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  1. #26
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    I think a little bacon fat tones down the bitter taste of fresh spinach, but I usually don't have it handy. I sautee spinach in usually just butter, salt, and pepper.

    I once accidentally fed the vegetarian kid I was babysitting a can of lima beans with bits of slab bacon in it. Truly, I felt guilty for doing it, but holy crap, that kid ate those beans like they were ice cream.
    Summers...

    Buy the bacon ends at HEB. I forget the brand but they come in a 2# box that's red, white, and blue. I keep it in the freezer and slice off what I need and put it back in the freezer. It's really really cheap relative to sliced bacon and you get what you really need for cooking.

  2. #27
    Cinnamon Girl mrsmaalox's Avatar
    Name
    Yvonne
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    San Antonio, Texas
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    Darlin you aren't COOKING the spinach. You start the bacon, add the onions, wait a little bit and add the garlic. When the onions are clear and the garlic starting to brown you add the spinach and toss/flip/stir till it's good and wilted and then pull it off. The spinach is wilted al dente.
    That's what I meant!!

  3. #28
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    san antonio
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    LOL

    OK.

    so hows it going?

  4. #29
    NWF Summers's Avatar
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    Summers...

    Buy the bacon ends at HEB. I forget the brand but they come in a 2# box that's red, white, and blue. I keep it in the freezer and slice off what I need and put it back in the freezer. It's really really cheap relative to sliced bacon and you get what you really need for cooking.
    Thanks for the tip... I think I'll do that.

  5. #30
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    OK, I want a dinner report.

    If I was cooking the little man would already be back in his room jacking off to his fantasy woman that had s like Jennifer Love Hewitt and could cook like me.

  6. #31
    NWF Summers's Avatar
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    OK, I want a dinner report.

    If I was cooking the little man would already be back in his room jacking off to his fantasy woman that had s like Jennifer Love Hewitt and could cook like me.
    Well, we had some VERY tasty black bean quesadillas for dinner. Tomorrow, I'm planning meatloaf, mashed potatoes, sauteed mushrooms, and something green (I'm leaning toward spinach, for some reason).

  7. #32
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    HMMM....so what king of a meat loaf woman are you? Tomato sauce? Brown Gravy? Beef/pork/veal? bread or croutons? Foil or no foil? Crock pot?

    Dr. Cosmic Phil is now in session...

  8. #33
    NWF Summers's Avatar
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    HMMM....so what king of a meat loaf woman are you? Tomato sauce? Brown Gravy? Beef/pork/veal? bread or croutons? Foil or no foil? Crock pot?

    Dr. Cosmic Phil is now in session...
    I keep it simple: lean ground beef, saltines, egg, finely chopped onion, plenty of salt and pepper. I bake it in a small cake pan instead of a loaf pan so it cooks more evenly and pour some tomato sauce on top for the last 20 minutes. I told ya, simple; but it's tasty and my kids like it. My mom likes to start with half beef and half sausage, but I like it less greasy.

  9. #34
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    OK...dry loaf. I understand the bit about cooking for the kids to like it and retained grease is a bad thing.

    My favorite victims to cook for are guys at hunting camps. I am one of those cooks that just says "why not?" and goes off the reservation. I know most of the cooking basics and then just improvise. If I screw up hopefully the alcohol will numb their memory. Unfortunately half the time when the recipes work out I forget the really good ones LOL.

  10. #35
    Iron Butted Warrior ORION's Avatar
    Name
    Jason
    Location
    New Braunfels
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    LOL

    OK.

    so hows it going?
    CC this is totally off topic but I will be hitting baffin next Friday

  11. #36
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    CC this is totally off topic but I will be hitting baffin next Friday
    Good luck. With this heat I suspect they are gonna be on the I/C channel drop offs and up on the edges early but still deep. I hate this time of year usually. Nothing like being nipple deep on a mud bottom and on big fish with wind blown waves breaking over your head. It definitely separates the guys catching fish from the guys taking long hot boat rides.

  12. #37
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    My favorite (failure/success) off the reservation dish recently was a Thai Shrimp thing with sticky rice. I'm still working out all the do's and dont's of curry and coconut. I accidentally bought coconut juice instead of coconut milk and my oriental es got to work WAY too long while it reduced. Those oriental peppers will kick your ass if you get a little liberal. Habanero's ain't got nothing on them.

    I will do better next time. The flavor was knock your socks off awesome but it was WAY too hot. We were all scarfing it down and wiping tears out of our eyes. I love hot but it was freaking WAY too hot...but it tasted so GOOD LOL. Every pot/plate was wiped clean.

  13. #38
    Iron Butted Warrior ORION's Avatar
    Name
    Jason
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    New Braunfels
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    Good luck. With this heat I suspect they are gonna be on the I/C channel drop offs and up on the edges early but still deep. I hate this time of year usually. Nothing like being nipple deep on a mud bottom and on big fish with wind blown waves breaking over your head. It definitely separates the guys catching fish from the guys taking long hot boat rides.
    so no flats or tide gauge ?what about king ranch ?

  14. #39
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    san antonio
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    so no flats or tide gauge ?what about king ranch ?
    I'm not the expert. The guy that I normally go with I have been fishing with for 25 years and long before he moved to the coast and got his guide ticket.

    We ONLY fish for big trout and release anything under 20" unless it is hooked bad.

    I haven't fished as much as I wanted to the last few years but this time of year we would normally fish within 300 yards of the inter coastal and hit it early. Try the stretch with the floaters/houses right before you get to Baffin on the right and stay waist deep or deeper early.

    My personal experience at the tide gauge bar is that you can limit out on schoolie's this time of year but the big trout are going deep.

  15. #40
    Cinnamon Girl mrsmaalox's Avatar
    Name
    Yvonne
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    San Antonio, Texas
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    OK, I want a dinner report.

    If I was cooking the little man would already be back in his room jacking off to his fantasy woman that had s like Jennifer Love Hewitt and could cook like me.
    Well it was a HIT!! Even the spinach that I deprived of bacon. The balsamic vinegar reduction was very delicious and I will do it again, but I couldn't resist drizzling it with plain uncooked balsamic, because I was really craving that flavor. Overall I would give it an A, because it was delicious, was actually quite easy to put together, and it looked beautiful.

  16. #41
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    san antonio
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    LOL

    Glad it worked out well. You owe me a blow job.

  17. #42
    Mr. John Wayne CosmicCowboy's Avatar
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    The positive is that I always reciprocate X2 at least.

  18. #43
    Cinnamon Girl mrsmaalox's Avatar
    Name
    Yvonne
    Location
    San Antonio, Texas
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    The positive is that I always reciprocate X2 at least.
    next time I may add a little bacon!! LOL

  19. #44
    Iron Butted Warrior ORION's Avatar
    Name
    Jason
    Location
    New Braunfels
    Post Count
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    I'm not the expert. The guy that I normally go with I have been fishing with for 25 years and long before he moved to the coast and got his guide ticket.

    We ONLY fish for big trout and release anything under 20" unless it is hooked bad.

    I haven't fished as much as I wanted to the last few years but this time of year we would normally fish within 300 yards of the inter coastal and hit it early. Try the stretch with the floaters/houses right before you get to Baffin on the right and stay waist deep or deeper early.

    My personal experience at the tide gauge bar is that you can limit out on schoolie's this time of year but the big trout are going deep.
    and Reds? Man I hate you. You does this to me every time.

  20. #45
    NWF Summers's Avatar
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    I beg your pardon, sir; my meatloaf isn't dry.

  21. #46
    Cinnamon Girl mrsmaalox's Avatar
    Name
    Yvonne
    Location
    San Antonio, Texas
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    I beg your pardon, sir; my meatloaf isn't dry.
    It's okay if it is Summers! Who likes drippy meat??

  22. #47
    NWF Summers's Avatar
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    Texas
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    It's okay if it is Summers! Who likes drippy meat??
    Drippy meat.

  23. #48
    Slovenian Master Slomo's Avatar
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    5764 Miles ENE from SA
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    Slomo, you really lost me on this one...olive oil had a higher smoke point than almost any of the normal kitchen oils (410F)

    I use it all the time when sauteing with butter to mix 1//2 and 1/2 and extend the flash point where I don't have to watch it QUITE so closely and can speed up the process.
    This is going to be difficult to explain in english since I don't really know the right terminology.

    First the trick of mixing butter and olive oil is a really good one and quite popular in modern french cuisine for exactly the reason you mentioned.

    Let me give you an example. To make a really good tomato sauce (ie for pasta) you start by stir frying some nice onion in a couple of spoons of olive oil. Due to the little quan y of oil in the pan (possibly a nice, heavy, old fashioned pan) it is very easy to overheat olive oil to a point where it "breaks down" specially since the best result is achieved by heating the oil before dumping the chopped onions in it. If instead of olive oil you use sunflower seed oil or peanut oil that risk is almost non existent (but the taste suffers). I've seen many people make this mistake and the result is bad taste and quite often a middle case of indigestion.

    I like the sweetness and aroma released by the onions when I use extra virgin olive oil - and that's even more delicate in terms of temperature (Italians don't recommend anything else but "regular" olive oil for cooking - it's more refined).

    Otherwise the best french fries I ever ate was in greece and they were deep fried in the foulest looking deep fryer filled with some cheap olive oil. But the taste was incredible and the fries were cooked to perfection (it's also more difficult to overheat the oil in a deep fryer).

  24. #49
    Veteran marini martini's Avatar
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    My favorite (failure/success) off the reservation dish recently was a Thai Shrimp thing with sticky rice. I'm still working out all the do's and dont's of curry and coconut. I accidentally bought coconut juice instead of coconut milk and my oriental es got to work WAY too long while it reduced. Those oriental peppers will kick your ass if you get a little liberal. Habanero's ain't got nothing on them.

    I will do better next time. The flavor was knock your socks off awesome but it was WAY too hot. We were all scarfing it down and wiping tears out of our eyes. I love hot but it was freaking WAY too hot...but it tasted so GOOD LOL. Every pot/plate was wiped clean.
    This is going to be difficult to explain in english since I don't really know the right terminology.

    First the trick of mixing butter and olive oil is a really good one and quite popular in modern french cuisine for exactly the reason you mentioned.

    Let me give you an example. To make a really good tomato sauce (ie for pasta) you start by stir frying some nice onion in a couple of spoons of olive oil. Due to the little quan y of oil in the pan (possibly a nice, heavy, old fashioned pan) it is very easy to overheat olive oil to a point where it "breaks down" specially since the best result is achieved by heating the oil before dumping the chopped onions in it. If instead of olive oil you use sunflower seed oil or peanut oil that risk is almost non existent (but the taste suffers). I've seen many people make this mistake and the result is bad taste and quite often a middle case of indigestion.

    I like the sweetness and aroma released by the onions when I use extra virgin olive oil - and that's even more delicate in terms of temperature (Italians don't recommend anything else but "regular" olive oil for cooking - it's more refined).

    Otherwise the best french fries I ever ate was in greece and they were deep fried in the foulest looking deep fryer filled with some cheap olive oil. But the taste was incredible and the fries were cooked to perfection (it's also more difficult to overheat the oil in a deep fryer).
    Dayum ya'll cook, too???

    Betty Crocker's in the kitchen and s in bed!!!

  25. #50
    NWF Summers's Avatar
    Location
    Texas
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    4,998
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    Betty Crocker's in the kitchen and s in bed!!!
    Aren't we all?

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