We have not really broached this topic before and I think it would be fun to discuss.
Afterall, from the Port enthusiasts I've met ... they all seem to love to eat well.

Moderators: Glenn E., Roy Hersh, Andy Velebil
I think so. Both of my parents like to cook and I worked in some restaurants in high school and my first few years of college, always in the back of the house. I think a good cook can follow recipes and prepare them well. A very good cook can read a recipe and know what it is going to taste like, and what other recipes would go well with it, even without ever having prepared that recipe before. And a great cook can come up with recipes from scratch and know what they are going to taste like and pair well with. I think I'm into the very good range, but not the excellent range.Roy Hersh wrote:Do you consider yourself a talented cook?
Most definitely. We have friends over regularly for meals, sometimes elaborate planned dinners, sometimes improvised things thrown together.Do you like to cook for friends?
I cook a lot of southeast Asian, and Chinese as well. I like Thai but cook Khmer more because you don't find it so easily in restaurants. After that, a lot of continental, some Italian, and then German and eastern European. Last night I made pecan-coated pork chops, a pretty simple recipe which I put in the continental category. I make a number of different cheesecakes that are pretty tasty, a variety of crème brulées, a fair number of chocolate desserts, and an occasional pear-ginger-custard tart.What are your specialties?
Fresh tumeric! I love it. I asked one of my local grocers for this and every now and then she gets some in. If I want to drive further I know a place that always has it, but they require buying more than I can use in a reasonable amount of time. I buy it anyway and give away some.Moses Botbol wrote:Yes, Turmeric with everything
If it ain't bright yellow, it ain't curry (to me).Eric Menchen wrote:Fresh tumeric! I love it. I asked one of my local grocers for this and every now and then she gets some in. If I want to drive further I know a place that always has it, but they require buying more than I can use in a reasonable amount of time. I buy it anyway and give away some.Moses Botbol wrote:Yes, Turmeric with everything
Lots of finger staining, and counter staining, but it goes away after a few days. For paprika I like Spanish, Hungarian, smoked, sweet ... all good, it just depends on the mood. I like smoking foods (and grain for beer), but haven't done that much. My last smoking was a turkey at Thanksgiving, over hickory. I regularly use hickory, mesquite, and alder depending on the food. I once used cherry, and I have some grape vines for future use. I know a brewery that used some pecan for smoking grain, but not pecan shells. Interesting. What cinnamon Moses? I'd think "true" cinnamon would be gone quickly. Cassia, commonly sold as cinnamon in the US might last a little longer. I've seen something in Asian grocery stores that I think is related and even thicker, but I don't remember what that was called.Moses Botbol wrote:I can buy fresh tumeric like ginger locally. That being said, I use the powdered most often. Too much hassle and finger staining to grate tumeric for a fried egg for instance. Put some powdered tumeric in oil and there you go.
I am also paprika crazy. Spanish is my favorite; both hot and smoked.
Into my smoker. Been BBQ and smoking meat for 10 years. Been cold smoking Linguica a lot; Gaspars or Armarals. 30 minutes smoke and then 4 days in the fridge. Newest tricks are using pecan shells & cinamon sticks for smoking wood.
The cinamon sticks that come in two pound size bags at the indian grocery store for $10.00. I'll throw in 10 sticks of cinamon at the beginning. I buy most spices at indian or middle eastern stores. The paprika I buy online. I buy Valencia rice in 10 KG bags for paella which is been a staple at my house.Eric Menchen wrote:Interesting. What cinnamon Moses? I'd think "true" cinnamon would be gone quickly. Cassia, commonly sold as cinnamon in the US might last a little longer. I've seen something in Asian grocery stores that I think is related and even thicker, but I don't remember what that was called.
Been big into making creme fraiche recently. So cheap to do it yourself.Michael Hann wrote:I like to make a thing called "tarte flambee," an Alsatian preparation. This comprises a very thin bread crust over which is spread a rich savory sauce of 1/2 creme fraiche, 1/2 sour cream with some nutmeg in it, some chopped sauteed pieces of bacon (not cooked to a hard brown stage but to an intermediate cooking stage
Yes, creme fraiche is easy to make. It seems, however, about the only thing I make which calls for creme fraiche is this same tarte flambee I mention above. I make a trout dish that calls for creme fraiche (salt, pepper butterflied trout inside, coat with flour, sautee to brown in butter, lay on a bed of minced shallots in a shallow baking dish, douse with some Alsatian riesling wine, braise in oven 8 minutes -- basting twice -- at 400 degrees, pour creme fraiche over trout, braise about another 20 minutes, meanwhile sautee slivered almonds in butter until browned -- but not burned! -- serve trout with browned almonds on top), but in fact it seems just as good with ordinary heavy cream.Moses Botbol wrote:Been big into making creme fraiche recently. So cheap to do it yourself.