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On Sat, 03 Jan 2004 04:50:12 GMT, "Lennie Richardson"
wrote: "Ken Fortenberry" wrote in message igy.com... Reading roffian discourse on the subject of tofu is like reading the report of a Japanese sports writer who mistakenly wandered in on a performance of the Bolshoi Ballet and wrote it up as a really dull Sumo match. You just SO don't get it. But what do you expect from folks who actually think deep fried turkey might be a good idea. -- Ken Fortenberry You speak as if liking tofu and deep fried turkey are mutually exclusive. Tofu is great stuff. I especially like it braised in salted black bean sauce and snow peas, garnished with chopped scallions. Ma po do fu is one of my favrotie dishes to eat and to cook, but is not strictly vegetarian. Yummy. It is tasty cubed, fried in a wok and then added to pad thai. But without the frying part, it's pretty rank, imo... Have you ever had deep fried turkey, Ken? Sounds like contempt prior to investigation to me... Well....perhaps it's just too scary for him... /daytripper (who loves deep fried turkey - if someone else does the frying ;-) |
#12
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apparently tofu is better known, more recognizable, and easier to define
than strider's dreaded "liberal"... Warren wrote: wrote... I think of tofu as the thing that's left in my miso soup when I'm all done. You are guilty by association since you had the broth surrounding the toegoo! |
#13
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No sensible person has a deep fryer of sufficient capacity for any
reasonable turkey, Uh, Mike. Said deep friers are available at you corner department store and are fairly ubiquitous over here. -- Frank Reid Reverse email to reply |
#14
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Mike Connor wrote:
... No sensible person has a deep fryer of sufficient capacity for any reasonable turkey, But of course you knew that anyway, ... Well of course *I* know that, but some clever redneck somewhere discovered that deep frying a turkey was the perfect excuse to stand around in the driveway drinking beer while the womenfolk did the real work in the kitchen. Naturally this has become very popular here in the States even though the finished product is so bland and tasteless that many use syringes and other silly things to INJECT flavor into the turkey. I swear to god I am NOT making this up. All you need to know about deep frying a turkey is that you cannot buy a turkey fryer from a cooking or culinary catalog but Cabela's sells a TON of them. -- Ken Fortenberry |
#15
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![]() "Ken Fortenberry" wrote in message gy.com... Mike Connor wrote: ... No sensible person has a deep fryer of sufficient capacity for any reasonable turkey, But of course you knew that anyway, ... Well of course *I* know that, but some clever redneck somewhere discovered that deep frying a turkey was the perfect excuse to stand around in the driveway drinking beer while the womenfolk did the real work in the kitchen. I don't have a deep fryer big enough to do a turkey. Several of my friends and acquaintances do. Some of them are rednecks.....others are anything but. Some of them are women. Given that the apparatus is typically used once or twice a year, there is some merit to the argument that they are not practical investment....but the same is true for a lot of kitchen gear.....or fly rods, for that matter. As for the observation that the men stand in the driveway drinking beer while the women do the real work in the kitchen, in households where this is likely to result, that's pretty much the way it would fall out anyway. Ever known anybody who owns a grill? Naturally this has become very popular here in the States even though the finished product is so bland and tasteless that many use syringes and other silly things to INJECT flavor into the turkey. I swear to god I am NOT making this up. Good cooks and bad used syringes for decades before deep frying turkeys (not as new a phenomenon as we are here led to believe) became popular. It's a good and perfectly acceptable method for seasoning and moisturinzing large pieces of meat. And most turkeys sold in grocery stores in the U.S. have already been injected with water and sundry flavorings and chemicals anyway, as is also true of hams and various other meats. That said, a deep fryed turkey is no more tasteless or bland than is deep fryed chicken, a perennial favorite, and not without reason. Deep frying in very hot oil is an excellent way to cook meats quickly and thoroughly without drying them, as has been known by decent cooks the world over for centuries. The only valid criticisms of deep frying (apart from matters of personal taste) center on health concerns; there can be no doubt that the method adds fat to whatever is being cooked. A large part of the problem is that it's comparatively difficult to season foods prior to deep frying.....anything simply sprinkled or rubbed on will fall off immediately when the food goes into the oil. The standard solution is to include the seasonings in breading or a batter of some kind and then coat the food with this mixture. Breading and batters are very absorbant; they soak up a lot of fat. Keeping this in mind, whole birds are ideal candidates for deep frying because they can be cooked with the skin on after seasonings like fresh herbs have been manually forced under the skin. The vast majority of the oil drains off while resting the meat after cooking and during slicing. Naturally, the deminishing ratio of surface to mass as size increases means that bigger pieces of meat will carry with them less fat per unit mass, thus making turkeys a particularly good choice for deep frying. All you need to know about deep frying a turkey is that you cannot buy a turkey fryer from a cooking or culinary catalog but Cabela's sells a TON of them. Well, it also helps to know that "all you need to know" about anything is a red flag worth paying attention to. I suspect that culinary catalogs don't list such items (if indeed this is true) for the same reasons that kitchen specialty shops don't stock them. It probably has more to do with return per unit of storage or display space and demand than anything else. Bottom line is Bubba and Buffy have different tastes, budgets, and prejudices. Myself, I've had more superb meals in the basements of southern Baptist churches than in four star restaurants....or my own kitchen, for that matter. Wolfgang |
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I don't have a deep fryer big enough to do a turkey. Several of my
friends and acquaintances do. Some of them are rednecks.....others are anything but. Some of them are women. Given that the apparatus is typically used once or twice a year, there is some merit to the argument that they are not practical investment....but the same is true for a lot of kitchen gear.....or fly rods, for that matter. It is also a good implement to make a large pot of stew for a large crowd when the appropriate kitchen is not available. I've got a "fryer" but I use it chiefly for feeding stew to 40 or so folks at Penns Clave. In all honesty, thats all I use it for (besides boiling some old socks). -- Frank Reid Reverse email to reply |
#17
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![]() "Frank Reid" moc.deepselbac@diersicnarf wrote in message ... In all honesty, thats all I use it for (besides boiling some old socks). -- Frank Reid I've heard your stews are quite tasty. Op --I'll bring some dirty socks for ya to boil, if I make it this year.-- |
#18
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Wolfgang wrote:
... Myself, I've had more superb meals in the basements of southern Baptist churches than in four star restaurants.... That is doubtless because you've eaten more meals in church basements than in four star restaurants. There are only 180 four and five star restaurants in the United States, none whatsoever in Wisconsin, and if you don't find the fare in any one of them better than that in a church basement you wouldn't know a superb meal from cheese curd. FYI, here's the 2004 list of four and five restaurants in the US. http://www.hotel-online.com/News/PR2...lFiveStar.html -- Ken Fortenberry |
#19
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On Sat, 03 Jan 2004 16:05:37 GMT, Ken Fortenberry
wrote: Wolfgang wrote: ... Myself, I've had more superb meals in the basements of southern Baptist churches than in four star restaurants.... That is doubtless because you've eaten more meals in church basements than in four star restaurants. There are only 180 four and five star restaurants in the United States, none whatsoever in Wisconsin, and if you don't find the fare in any one of them better than that in a church basement you wouldn't know a superb meal from cheese curd. FYI, here's the 2004 list of four and five restaurants in the US. http://www.hotel-online.com/News/PR2...lFiveStar.html -- Ken Fortenberry They forgot Champ's, here in Merrill. Chocolate chip pancakes...mmm. g.c. |
#20
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![]() "Frank Reid" moc.deepselbac@diersicnarf schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... No sensible person has a deep fryer of sufficient capacity for any reasonable turkey, Uh, Mike. Said deep friers are available at you corner department store and are fairly ubiquitous over here. -- Frank Reid Reverse email to reply I see nothing mutually exclusive in the above statements ![]() TL MC |
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The politics of nature | Sportsmen Against Bush | Fly Fishing | 290 | January 12th, 2004 08:42 PM |