Dinner Tonight
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- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
What's with the sandwich dinner theme tonight? Can we do this every night?
I often say F the salad at the last minute.
I often say F the salad at the last minute.
- Chicat
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Paprika chicken at my house tomorrow. Get on my wavelength.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
I meant can we all just have sandwiches every night.
Re: Dinner Tonight
I'm sure we can all use our brain and stomach power to come up with a list of 7 top sandwich recipes that we can just use all week.
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
Re: Dinner Tonight
Kinda boring eh?Longhorned wrote:I meant can we all just have sandwiches every night.
- Chicat
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Uh . . . I'll think about it.Longhorned wrote:I meant can we all just have sandwiches every night.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Why boring? Couldn't every dish I love be converted to a sandwich? It would be even better.
- BearDown89
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Love sandwiches as much as anything. Egg salad sandwiches for us tonight.
Re: Dinner Tonight
Egg salad sandwiches are underrated.BearDown89 wrote:Love sandwiches as much as anything. Egg salad sandwiches for us tonight.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Egg salad sandwiches are amazing. Especially on untoasted white bread. Your teeth slice effortlessly into the soft bread, and then seamlessly into the cold, unctuous filling replete with smooth texture, viscous emulsion, and vaguely sharp notes from the yokes and mustard. The experience is liminal -- somewhere between sleepiness and relaxed engagement, with the pure comfort and hopefulness of waking up without having to get out of bed and a promised nap later.
- Merkin
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Re: Dinner Tonight
How did you make the onion rings? I love fried onion rings, but trying to cut down on fried foods.Chicat wrote:I made grilled ham and Swiss paninis on brioche with onion rings. I was supposed to make a salad too but said fuck it at the last minute so there was no veggie.
Looking at oilless fryers, which do a mean turkey or chicken breast, but french fries and onion rings don't seem to turn out very good.
- scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight
perfect description. been on a hardboiled egg kick lately. deviled eggs, plain, egg salad.Longhorned wrote:Egg salad sandwiches are amazing. Especially on untoasted white bread. Your teeth slice effortlessly into the soft bread, and then seamlessly into the cold, unctuous filling replete with smooth texture, viscous emulsion, and vaguely sharp notes from the yokes and mustard. The experience is liminal -- somewhere between sleepiness and relaxed engagement, with the pure comfort and hopefulness of waking up without having to get out of bed and a promised nap later.
Re: Dinner Tonight
Dirty rice and mixed veggies. not on a sammich.
- scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Baked Chinese restaurant style lemon chicken
- BearDown89
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Went home to have some of the left over egg salad for lunch - albeit on cheap soft squishy wheat bread and sans mustard (damn Canadians). It was all gone when I got home (fucking Canadians)! She was no where to be found, but she copped to it in a text. Tried to placate me with compliments of its deliciousness. Indeed, I was excited for the overnight melding of flavors and the hard chill of the fridge.
Settled for turkey, salami and swiss instead.
Settled for turkey, salami and swiss instead.
- CalStateTempe
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Re: Dinner Tonight
LH, AZgreg, and beardown 89, and all lover of sandwiches...come join the battle royal that I am going to setup in another thread.
Re: Dinner Tonight
Attempting to recreate Pei Wei's chicken lettuce wraps
- Gato Salvaje
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Re: Dinner Tonight
I was in Fronteras Sonora yesterday (Birthplace of Juan Bautista De Anza)
Its In the middle of nowhere on the way to nowhere mexico. Nice quiet little town.
Ate Carne con Chile verde, and Carne con Chile Colorado burritos from a restaurant that was part of the local hardware store/ bakery/ candy store.
Handmade flower tortillas made in front of you, local beef, and chilies grown a few hundred feet away.
All incredibly local and fresh.
Like my boy Longhorned has said again and again. It's all about the ingredients. It can make the simplest food a culinary masterpice.
3 of us. 9 Burritos and 4 Fantas. Paid like 12.00
Its In the middle of nowhere on the way to nowhere mexico. Nice quiet little town.
Ate Carne con Chile verde, and Carne con Chile Colorado burritos from a restaurant that was part of the local hardware store/ bakery/ candy store.
Handmade flower tortillas made in front of you, local beef, and chilies grown a few hundred feet away.
All incredibly local and fresh.
Like my boy Longhorned has said again and again. It's all about the ingredients. It can make the simplest food a culinary masterpice.
3 of us. 9 Burritos and 4 Fantas. Paid like 12.00
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Gato Salvaje wrote:I was in Fronteras Sonora yesterday (Birthplace of Juan Bautista De Anza)
Its In the middle of nowhere on the way to nowhere mexico. Nice quiet little town.
Ate Carne con Chile verde, and Carne con Chile Colorado burritos from a restaurant that was part of the local hardware store/ bakery/ candy store.
Handmade flower tortillas made in front of you, local beef, and chilies grown a few hundred feet away.
All incredibly local and fresh.
Like my boy Longhorned has said again and again. It's all about the ingredients. It can make the simplest food a culinary masterpice.
3 of us. 9 Burritos and 4 Fantas. Paid like 12.00
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Sandwich: prosciutto crudo (La Quercia Tamworth), gruyere, and claytonia dressed with olive oil and sherry vinegar on buttered baguette
Re: Dinner Tonight
Breakfast tonight.
Re: Dinner Tonight
Brinner?
i was going to put the ua/asu records here...but i forgot what they were.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
i'll just go with fuck asu.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Why would anybody ever eat anything besides breakfast foods?
Re: Dinner Tonight
We still have a little bit of ham left from Easter so I'm dicing it up and throwing it into an omelet with a few other things.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
I did that last week with, believe it or not, left over Christmas ham.azgreg wrote:We still have a little bit of ham left from Easter so I'm dicing it up and throwing it into an omelet with a few other things.
- scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Chickpea and spinach curry over jasmine rice. Cost me $4 to make a huge 10 serving pot of it
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Lucky you can afford that with your job at the Dairy Queen!!scumdevils86 wrote:Chickpea and spinach curry over jasmine rice. Cost me $4 to make a huge 10 serving pot of it
Ha ha!
(Trips backward over the coffee table and hits head on the bannister and dies.)
And so it was that a mentally and socially challenged message board fool came to his sudden and final demise.
The End.
- Gato Salvaje
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Greek Style grilled Octopus on the piastra!
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Love octopus. And squid. But Fortune Fish in Chicago can only get the squid cut up. They sell me the whole 2 pound octopus with just the brain and innards removed. He looks ready to swim away.
- Gato Salvaje
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Re: Dinner Tonight
One of the best dishes I've ever eaten is this dish in a restaurant in Sinaloa:Longhorned wrote:Love octopus. And squid. But Fortune Fish in Chicago can only get the squid cut up. They sell me the whole 2 pound octopus with just the brain and innards removed. He looks ready to swim away.
https://instagram.com/p/wpDpYpFWwN/
My dream is to somehow duplicate this recipe. It was incredible. I'm sure all the ice cold Altatas (local craft beer) helped.
The Pulpo Mongol tacos (Mongolian Octopus tacos) off the secret menu at La Cabanna down the street are pretty incredible too. I never miss either of these dishes when I'm down in culiacan on business.
Re: Dinner Tonight
Beef stew and biscuits last night.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Under inspiration of Gato, I had to get me some octopus last night at Vera in the west loop, Chicago. Grilled octopus. It was just okay. But their bacalao croquettes were for realz. Some nice shrimp a la plancha. Lots of cold, white, old school Rioja.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Is it crispy? I mean, did they deep fry it? If so, I've never had anything like it. I'd guess we'd have to tenderize it first by cooking. The usual 20 minutes boiling in salted water with vinegar. And the color makes me think of octopus braised in red wine, like the Greek way. I don't know.Gato Salvaje wrote:One of the best dishes I've ever eaten is this dish in a restaurant in Sinaloa:Longhorned wrote:Love octopus. And squid. But Fortune Fish in Chicago can only get the squid cut up. They sell me the whole 2 pound octopus with just the brain and innards removed. He looks ready to swim away.
https://instagram.com/p/wpDpYpFWwN/
My dream is to somehow duplicate this recipe. It was incredible. I'm sure all the ice cold Altatas (local craft beer) helped.
The Pulpo Mongol tacos (Mongolian Octopus tacos) off the secret menu at La Cabanna down the street are pretty incredible too. I never miss either of these dishes when I'm down in culiacan on business.
- scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight
hawaiian bbq grilled chicken quarters tomorrow night. corn on the cob. baked beans. chips. lot o' beer.
- Gato Salvaje
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Re: Dinner Tonight
It's grilled. I think its some kind of marinade that makes it red. little spicy like adobo. I'm sure they had to boil it before hand though.Longhorned wrote:Is it crispy? I mean, did they deep fry it? If so, I've never had anything like it. I'd guess we'd have to tenderize it first by cooking. The usual 20 minutes boiling in salted water with vinegar. And the color makes me think of octopus braised in red wine, like the Greek way. I don't know.Gato Salvaje wrote:One of the best dishes I've ever eaten is this dish in a restaurant in Sinaloa:Longhorned wrote:Love octopus. And squid. But Fortune Fish in Chicago can only get the squid cut up. They sell me the whole 2 pound octopus with just the brain and innards removed. He looks ready to swim away.
https://instagram.com/p/wpDpYpFWwN/
My dream is to somehow duplicate this recipe. It was incredible. I'm sure all the ice cold Altatas (local craft beer) helped.
The Pulpo Mongol tacos (Mongolian Octopus tacos) off the secret menu at La Cabanna down the street are pretty incredible too. I never miss either of these dishes when I'm down in culiacan on business.
Re: Dinner Tonight
One of my childhood favorites tonight. Pork chops baked beans and apple sauce.
- scumdevils86
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Graze premium burger in Tucson now. Double with grass fed hormone free beef, American cheese, lettuce, tomato, red onion, pickle, nitrate free bacon, and the standard condiments. Amazing fries too. Love this place. They have a great selection of dipping sauces too and great all natural, organic sodas too.
Re: Dinner Tonight
Machaca burros tonight.
- FreeSpiritCat
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- Chicat
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Sautéed shrimp with asparagus risotto.
Of the 12 coaches, Rush picked the one whose fans have the deepest passion, the longest memories, the greatest lung capacity and … did I mention deep passion?
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Besides that Los Drowned sandwich I ate at Little Goat on Friday, I haven't eaten anything of note recently. Tonight I'll eat at a mediocre restaurant in Champaign.
Don't miss the Los Drowned sandwich at Little Goat when you're in the west loop in Chicago.
Don't miss the Los Drowned sandwich at Little Goat when you're in the west loop in Chicago.
- Gato Salvaje
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Hmm looks good. A bit of a gut bomb, but Probably tastes like heaven after hitting the bars at 2AM!Catintheheat wrote:I tried this in Phoenix today.
[youtube]www.youtube.com/embed/WifiwOMSr1g[/youtube]
As a rule though, I don't mix meat in a sandwich. Unless its bacon (In the words of Gaffigan: the fairy dust of meats).
Tortas are incredible though. And none better than the tortas ahogadas made in Guadalajara. It's another food where the ingredients are simple but make all the difference in the world. The meat is Carnitas, and the key ingredients (chile de arbol for the salsa) and the avacados are all fresh and local to the region. Of course the fresh baked pan bolio is the star of the show.
worth the trip to Guadalajara for this sandwich alone.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Gato, I got a torta ahogada recently and a taqueria I otherwise trust fully and who otherwise make brilliant tortas. I decided I'd never get another torta ahogada again for the rest of my life. It was a torta submerged in a bowl of broth. Immersed in liquid, the bread turned into glue. It was irretrievable, let alone inedible. Even a spoon was useless. It was literally impossible for a human to enjoy. I tried to explain to them what earthlings think of in reference to "sandwich", and this wasn't it.
- Gato Salvaje
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Re: Dinner Tonight
I've never had a good torta ahogada in Sonora Territory, and I've never had a good taco in Jalisco.Longhorned wrote:Gato, I got a torta ahogada recently and a taqueria I otherwise trust fully and who otherwise make brilliant tortas. I decided I'd never get another torta ahogada again for the rest of my life. It was a torta submerged in a bowl of broth. Immersed in liquid, the bread turned into glue. It was irretrievable, let alone inedible. Even a spoon was useless. It was literally impossible for a human to enjoy. I tried to explain to them what earthlings think of in reference to "sandwich", and this wasn't it.
Sure someone might make a serviceable version, but it always ends up being a disappointment in the end.
Sonora= Tacos/carne asada/sonora dogs/carne seca(obregon)
Sinaloa= Mariscos (seafood)
Jalisco= Tortas ahogadas
chihuahua= queso menonita
oaxaca=Mole
Mexico City = Endless versions of deliciousness
The end
- Reydituto
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Re: Dinner Tonight
I enjoyed the frijoles negras in Guadalajara, thought everywhere I went did a mean birria, a good bacon-wrapped filet, and what I would call tacos ahogados (same idea, but tacos, just don't go pee right after). Also, arroz con leche, and the best micheladas I've ever had. I never was into their versions of pozole though.
Chihuahua, you forgot cabrito, cabron.
Chihuahua, you forgot cabrito, cabron.
But in my book, you gotta get to White Castle before the weirdos show up!
Tonight he gets Happy-Go-Jackie on the big white guy like a donkey eating a waffle!
Sweet Sassy Molassey, get out the checkbook and pay Grandma for the rubdown!
Tonight he gets Happy-Go-Jackie on the big white guy like a donkey eating a waffle!
Sweet Sassy Molassey, get out the checkbook and pay Grandma for the rubdown!
Re: Dinner Tonight
Chicken Parmesan with zucchini noodles.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Homemade mac and cheese made from a mornay sauce with gruyere.
- Gato Salvaje
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Smoked salmon made in the flower pot. Heat to 225, leave it in for 1 hr. So easy. So good.
- Longhorned
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Re: Dinner Tonight
Yesterday a friend gave us some fresh chicken eggs from her backyard coop. I don't know why they're better than - and look so different from - the local farm eggs. So last night I wanted to show them off by cooking them very soft: spaghetti alla carbonara.
It's almost impossible to get a good carbonara outside of Rome, and there's all this intrigue about the secret to making it come out right instead of overcooked. The internet is filled with stories of failure, and this idea that you can't do it.
It's actually the easiest pasta you can make. Like, if this were your first time in the kitchen cooking anything at all, you'd have wild success, and with no challenges along the way. And it's the fastest pasta you'll ever make. Which is awesome because it's also one of the most amazing things you'll ever eat. Pure satisfaction and comfort.
One thing you should do is to make it with fresh grated parmigiano reggiano, which is a sacrilege in Rome. The reason why is because you're unlikely to get the right pecorino romano even if you try. And even if you did, you won't get the right Roman guanciale (pork jowel) that works with that pecorino. Just forget it. Be northern Italian about the whole thing and use imported pancetta, as long as it isn't sliced because you have to cube it.
The reason why it's so easy is because there's nothing to screw up. The rendered fat from the pan-fried pancetta, which infuses with the olive oil, is the magic carpet that the flavor rides on. But people worry about how much fat to use. Forget about it. It's a self-filtering process. The spaghetti itself does that for you. The other, bigger worry that everyone claims is the major screw up that only master Italian cooks can achieve is how much to cook the eggs. Don't listen to anybody about this. Don't follow any techniques or rules. Don't worry about it at all, because the spaghetti does it for you.
You do have to salt the pasta correctly, and this is the thing most people screw up with any pasta. It's the reason why pasta tastes better in restaurants than it does when you make it. Recipes never tell you how to do it right, and what they do say is misleading. Doing it the right way is much, much easier than how you've been doing it. Use sea salt, preferably coarse, but regular is fine. The thing to keep in mind is that you're salting the water, not the pasta. You fill up a big pot of water like a stock pot about half way or more (pasta needs lots of water to get the starching right), and after it's boiling, you put a giant, heaping hand full of salt in. Look to make sure all the granules fully break down into the water. Then taste the water. What you're going for is the taste of the sea. If it's not as salty as the sea, add more salt. If you made it too salty, add more water. When it tastes like when you accidentally get water in your mouth while you're in the ocean, you're there.
Never ever follow the cooking time suggestion on a package of pasta. It varies too much based on elevation. You have to retrieve the pieces of pasta from the pot and taste them until they're ready -- even slightly before it's ready because it's going to keep cooking after you drain it.
Make sure you have a pair of kitchen tongs on hand. If you don't, splurge $4 and pick up a pair at the supermarket.
To separate egg yolks from whites, you just crack open an egg, and then pass the yolk back and forth over the sink from one half of the shell to the other until the white is gone and just the yolk is left in the shell.
For 4 people (just half this for 2 people):
1 pound package spaghetti (494 grams or whatever it is)
2 thick slices of pancetta, each 1" to 1 1/4" thick
10 eggs
olive oil, like around 1/4 cup
parmigianno regiano
Put the olive oil in a pan on the stove so it's ready for you. Then start by cubing up the pancetta. Put it on a plate and wash the cutting board and knife and put them away. You're not going to want to mess with any dirty dishes after a hot, steamy bowl of pasta has you all relaxed. Then separate the egg yolks from the whites, and put the yolks in a bowl large enough to accommodate the full pound of cooked spaghetti. Sprinkle a little salt and pepper over them, just enough like if you were going to eat them like that. Now start heating the pasta water.
While the water heats, turn the burner under pan with the olive oil on medium heat until the oil is hot. Dump in the cubed pancetta. Brown it until it looks delicious. Not completely crisp like you'd do bacon, but like something you'd want to eat in a taco, for example. Then turn off the heat and just let it sit there with the hot melted fat and the cooked pancetta in it.
Grate a bunch of parmigianno. Beat the egg yolks in the bowl and mix around 3/4 cups of the grated parm into them, making sure you have enough grated parm left over to cover each dish of pasta generously. Add enough parm to the egg yolks to form a kind of gloop, so that you could imagine gluing something together with it.
After the water boils and you've salted it right, dump in the spaghetti. Announce to everyone that they have to be at the or on the sofa waiting because this stuff has to be eaten immediately upon being ready. If anybody starts answering their phone or whatever, kick them out of the house.
After the spaghetti cooks perfectly and you drain it, immediately dump the cooked spaghetti into the fatty pancetta pan. Take a pair of tongs and toss with the fatty pancetta. Then, with the tongs lift out the spaghetti, shaking off the excess fat from the pasta, and dump it into the bowl with the egg yolks and parm mixture. Pick up all those pieces of pancetta and get them into the bowl, too. The spaghetti will take exactly enough fat with it, and the hot pasta and the hot fat will cook the egg yolk mixture perfectly as is. Toss it all in the bowl, dish it out, and cover each dish with a bunch of parm. Eat right now.
It's almost impossible to get a good carbonara outside of Rome, and there's all this intrigue about the secret to making it come out right instead of overcooked. The internet is filled with stories of failure, and this idea that you can't do it.
It's actually the easiest pasta you can make. Like, if this were your first time in the kitchen cooking anything at all, you'd have wild success, and with no challenges along the way. And it's the fastest pasta you'll ever make. Which is awesome because it's also one of the most amazing things you'll ever eat. Pure satisfaction and comfort.
One thing you should do is to make it with fresh grated parmigiano reggiano, which is a sacrilege in Rome. The reason why is because you're unlikely to get the right pecorino romano even if you try. And even if you did, you won't get the right Roman guanciale (pork jowel) that works with that pecorino. Just forget it. Be northern Italian about the whole thing and use imported pancetta, as long as it isn't sliced because you have to cube it.
The reason why it's so easy is because there's nothing to screw up. The rendered fat from the pan-fried pancetta, which infuses with the olive oil, is the magic carpet that the flavor rides on. But people worry about how much fat to use. Forget about it. It's a self-filtering process. The spaghetti itself does that for you. The other, bigger worry that everyone claims is the major screw up that only master Italian cooks can achieve is how much to cook the eggs. Don't listen to anybody about this. Don't follow any techniques or rules. Don't worry about it at all, because the spaghetti does it for you.
You do have to salt the pasta correctly, and this is the thing most people screw up with any pasta. It's the reason why pasta tastes better in restaurants than it does when you make it. Recipes never tell you how to do it right, and what they do say is misleading. Doing it the right way is much, much easier than how you've been doing it. Use sea salt, preferably coarse, but regular is fine. The thing to keep in mind is that you're salting the water, not the pasta. You fill up a big pot of water like a stock pot about half way or more (pasta needs lots of water to get the starching right), and after it's boiling, you put a giant, heaping hand full of salt in. Look to make sure all the granules fully break down into the water. Then taste the water. What you're going for is the taste of the sea. If it's not as salty as the sea, add more salt. If you made it too salty, add more water. When it tastes like when you accidentally get water in your mouth while you're in the ocean, you're there.
Never ever follow the cooking time suggestion on a package of pasta. It varies too much based on elevation. You have to retrieve the pieces of pasta from the pot and taste them until they're ready -- even slightly before it's ready because it's going to keep cooking after you drain it.
Make sure you have a pair of kitchen tongs on hand. If you don't, splurge $4 and pick up a pair at the supermarket.
To separate egg yolks from whites, you just crack open an egg, and then pass the yolk back and forth over the sink from one half of the shell to the other until the white is gone and just the yolk is left in the shell.
For 4 people (just half this for 2 people):
1 pound package spaghetti (494 grams or whatever it is)
2 thick slices of pancetta, each 1" to 1 1/4" thick
10 eggs
olive oil, like around 1/4 cup
parmigianno regiano
Put the olive oil in a pan on the stove so it's ready for you. Then start by cubing up the pancetta. Put it on a plate and wash the cutting board and knife and put them away. You're not going to want to mess with any dirty dishes after a hot, steamy bowl of pasta has you all relaxed. Then separate the egg yolks from the whites, and put the yolks in a bowl large enough to accommodate the full pound of cooked spaghetti. Sprinkle a little salt and pepper over them, just enough like if you were going to eat them like that. Now start heating the pasta water.
While the water heats, turn the burner under pan with the olive oil on medium heat until the oil is hot. Dump in the cubed pancetta. Brown it until it looks delicious. Not completely crisp like you'd do bacon, but like something you'd want to eat in a taco, for example. Then turn off the heat and just let it sit there with the hot melted fat and the cooked pancetta in it.
Grate a bunch of parmigianno. Beat the egg yolks in the bowl and mix around 3/4 cups of the grated parm into them, making sure you have enough grated parm left over to cover each dish of pasta generously. Add enough parm to the egg yolks to form a kind of gloop, so that you could imagine gluing something together with it.
After the water boils and you've salted it right, dump in the spaghetti. Announce to everyone that they have to be at the or on the sofa waiting because this stuff has to be eaten immediately upon being ready. If anybody starts answering their phone or whatever, kick them out of the house.
After the spaghetti cooks perfectly and you drain it, immediately dump the cooked spaghetti into the fatty pancetta pan. Take a pair of tongs and toss with the fatty pancetta. Then, with the tongs lift out the spaghetti, shaking off the excess fat from the pasta, and dump it into the bowl with the egg yolks and parm mixture. Pick up all those pieces of pancetta and get them into the bowl, too. The spaghetti will take exactly enough fat with it, and the hot pasta and the hot fat will cook the egg yolk mixture perfectly as is. Toss it all in the bowl, dish it out, and cover each dish with a bunch of parm. Eat right now.
Re: Dinner Tonight
Los Reyes is the bomb. Man v. Food went there, and its combination plates are almost as good. Right up the street from where my grandpa lived until the day of his passing on El Caminito in Sunnyslope.Catintheheat wrote:I tried this in Phoenix today.
[youtube]www.youtube.com/embed/WifiwOMSr1g[/youtube]
Which is good, because unless you're going to save a rescue animal up the street at the Humane Society on Hatcher, restaurants are the only reason to be in that part of Phoenix. Greektown is just a couple miles south on 7th St. and Dunlap...if you can get by the Carlos O'Brien's on 12th St. and Northern.
Yes, I am familiar with that neighborhood.