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  • #16
    Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

    ditto, I brown the meat well and then drain off the fat (saturated)
    add some olive oil for the onions, garlic, peppers, etc....
    Sharing life's positives and loving the slow food lane

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    • #17
      Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

      When you brown the meat that much in advance, doesn't it get tough? Or are you slow/long cooking it afterwards?
      My oven: http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/21/t...html#post46599
      My blog: Live For Pizza

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      • #18
        Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

        No, it get's rehydrated in the sauce and cooks further. Since it's ground meat, it's not much of a problem. The natives love it!
        Sharing life's positives and loving the slow food lane

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        • #19
          Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

          My favorite secret ingredient is 18yo Basalmic Vinegar.
          We use it on everything from chicken to steaks. I just did 10 pizzas for a friends open house yesterday and one of the pizzas featured a ricotta cheese mixture with basil, sun dried tomatoes, romano cheese, red chile flakes, salt, pepper and EVO and then topped with sliced wood fired chicken, basil, spinach, roated red peppers, fresh mozzerella and then a sprinkling of grated Asiago.
          Anyway...the chicken was marinated in chopped onion, garlic, fresh red chiles, salt, pepper, EVO and 18yo Basalmic vinegar and then grilled in the WFO. We had it earlier in the week w/o the BV and what a difference it makes. Wow!
          We also used it to marinade fresh grape tomatoes that were quartered and then tossed with fresh chopped basil, garlic, salt, pepper, chile flakes, EVO and BV. Toss and let sit for an hour at room temp and the tomatoes exude all their juices. the flavor is awesome, to say the least. When you are ready to use just drain the tomatoes thoroughly and use them as the base for the best Margherita Pizza you have ever tasted.
          The juices saved are a mixture of the EVO, BV and all the tomatoe juices with the spices and makes the best tomatoe vinegarette you have ever tasted. Nothing wasted...a perfect meal.

          Sorry for the ramble....I am getting hungry now.

          Thanks guys...great forum,

          Tom in PA

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          • #20
            Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

            We've been singing the praises of fresh terragon lately. Our favorite pizza is basil, tarragon, tomato, salt, pepper, mozzarella, olive oil, and some grated parmesean.

            Ken Morgan, Oregon

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            • #21
              Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

              SALT!

              Everyone seems scared to death to add enough salt - just watch a professional chef, you'd be amazed just how much salt they use! It's something processed food manufacturers know only too well and go overboard which is why it is linked to health problems, but if you're eating good real food please add enough salt, you're worth it.
              My rustic oven;
              http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/p...oven-6770.html
              sigpic

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              • #22
                Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

                Thanks for reviving this topic, Perry!

                Three of the previous messages identify balsamic vinegar as a secret ingredient. One using 18 year old. A good trick is to buy cheaper balsamic and reduce it to a light syrup. The regular reduced balsamic is a lovely plate drizzle as well as a food drizzle. Great on meats, veggies, pizzas of many kinds, even desserts (especially fruity ones).

                There is such a thing as white balsamic also. It too is wonderful reduced to a syrup. Try it on baked figs with blue cheese wrapped in prosciutto or serrano ham!
                Jay

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                • #23
                  Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

                  Originally posted by PerryPizza View Post
                  SALT!

                  Everyone seems scared to death to add enough salt - just watch a professional chef, you'd be amazed just how much salt they use! It's something processed food manufacturers know only too well and go overboard which is why it is linked to health problems, but if you're eating good real food please add enough salt, you're worth it.
                  Most chefs use kosher salt whlie cooking which is not as salty as iodized or sea salt. So the amount looks of salt you see them use may be misleading if the home cook is not using kosher salt. So always taste as you season and buy some kosher salt keep it in a container where you can reach in and grab a pinch or more!!
                  Check out our blog for a glimpse into our hobbies of home brewing, soda, beer and wine, gardening and most of all cooking in our WFO!

                  http://thereddragoncafe.blogspot.com/

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                  • #24
                    Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

                    A number of people also don't realize that you'll use a whole lot less salt if you just salt the water for potatoes, rice and pasta instead of trying to add it at the table. You can't add enough at the table to make up for what they didn't get while cooking....

                    I don't think I have one secret ingredient. My secret is to use the best stuff I can afford when it matters, and I try not to have too many things competing for your attention in the dish. I also make a some things that a lot of people buy- hummus, pesto, etc. I know most of you all probably make those too, but the vast majority of people buy a lot of prepared things, some of which are good, but a lot of which could be a lot better. My son's girlfriend gave me the best compliment once- "where do you shop for groceries? everything always tastes so good here!"
                    Elizabeth

                    http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/e...html#post41545

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                    • #25
                      Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

                      I'm afraid I don't get the kosher salt thing. Salt is salt, no matter what size chunks it's in. I particularly like the sort of recipe that calls for unsalted butter and mounds of sea salt or kosher salt. I think these are markers about how classy the recipe writer is.

                      It's not like biblical times when salt bearing rock was boiled in stew, then thrown out when it had "lost it's savor".
                      My geodesic oven project: part 1, part 2

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                      • #26
                        Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

                        Hi dmun!

                        My wife and I were both skeptics about salt for some time but I was converted in a cooking class where we did a salt tasting.

                        WRT kosher vs. regular table salt, the issue is not huge. The key difference there is that the larger grains create a subtle (or not once you recognize it) "larger" variation of saltiness across the food and tongue. The chemical differences are trivial and/or nonexistent except for iodine if you buy iodized salt.

                        Sea salts tend to be different - mainly in impurities which may or may not affect flavor. Cheaper sea salts in my experience are not a big deal or worth the money.

                        Cheaper sea salts and Mortons and Kosher are all pretty equivalent IMO.

                        Higher priced sea salts which I will call "finishing salts" are a whole different ballgame. There the size and shape and variation in size and shape is a big deal. And they tend to have somewhat different flavors (sometimes quite different) but it is usually more about texture and tongue "feel" and explosions (sort of like capers). I currently am using three finishing salts - a fleur de sel from France which is smallish to moderate flakes and light gray, Maldon from England which is highly variable in size but very thin flakes, and a black Hawaiian salt (that I use for appreance more than anything else).

                        You don't put these on until the very end. You don't want them to "dissolve" or at least not too much. You want them to provide a crunch and to provide tongue explosions.

                        The one salt I would recommend if someone wants to "try" an upscale sea salt is Maldon. It is not in the upper price range, is readily available, is neutrally flavored and versatile, and a good intro. I simply grab a pinch and "grind" it with my fingers as I sprinkle it on veggies or whatever with the amount of grinding determined by the size chunks I want. It can be especially good on salads.

                        I like it. I don't use it daily. 2-3 times a week when I think the food needs a little kick!
                        Jay

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                        • #27
                          Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

                          wow,,, some good stuff here, My big "secret" when I make pizza I use McGregor Roasted garlic and salt steak rub instead of oregano, Just adds a little diferent flavor to it..

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                          • #28
                            Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

                            Butter, cream, salt. I must add that as a child my favorite was a sugar sandwich.

                            Mark

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                            • #29
                              Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

                              Word on the salt thing. And season as you go. Applying salt to a finsihed dish is not the same thing as a dish that's been properly seasoned as it cooks.

                              My latest ingredient obsession is shaved garlic. Chopped fresh garlic, yea, but shaved paper thin and it becomes a totally different experience, especially in the WFO. I just can't get enough of it. I keep a ramekin of it in olive oil in my fridge.

                              And not that anyone here would be so silly, but because I continue to be shocked by how often people seem to use it, never, NEVER buy that chopped jarred garlic. That stuff is utterly disgusting and tastes nothing like fresh garlic.

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                              • #30
                                Re: Secret Cooking Ingredients

                                Well said, Splatgirl!

                                I too love shaved garlic. Ditto on the jarred chopped garlic. And I should have pointed out that in general one wants to slightly underseason with salt when cooking IF you will use a finishing salt! And...as you say, the finishing salt is NOT seasoning but more of an experience...

                                Thanks!
                                Jay

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