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hellkat
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PostPosted: 14:45 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Alternative cookery Reply with quote

For reasons not currently available for public information purposes, I found myself in temporary ownership of a small amount of exotic dried-parsley-appearing stuff which was surplus to normal hellkattish requirements.

And I thought I would make some flavoured butter for cooking with later on (maybe scones, muffins ......... brownies).

But apparently I was supposed to grind it up first.
(a) I didn't know this, and
(b) I don't actually own a grinder.

(normally I consume so little of this exotic parsley that I just snip it into little bits with a pair of nail scissors)

I also added about 50ml of oil which I thought might save it from overcooking too quickly, cos I know how quickly butter can burn.

So my Q's were going to be these:

* Will it not be as strong cos I didn't grind it?
(it's only small bits and pieces anyway, that would probably fall to dust in 3 or 4 more days. There might be a small twig in there, not even the size of a matchstick.

* Will cooking it longer make it stronger?

HOWEVER ... whilst I have been typing this out, I left it on the cooker (on lowest gas possible, dudes) and now it is kind of brown. I think its burnt, as it appears to be more brown than the cheery green I understand it is supposed to turn.

In these frustrating circumstances*, what might I use it for?


* I am more annoyed about wasting the best part of 200g of butter than the less than 0.25oz of parsley-appearing herbal additions.
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hellkat
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PostPosted: 14:46 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

P.S. Crying or Very sad Crying or Very sad Crying or Very sad Crying or Very sad Crying or Very sad Crying or Very sad Crying or Very sad






Laughing
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stinkwheel
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PostPosted: 14:51 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Re: Alternative cookery Reply with quote

hellkat wrote:

(b) I don't actually own a grinder.


You could however own a lovely garlic plate. Which is much better than a garlic press and can be used to grind up other ingredients too.

I use mine for grating root ginger and tumeric as well as garlic.

https://sallanscorner.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/plate.jpg
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hellkat
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PostPosted: 14:59 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

That is a very attractive garlic plate.

I usually just crush garlic with salt/bladeofknife, actually.
And I have a tiny nutmeg grater which also works well for ginger.

But for grinding purposes, I may give such a plate some serious mind when I next pass an establishment purveying similar charmingly naive crockery. Cool

(if I don't buy a pestle and mortar before then Laughing )
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temeluchus
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PostPosted: 15:09 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

It doesn't have to be especially warm to transfer its essence to the butter.

Filling a pan with water, then placing a bowl in the water and melting butter in there is a safer bet. One can then allow for plenty of time without burning the butter.
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hellkat
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PostPosted: 15:19 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hmmmm, okay.
I may have to attempt it again at a later date.
Thank you.

I did wonder whether I ought to do that, but my sister used the direct-in-saucepan method with overwhelming success when I was visiting her earlier in the year. Mind you, she's so much more experienced than me at such things. No doubt she's burnt a few saucepans in her time Laughing

Bloody waste of good butter.
Perhaps I could do my own version of special (field/button) mushrooms with garlic and burnt-parsley-butter. Thinking
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chickenstrip
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PostPosted: 16:40 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think parsley is one of those herbs that just doesn't work dried. Fresh stuff every time for me.

I'm another one who uses a little salt and the flat of a knife blade to crush garlic - saves on washing up, and some say you get a better flavour that way, not sure I necessarily agree, but as long as it's not worse.

Did a chicken breast with a garlic, cider and cream sauce the other day - four LARGE cloves of garlic for one serving Shocked Blanched in boiling water for about 4 mins first, it really works, not overpowering at all Drooling

Got myself a little grater tool thingy for fresh ginger - don't use it for anything else but works great for ginger.
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Nobby the Bastard
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PostPosted: 16:52 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Previous experience indicates that sticking it into a bottle of smirnoff 1) removes the need to chop it up, and 2) is a bit mental.....
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hellkat
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PostPosted: 17:30 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Nobby the Bastard wrote:
Previous experience indicates that sticking it into a bottle of smirnoff 1) removes the need to chop it up, and 2) is a bit mental.....

Useful to know Cool Thumbs Up

... but I am trying to avoid overloading my liver any more than I absolutely have to. Laughing
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hellkat
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PostPosted: 17:33 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Laughing Laughing Aw, Chickenybobs ... *sigh*
You're sooooo cute. Laughing Laughing

Good recipe, though.
I shall try it out.
Nom.

Those little graters are v. useful in ordinary (non-herbal) cookery.
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chickenstrip
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PostPosted: 20:00 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

hellkat wrote:

Good recipe, though.
I shall try it out.
Nom.



For 2:

Boil 8 large garlic cloves whole in a deep pan of water for 4 mins.
Fry chicken breasts in olive oil and a little butter until golden on both sides.
Turn heat down as low as it will go, pop garlic cloves out of their skins and into pan with chicken, still whole. Cover and cook for about 20mins, until cooked through. Don't let garlic cloves burn! Laughing
Remove chicken from pan, add cider and crush garlic cloves with spoon or spatula.
Reduce down to a garlicky, cidery mush.
Add cream (single or double), a little salt and freshly ground black pepper, return chicken to pan and let sauce bubble for a bit. Serve. Eat. Thumbs Up

And remember: "the best cooks are men. Wherever you go in the world, the best cooks are always men" Laughing
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hellkat
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PostPosted: 20:05 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

What do you serve that with? Rice, mash, spaghetti?

Or just salad (yes I have been known to eat salad)

I even have cider Cool and I could probably find some chicken breasts in the freezer somewhere. When the big fella is next here, I shall make a point of trying it out for him (if he is not averse to letting me use up a botltle of his Old Rosie in such a wasteful fashion Laughing ).
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Omega
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PostPosted: 20:05 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Between the two of you, hellkat and chickenstrip, you could make an interesting alternative to Nando's...
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chickenstrip
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PostPosted: 20:12 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

hellkat wrote:
What do you serve that with? Rice, mash, spaghetti?

Or just salad (yes I have been known to eat salad)

I even have cider Cool and I could probably find some chicken breasts in the freezer somewhere. When the big fella is next here, I shall make a point of trying it out for him (if he is not averse to letting me use up a botltle of his Old Rosie in such a wasteful fashion Laughing ).


I did baby new potatoes and green beans, but whatever you like.

Omega, if you know how to cook, you don't need restaurants and their over-inflated prices Wink
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hellkat
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PostPosted: 20:18 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

So, what does the panel think:
should I throw out this burnt butter stuff or should I try it out in something anyway.

Maybe a REALLY chocolatey cake, to take away the taste of the burnt butter ... Thinking
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oldpink
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PostPosted: 20:19 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

made lots of herbal butter in my time not hard but you need to pay attention

as said use a bowl in a pan of water
gently heat the butter till its just melted add your herb of choice keep the heat low and stir often for about 2 hrs

get some cheese cloth to use as a strainer pour the hot mix through the cheese cloth to strain out the herbs
place the filtered butter in the fridge job done Thumbs Up
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hellkat
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PostPosted: 20:35 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks Cool

So I'm prolly best using this batch as chainlube, then? Laughing
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oldpink
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PostPosted: 20:50 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

you could try using it nothing to lose Thumbs Up Thumbs Up
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J.M.
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PostPosted: 21:42 - 29 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

I've had quick and effortless success with brownie mix, some butter, and said parsley.

I just grind it up, or scissors work but is more time consuming, and add to melted butter on low heat for 20-30 mins, then mix with a brownie mix and stick in the oven until done.

Perhaps not as good as it could be, but worked perfectly for me each time I've tried!
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temeluchus
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PostPosted: 00:54 - 31 Dec 2015    Post subject: Reply with quote

Nobby the Bastard wrote:
Previous experience indicates that sticking it into a bottle of smirnoff 1) removes the need to chop it up, and 2) is a bit mental.....


If you can get some ethanol, you can make a very strong tincture that doesn't require a large volume to get the desired effect if the consumer isn't also intending to get drunk.

Polish Spirytus is pretty much neat ethanol, a small bottle is plenty enough to process a large amount of plant matter.

Leave it to steep for a month for best results and one can carefully measure out the dose easily to avoid overdoing it.
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hellkat
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PostPosted: 00:03 - 02 Jan 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

So anyway, it can't have been that potent, as I just made some betty crocker brownie cupcakey things, and really - the burnt taste isnt really noticeable, and there's a bit of a green tinge flavour.

But the headshot is negligible; even >1hr, I've had to have a second one 'cos it seems that the first didn't work ... The world's smallest violin player, just for you!
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chickenstrip
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PostPosted: 00:28 - 02 Jan 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

Doh! It just clicked! Laughing Defo getting old!

Haven't done anything like that for a long time, but don't think I'd use green in cakes - crumbly stuff makes a nice spice Smile
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Shaft
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PostPosted: 00:45 - 02 Jan 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

chickenstrip wrote:
Doh! It just clicked! Laughing Defo getting old!



Did you have to cover your ears, to prevent becoming temporarily deafened by the sound of that penny dropping Laughing

BTW, what sort of quantities of cider and cream are you using in that recipe?

And do you have to keep the garlic in it's skin, or could you peel it right from the start?
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hellkat
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PostPosted: 00:52 - 02 Jan 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

I've only ever had it in cakes ... (although I might have fried the bacon in a tiny bit of that butter the other day, don't tell the Prez whatever you do, LOL, I forgot to mention it to him, and one can't really taste the burnt butter OR the green flavour with smoked bacon, it's such a strong flavour of its own ...)

When I visited my sister earlier this year, she made some of those Rice Crispie style space-cakes, known as "chocolate crackles" in the antipodean section of my family - I had one (or maybe it was two Shifty ) and then went to do the touristy thing about marsupials. I was totally trolleyed all day long. Wandering happily about, pestering kangaroos and generally communing with nature, la la la la, completely in la-la land.

(when we came away from the zoo we stopped at the Seacliff Bridge lookout point for a cup of tea and a bun, and I ended up chatting to some guys on bikes, blithely rabbiting on to them whilst my sister and daughter were patiently waiting for me in the car RIGHT BEHIND ME for about 10 minutes before I realised they were there).

Laughing proper wankered, I was Laughing
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Last edited by hellkat on 00:58 - 02 Jan 2016; edited 1 time in total
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Ste
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PostPosted: 00:57 - 02 Jan 2016    Post subject: Reply with quote

"Cannabis Cookbook
You want to get high? but you dont smoke? Check out the UK420 Good Food Guide."

https://www.uk420.com/boards/index.php?showforum=78

Just adding uncompressed Bubble Hash (or other hash that crumbles) to something is much easier than making cannabutter.

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