Monthly Archives: October 2011

Curing Ground Meat: Soppressata

Soppressata w-credit In honor of this month's #charcutepalooza challenge over at Mrs. Wheelbarrow, I'm reposting this soppressata recipe from a couple years back. Wishing all who take up the challenge well. Happy curing! While David Lebovitz considers molecular gastronomy and  The Alinea Cookbook in a long and thoughtful post today (he approaches with great skepticism, as he's a traditionalist at heart, and leaves with appreciation having come back round to where he'd begun but by a whole new route), I would like to consider some of the oldest molecular gastronomical magic known to man.  Combining ground pork and salt and seasonings, introducing to it some microscopic creatures, and waiting for it to dry a little, to achieve a tangy flavorful sausage that has never gone above room temperature. In December, a few of us went in on a pig.  One of the pleasures of hand-raised hog is ...

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Perennial Plate

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Banana Extinction?

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Whale Hunt

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Ruhlman’s Twenty: The Winners

Whisk/photo by Donna Turner Ruhlman (the book's opening image)

Winners were chosen at random, but the ah-ha moments were so interesting and so vast, they deserve their own post, or maybe even a book!  Many thanks to all who offered their personal "Ah-Ha."  And thank you Rob Levitt, of Chicago's Butcher & Larder for suggesting this idea in the first place! Here are the winners of a signed copy of Ruhlman's Twenty: 20 Techniques; 100 Recipes; A Cook's Manifesto and their "Ah-Ha" moment: Ryan: My Ah-Ha moment came the first time I used a knife that wasn't from a garage sale or Walmart. Before that moment cutting food (much less cooking it) was always a chore; something done because it had to be, not because I wanted to. But from the first moment I used a real ...

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