Posts Tagged ‘How To’

Dear God, I love bacon

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

I love .

Here piggy piggy

It’s the perfect synthesis of all your basic food groups, meat and fat. It’s welcome for dinner, lunch or breakfast. It’s great by itself, on the side or when wrapped around another food product. In fact, if you could wrap around you might create a nexus of awesome so great the world as we know it would end and an entirely new and perfect universe would open up. I love .

Which is why when someone complains about it being too much work to make I want to claw their eyes out with a fork. They’ve put no effort into maximizing their intake while minimizing the clean up. Making is quick, easy and requires absolutely zero clean up.

All you need is a cookie sheet, a cooling rack and a cold oven. Layer the cookie sheet with aluminum foil(I told you no clean up) and put the cooling rack on top. You don’t technically need the rack, but it keeps the out of it’s own grease and helps it brown up real nice.

Then just drop that bad boy in a cold oven, turn the temp to 400 and let it go. By allowing the to heat up with the oven you’re giving it time for the fat to render off. If you’re one of those philistines who like soggy , then you can pre-heat the oven and put the in after. I wouldn’t do that though, because I love .

How long do you cook it at 400? Well, that depends. About 2 minutes, but you have to be really careful because goes from done to charcoal ribbons in about 30 seconds. Luckily this is the one case where you can keep opening the oven door and you won’t hurt a thing, so I say just keep an eye on it and don’t worry about the time.

What’s that? You’re one of those sad, divorced guys who only has a toaster oven and an I.O.U. where your dignity used to be? No problem, we can make that work too. I wouldn’t want to compound your misery by leaving you without as well.

Just line your sad little toaster tray with foil, drape it with and pop it in at 200 degrees. Once it reaches temperature bump it up 25 degrees every minute or so until you get to 350. By then it should be perfect.

Did I mention that I love ?

It Burns, Dear God it Burns

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

When I was eight my brother was six. Six and very gullible. Which is why when I gave him a bar of bakers chocolate, he ate the whole thing. I just kept saying “Isn’t that great?” He just kept nodding and wincing through the whole, disgusting bar. It was much harder, a year later, to get him to consume a habanero pepper. He was gullible but not stupid.

So began our dance, me trying to feed him more and more disgusting things and him trying to eat in peace. And through the years he’s become tougher and tougher to get. Until…

 

The other day I was making spicy apple . My apple , by the way, is awesome. It’s better than any of the “gourmet” crap you find in half ounce jars at the store. And it costs less to make then the bright yellow, congealed piss most people put on their dogs. All it takes it a few simple ingredients, a glass jar and some forethought. Why forethought?

Because you make it, let it sit on the counter for a week, and then move it to the fridge. As a boy they told me this was to let the flavors mingle. They lied, as I recently learned.

So I last week I was going to grill up some brats when I realized I was out of my awesome spicy apple . I figured that not letting the flavors mingle for that first week would mean it wasn’t quite as good, but a lesser some is better than a perfect none. So I mixed up a batch on the counter and applied it straight from the bowl.

 

After I regained consciousness I did a little research. In fact the one week waiting period has nothing to do with flavors mingling, it’s all about heat dissipation. The heat you get from comes from a reaction between it’s enzymes. The longer you let that reaction go, the less heat you have. The reason you put it in the fridge is to stop that reaction. So what I was really doing was letting the cool down for a week, then holding it at that level of spiciness.

So began a series of painful experiments. I found out that dry by itself is about as spicy as cornstarch. The reaction starts when the powder is mixed with water. From that moment, for about 15 minutes it tastes as bitter and as a lit cigarette. From 15 minutes to about 2 hours it’s obscenely , but you can consume it without a trip to the ER. From 2 hours to a day is about as or hotter than anything you can find in a specialty store. If you are looking for a really blazing (as I always am) this is about the ideal zone. Letting it sit for a week will net you a really good, flavorful, intriguing . But where’s the fun in that?

 

My brother’s coming over tonight for brats. I think I’m gonna pre- my buns with the stuff from the fridge, then mix up a bowl at the table and slide it right in front of him. I wonder how long I can get him to keep eating just by mentioning “Isn’t fresh the best?”

Spicy Apple

  • 4 Tbsp ground powder(brown or yellow or mixed to your liking)
  • A pinch of cinnamon
  • 1/2 Tbsp apple cider vinegar
  • 1 and 1/2 Tbsp apple cider(juice if you have to)

Mix the cinnamon, powder and apple juice, then let sit for 15 minutes. Then you can add the vinegar. If you add the vinegar early, it may stop the enzymes from reacting and you might get weird “ spots” in your as it ages.

Let it sit until you reach your desired heat level(as described in the article) then move to the fridge. That’s it. Really.