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9
Comments
342
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • I hear you. I'm blessed with more choices for potato ingestion than I need or deserve in the supermarket aisle. a benefit of living in middle-America, I suppose. I've heard that you can approximate them by squeezing as much moisture as possible out of grated potato using a cheesecloth or tea towel, and then freezing the shreds before frying them off in a pan, but that degree of foresight and prep work doesn't factor into most of my breakfasts lol.

  • all fried potatoes have a place in my heart (lodged into the arterial walls, secured with cholesterol glue), but I'll always insist that hashbrowns are shredded potatoes, not cubed. don't get me wrong, I'd happily house this entire bowl and ask you for seconds, but these are what I usually picture.

    did you hand cut the potatoes? they're very neatly done. I'm useless at consistency when it comes to anything smaller than 1 cm dice.

  • since you brought red-eye gravy up, are your familiar with its preparation? I've read that it's often made by frying up a ham steak with maybe a little supplementary fat (butter, lard, or bacon grease) and creating a roux from the drippings. rather than milk, as might be done with sawmill/country gravy, the liquid added is strong black coffee.

    this combination of ham, coffee, and roux has long fascinated me, as I imagine a real roller coaster of flavors there. however, I've not had the opportunity to order it in a real Southern diner, so I don't know if I'm off-base here, especially because, as I think about it, I'm pretty sure the first time I came across the dish as a concept was in an alternate-history novel in which racist South Africans time travel to the American Civil War and hand out AK-47s to the Army of Northern Virginia. In other words, citation very much needed lol.

    • 250 g AP flour
    • 1 TBSP sugar
    • 1 TBSP baking powder
    • Pinch salt
    • 6 Tbsp (90 g) butter (cold)
    • 2 Tbsp (30 g) butter (melted for topping)
    • 2/3 cup (150 ml) whole mil

    Add flour, sugar, baking powder and salt to bowl. Take your very cold butter, and grate it into the dry ingredients using a box grater. Quickly work the butter into the flour mix with a fork or your hands. Add a portion of the milk, and mix until a shaggy dough forms, adding more milk as necessary (I did not use the full allotment). Turn out onto a work surface dusted with flour. Knead with your hands until you have a solid mass which does not stick to your work surface. Roll it into a rough ball/lump, then flatten it out into a rough rectangle approximately 1 inch thick. Fold one half of the rectangle on top of the other half, and then knead it back out to a 1 thick rectangle. Turn the dough 90 degrees, and repeat a couple times. I think I maybe did 5 reps. Once you have your final rectangle, cut out your biscuit rounds if you have the tool to do so. I did not, so I just cut the rectangle into thirds and then half using a chef's knife. Lubed a baking pan with cooking spray, hucked the bits of dough in, and set into a 425 degree F (~220 C) oven. Baked until the dough had puffed up at least twice it's initial size, and the surface was dry and unyielding to my finger (roughly 15, 20 min? I don't know, tbh, this was all feel at this point). Notably, the biscuits had not acquired much of any color other than their bottoms. I was worried about over cooking them or scorching the bottoms if I let it go until the tops were golden brown, so I brushed them down with butter and then hit em with a full broiler grill fro several minutes, until the coloration seen here was achieved. Reapplied more melted butter, cracked over some fresh salt, and voila.

    here is the process that i used this morning. the other posters are correct that American biscuits are apparently quite different than what biscuits are elsewhere. as someone else shared with you, I've often heard that the closest European equivalent would be a butter scone, but I've also heard folks who care more than I about these things that that's also not exactly 1:1. in any case, it's a very lightly sweet and buttery quickbread. it has a crispy exterior, and a very soft, tender crumb interior, sometimes with distinct, laminated layers (similar in principle to a croissant). it is equally at home in both savory and sweet applications. this morning, I ate them with elderberry jam, while I served them as a side for beef stew this evening. I used it to sop up the remnants in my bowl. equally delicious.

  • Liberally, and frequently!

  • Thank you! The broiler did most of the work at the end there.

  • Indeed! I felt like a mad man when I was dusting my counter down with flour, but thankfully I was able to do so right next to my sink, so cleanup was just pushing the leftover cruft into the sink and giving a quick wipe down. Still, definitely not a breakfast fit for a workday, that's for sure.

  • Salt! I used salted butter, so I had not added any to the actual dough. My first sample told me I needed a little more salt to balance out the sweet, so I spread a little more melted butter on top and cracked over a bit of salt. Vast improvement!

  • I sympathize with you entirely. While I know there's a perfectly reasonable explanation for almost every baking mishap (too dry, too wet, too much gluten, not nearly enough, overworked, underworked, and on and on), I can't help but feel that some loaves are just cursed by fate

    • 250 g AP flour
    • 1 TBSP sugar
    • 1 TBSP baking powder
    • Pinch salt
    • 6 Tbsp (90 g) butter (cold)
    • 2 Tbsp (30 g) butter (melted for topping)
    • 2/3 cup (150 ml) whole mil

    Add flour, sugar, baking powder and salt to bowl. Take your very cold butter, and grate it into the dry ingredients using a box grater. Quickly work the butter into the flour mix with a fork or your hands. Add a portion of the milk, and mix until a shaggy dough forms, adding more milk as necessary (I did not use the full allotment). Turn out onto a work surface dusted with flour. Knead with your hands until you have a solid mass which does not stick to your work surface. Roll it into a rough ball/lump, then flatten it out into a rough rectangle approximately 1 inch thick. Fold one half of the rectangle on top of the other half, and then knead it back out to a 1 thick rectangle. Turn the dough 90 degrees, and repeat a couple times. I think I maybe did 5 reps. Once you have your final rectangle, cut out your biscuit rounds if you have the tool to do so. I did not, so I just cut the rectangle into thirds and then half using a chef's knife. Lubed a baking pan with cooking spray, hucked the bits of dough in, and set into a 425 degree F (~220 C) oven. Baked until the dough had puffed up at least twice it's initial size, and the surface was dry and unyielding to my finger (roughly 15, 20 min? I don't know, tbh, this was all feel at this point). Notably, the biscuits had not acquired much of any color other than their bottoms. I was worried about over cooking them or scorching the bottoms if I let it go until the tops were golden brown, so I brushed them down with butter and then hit em with a full broiler grill fro several minutes, until the coloration seen here was achieved. Reapplied more melted butter, cracked over some fresh salt, and voila.

  • That's a wild take. Quibble over exact war contributions scores all you like, but to say the US didn't have an impact in Europe is blatantly false.

  • I'm coming up on the end of season 2 right now, and I legit thought this was the chevron7 community.

  • Devs are asleep at the wheel

  • If anyone's curious, they actually wrote a song addressing that whole kerfuffle a few years after the fact called "Not Ready to Make Nice". In so far as pop-country goes, it's pretty good.

    Also, "Gaslighter" is a bop, while I'm recommending songs of theirs.

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    nasty as hell

    Jump
  • this is an older performance of theirs, but is one I frequently throw on while choring about the house. Perfect vibes.

  • You might like Burn Notice, depending on your tolerance for network television tropes of the mid-aughts. It's a "monster of the week" format, rather than the serialized approach of Reacher, but it typically includes a scene or two referencing the season arc in any given episode, so you still feel like the narrative is advancing, even if the majority of the episode was a side quest.

    The gist is that a US government spy gets "burned" and turned loose in Miami. He, and the few contacts he has who will still speak with him (which include his mother, an ex-gf with a bombastic personality, and Bruce Campbell at the height of his smarmy powers), attempt to figure out who burned him, while also getting wrapped up in "favors" for various folks about town that inevitably wind up more complicated than was initially let on. Antagonists run the gamut from international terrorists to con artists who target the geriatric (it is, after all, set in Florida).

    It's not high art, but it's got a winning cast, decent action (for network television), and, on occasion, I think some pretty clever solutions for problems which leverage the "spycraft" gimmick. Worth a shot.