard the veg. Add some stock. Reduce further, add a squeeze of lemon juice or dash of good vinegar for acidity. Temper this with something sweet like redcurrant jelly if necessary. This should thicken things but if not a roux or beurre manie will sort it out, but remember to cook the flour out.
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@R-L yeah like @Catogrande says, trivet! I only really started doing decent roasts a few years ago and Jamie's "Ministry of Food" book was a godsend when I was trying to find my way. Onions, Carrots, Celery, Garlic, wine. If I'm doing Pork I might swap wine for cider, Chicken I might throw some lemons in.
I also have a thing of bisto that I occasionally use to help thicken or add volume. Whatever gravy I don't use goes in the freezer to be added to the next batch.
I might be a heathen...
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@voodoo said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@R-L my gravy game suuuuucks. It kills me. Always comes out oily.
Tried a fat separator jug? You can see how much fat you are using so you can judge how much you are getting for flavour without going over the top and getting it greasy. I use one of these.
Agree with other comments about putting some vege in the pan with the meat. Onions in particular.
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@voodoo said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@Snowy no, never
It's not used for what you think mate.