Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff
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<p>I have a small single plant with it's first lot of chillis</p>
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<p>I guess just how to keep them to use later or how to use them (ie do you just chop em up and add them for flavour) </p> -
<p>I thought yr Minister of Finance wasn't a chilli fan.</p>
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<p>I use chilli's in about 50% of what I cook. Usually in some form of sauce. The pestle and mortar is your best friend. 755 of the trick with south or SE Asian food is getting the base sauce right. They can keep in a jar for about a month (if you can wait that long). I don't eed a recipe as I do it so much but if you need help I can give you soime</p>
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<p>I figure you are after options to keep them longer.</p>
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<p>Harrissa mix dried chillis with toasted spices salt and garlic. Use the water you rehydrated the chillis in to get the desired consistency</p>
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<p>Dried - 4-6 hrs in a layer in a fan baked oven on about 80 degrees - you need the chillis to be deseeded. Unless they are the short fate type do this quickly bt trimming stalk and then (cut end down doh) rolling gently between yr hands so seeds drop out. The finished chilli should be quite brittle. You want to dry the chilli not cook it so low and slow.</p>
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<p>Smoking. I have done this successfully in a wok with a mix of tea, demerara and jasmine rice as the smoke element. As low a heat as possible for as long as possible. I'm lucky to have a convection oven which makes temp control easier. You then need to dry the chillis as above (but with reduced time)</p>
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<p>Chilli sauce Rehydrated chillis garlic salt blitz add white vinegar and some sherry (good quality yr after the oak flavour) Cut with rehydrating liquid to desired heat.</p>
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<p>Is that any help. Basically chillis don't last long enough at my place for storing them to be an issue.</p>
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<p>As a chilli aside. For those in Akl. Farros now selling assorted gourmet chillis including naga and scotch bonnet</p>
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<p>Make</p> -
<p>Yeah mate, just after options for keeping them longer, with a new small plant, dont wanna waste those flavoursome red devils they have grown! </p>
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<p>made some Lemon honey/curd today...my lemons are so motherfucking sour! </p>
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<p>Tastes damn fine though, home grown lemons, eggs from my chickens....just need to learn how to grow my own sugar haha</p>
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<p>I always have squeezed lemon/grapefruit juice in the freezer to add to water, but these lemons are quite brutal, and my little tree is a prolific grower! </p> -
Re the butcher conversation earlier. Sadly good butchers are getting harder to find. A couple worth stopping at if travelling around are Mangawhai Meats at the Mangawhai Village (great snags and awesome thick cut lamb chops and aged steaks); Harris Meats at Cheviot ( the butcher is the nice older bloke that was on the last season of Masterchef. The brothers own an abbatoir down the road and regularly get in the finals of best steak comps. The shop itself is mouth watering. Beautifully presented and awesome family size pies). Highly commended also to the butchers in Geraldine down a side street. Venison patties, great snags etc.
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<p>A year ago I sold these people a chainsaw on trademe and they unexpectedly sent me up a box of their different salamis <a data-ipb='nomediaparse' href='http://www.blackballsalami.co.nz/'>http://www.blackballsalami.co.nz/</a></p>
<p>Their stuff is superb too, probably the best I've ever had.</p> -
Good resurrection.
I went to a 60th for my brother-in-law in the weeknd and I can highly recommend these guys. The Pulled Lamb, Pork Ribs & Brisket were mouth wateringly devine!
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@dogmeat said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
So resurrecting this thread in case anyone is interested in this
I was going to cook there, but away with mates instead. Pity - would have been good fun.
That said, I don't agree with their weird australian BBQ categories. Seafood ain't 'q', it's grilling. Grumpy grumpy grumpy NZZP
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@dK said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
Good resurrection.
I went to a 60th for my brother-in-law in the weeknd and I can highly recommend these guys. The Pulled Lamb, Pork Ribs & Brisket were mouth wateringly devine!
These guys are great.. the brisket is incredible
Last autumn they had a semi permanent store in the CBD (O'Connell Street). Hopefully they do the same this year
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So resurrecting this thread again because as well as treating myself to a new Audi I have been given a top range Bradley smoker for my birthday (good week
).
Wanted one of these suckers for a loooong time. Almost completes the cooking toys - two kamado's, sous vide, induction hob, pressure cooker - I'm in business.
What's the collective advice of the Fern recipe - technique wise? I already do a bit of smoking, but this hopefully promotes me to a higher division.
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@dogmeat said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
So resurrecting this thread again because as well as treating myself to a new Audi I have been given a top range Bradley smoker for my birthday (good week
).
Wanted one of these suckers for a loooong time. Almost completes the cooking toys - two kamado's, sous vide, induction hob, pressure cooker - I'm in business.
What's the collective advice of the Fern recipe - technique wise? I already do a bit of smoking, but this hopefully promotes me to a higher division.
Also, are you on facebook? Join the Barbeque Pitmasters NZ page. Heaps of gooduns on there
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@Bones said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
Gents and gentesses, ham hock. Never cooked one before. Suggestions please?
I've used this pressure cooker recipe a couple of times - the 30 minutes on high pressure variation
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@Stockcar86 cheers but bugger! No pressure cooker.
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@Bones said in Recipes, home grown goodness, BBQing and food stuff:
@Stockcar86 cheers but bugger! No pressure cooker.
oops, I do 80% of my cooking using that