(no subject)
Mar. 29th, 2009 09:34 pmFinally finished pulling together the tax stuff for the CPA. It's in an envelope and ready for tomorrow's mail. Finished up my post for the Ninc blog, which will go live on 1 April. Nope, not fooling.
Made pork ribs in the crockpot with a sauce of red wine and tomato paste and fennel, garlic, onions, celery, and carrots. I made the mistake I always do with these recipes in that I didn't brown things enough during the pre-crockpot cooking. Plus, my best frypans are nonstick, and you don't get the browning you need with coated pans. Ina Garten made this recipe with beef short ribs, and she used a dutch oven/casserole type pot that could go from burner to oven. I needs me one of those.
The ribs were still really good--meat fell off the bone, and as usual, the sauce contained a wealth of juice from the veggies, and tasted very good. But it all would have been better with more browning.
While the ribs cooked, I baked banana bread. After I ate, I went out and shoveled the deck and driveway. Temps had risen to around 40F, and the snow was falling out of the trees in fist-sized clumps and melting into a slush that set like cement when I tried to push it with the shovel. Heavy, heavy snow. Density of neutronium.
I am tired.
Oh look--Monday's coming.
Made pork ribs in the crockpot with a sauce of red wine and tomato paste and fennel, garlic, onions, celery, and carrots. I made the mistake I always do with these recipes in that I didn't brown things enough during the pre-crockpot cooking. Plus, my best frypans are nonstick, and you don't get the browning you need with coated pans. Ina Garten made this recipe with beef short ribs, and she used a dutch oven/casserole type pot that could go from burner to oven. I needs me one of those.
The ribs were still really good--meat fell off the bone, and as usual, the sauce contained a wealth of juice from the veggies, and tasted very good. But it all would have been better with more browning.
While the ribs cooked, I baked banana bread. After I ate, I went out and shoveled the deck and driveway. Temps had risen to around 40F, and the snow was falling out of the trees in fist-sized clumps and melting into a slush that set like cement when I tried to push it with the shovel. Heavy, heavy snow. Density of neutronium.
I am tired.
Oh look--Monday's coming.
no subject
Date: 2009-03-30 03:07 pm (UTC)Aside: Yes, nonstick pans do brown things nicely. What they don't do is leave much fond behind for the sauce... but fond doesn't do well in low-temperature moist-heat environments like a crock pot anyway. The key is that one must "brown" things at a much higher temperature in a nonstick pan if the recipe calls for medium, crank it to medium-high.
Jaws
no subject
Date: 2009-03-30 05:43 pm (UTC)But all the instructions I've read for nonstick pans state that they can't take higher temps or the coating can be damaged. I try to never crank it beyond medium.