Showing posts with label spices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spices. Show all posts
About two months ago when I was staying at my sisters, she made the best oven barbequed ribs I have ever eaten. They were tender and delicious and really succulent. It was love at first bite for me!
I love spare ribs! They are something I only ever rarely eat. A lot of that has to do with having to go through a lot of pallaver to get them really tender, and then of course there is the fat content. They are a rare treat!
Making them in the past had always involved simmering them in a liquid for a long period of time. Then I would have to brush them with BBQ sauce and cook them some more in the oven or on the grill.
I didn't always have the time or the patience for all of that. My sister's method is so much easier and results in perfectly cooked juicy ribs!
It really was simple and I asked myself afterwards, why had I never thought to do the same! It was so easy and they were so tender.
How could I not have thought of this myself? I mean, if you look at them they are literally falling apart, they are so tender and there was no boiling, simmering involved at all.
First of all she only ever uses back ribs. She says there is too much bone in the side ribs, and I have to agree with her. You are paying for a lot of bone when you do ribs anyways, why pay for even more!
The side ribs almost always include that huge breast bone and there is not an awful lot of meat on them. Pound for pound, dollar for dollar, you get a lot more meat for your money if you buy back ribs.
That is probably why back ribs are so much more expensive than side ribs. It makes sense. This past week the local Foodland had back ribs on offer so I took advantage of the great price and bought some for me to cook at home.
I decided to cook them just as my sister had.
First I started by creating a delicious, nicely flavored rub to season them with. This involved quite a few different spices, as well as some brown sugar.
Sweet and smoked paprika, dry mustard powder, ground cumin, chili powder, chipotle powder, cinnamon, nutmeg, garlic, onion, oregano, thyme, etc. to just name a few. I have given you the exact quantities and spices in the notes section of the printable recipe below.
I am actually a huge fan of making my own mixes, spice blends, and rubs. I have a whole page dedicated to them here.
Today I only had one rack so I only used a portion of the rub. You will need to keep to the cook time no matter how many ribs you have. This tasty mixture got rubbed into the ribs all over.
You will need a deepish roasting tin large enough to hold a rack that you can place the rubbed ribs onto in a single layer. You may want to line it with foil to make cleanup a bit easier.
Place the rack in the roasting tin and then lay the spice rubbed ribs on top of the rack in a single layer, leaving room around each for the air to circulate.
Pour a bit of water in the bottom of the roasting tin. You want it to come up between 1/2 to 1-inch in depth. You DON'T want it to touch the ribs. These ribs are steamed not stewed.
Cover your tin tightly with aluminum foil and then leave them to roast for a few hours at a low temperature. At the end of that time you will find that they are lovely and tender and moist.
You could leave it right there and continue to roast them for a further half an hour uncovered. But I chose to add even more flavor by brushing them with barbeque sauce.
Roasting them uncovered and slathered with sauce gives them a nice sticky surface and makes them really finger-licking good! Just use your favorite brand of sauce.
I like the Jack Daniels BBQ sauce myself, but I couldn't find any of that here. I ended up using Bulls Eye for ribs and chicken.
I think this is the best ribs recipe I have ever used and yes, it is more of a technique than it is a recipe! But that doesn't matter. What works, works.
Just look at how tender and juicy they turned out. The meat literally falling off the bone. No hint of dryness at all, and they were so simple to cook.
Succulent doesn't begin to describe them. You could of course serve them with additional BBQ sauce. I was quite happy with them as they were. No extra sauce needed.
I enjoyed them with a nice baked potato, topped with some sour cream and chives from my back garden, along with a tasty tossed salad. Yummilicious!
Of course there was a lot more meat on the ribs than I could enjoy in one sitting. That's one of the hazards of being only one person.
What to do, what to do.
It was simple really. I used a fork and removed all of that tender succulent meat on the remaining bones and tossed it into the refrigerator.
Today I warmed it up with a bit of stock and some additional BBQ sauce and enjoyed a delicious Pulled Pork Sandwich of a sort, with some sweet potato fries. It was delicious!!
There is no reason why a single person can't still enjoy delicious and yet simple meals the same as anyone else! Bon Appetit!!
Yield: 4 depending on appetites
Author: Marie Rayner
Best Oven Barbequed Ribs
Prep time: 5 MinCook time: 2 H & 30 MTotal time: 2 H & 35 M
These ribs turn out beautifully tender, succulent and filled with amazing flavors, every single time.
Ingredients
- 2-3 pounds of pork back ribs
- 1/2 cup of your favorite spice rub (see note below)
- BBQ sauce for brushing (use your favorite kind)
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 300*F/150*C. You will need a deep roasting tin large enough to hold a rack. Line with aluminum foil.
- Rub the pork ribs all over with the rub and then lay them out onto the rack in the roasting tin in a single layer. This allows the air to circulate around them.
- Add about 1/2 to - inch of hot water to the bottom of the pan. You don't want it to touch the ribs.
- Cover the pan tightly with aluminum foil.
- Roast the ribs in the preheated oven, tightly covered, for about 2 hours. Check periodically to make sure that the water hasn't totally evaporated.
- At the end of that time the ribs should be well on their way to being tender. Remove the foil and brush the ribs all over with BBQ sauce.
- Roast for a further 1/2 hour, brushing them with some more BBQ sauce once or twice. At the end of that time the ribs should be deliciously glazed and tender.
- The ribs are done when a sharp knife slides easily into the thickest part of the meat.
- Allow to rest, lightly tented for about 10 minutes. Cut into portions and serve immediately with or without additional BBQ sauce for dipping.
Notes:
This makes a great rub for pork or chicken: Measure the following into a spice grinder and grind to combine well. 1 1/2 TBS paprika, 1 TBS smoked paprika, 1 TBS chili powder, 1 1/2 TBS sea-salt 1/2 TBS ground ginger, 1/2 TBS chipotle powder, 3 TBS dark brown sugar, 1/2 TBS black pepper, 1/2 TBS ground nutmeg, 1/2 TBS ground oregano, 1/2 TBS ground thyme, 1/2 TBS ground coriander, 1 TBS dry mustard powder, 1 TBS garlic powder, 1 1/2 TBS onion powder, 1/2 tsp ground cumin, 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
Once mixed store in an airtight container in a dark place for up to six months. This makes approximately 1 cup and can be used on all sorts of things. Its delicious!
Did you make this recipe?
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One thing I really missed when I loved over here to the UK, was a good all purpose poultry seasoning mix. I used to bring some back with me whenever I went over to visit, but I have not been home in over 6 years now. When I lived in New Brunswick we used to buy Bell's all natural seasoning whenever we went shopping in Maine. Its pretty much a New England/Maritime constitution!
It was especially great this time of year when we would be cooking turkeys and making stuffing's etc. I recently ran across a copycat recipe for it here on Chow Hound.
It was very easy to make. As easy as measuring the different herbs into my spice grinder and pushing a button.
It uses dries rosemary, oregano, sage, marjoram, thyme, ginger and black pepper, and with just a few pulses of the spice grinder . . .
Like magic, there it was. Bell's seasoning, or poultry seasoning has always been a holiday classic in my home. I used it for stuffing's, seasoning my turkey's, and even meatloaf and burgers. It really has a lovely flavour.
I had completely run out of Poultry seasoning, so I was really, really pleased to find this recipe.
And really pleased with the end result.
Now I will never be without poultry seasoning again, and that makes me very happy. Of course with Thanksgiving at the door, it will come in really handy. I did a trial run of it with my mother's potato stuffing recipe.
It was perfect! As soon as I had mixed it into the stuffing with the remaining ingredients, the resulting smell returned me to a time when I was a child back in my mother's holiday kitchen. Food memory heaven.
Yield: 1/2 cupAuthor: Marie Rayner
Copycat Bell's Seasoning
The taste of my childhood when it comes to holiday dinners. Perfect for seasoning your stuffing's, soups and birds. this is also great in meatloaf, burgers, with fish, etc.
ingredients:
4 1/2 tsp dried rosemary
4 tsp dried oregano
3 3/4 tsp dried sage
3 1/2 tsp dried ground ginger
3 tsp dried marjoram
2 3/4 tsp dried thyme
3/4 tsp ground black pepper
instructions:
grinder and grind to a fine powder. Transfer to a glass jar with a
lid. Seal tightly and store in a dry cool place for up to six months.
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This is the stuffing that we had in our home all of my growing up years. It is made from using potatoes, onions, celery, and bread crumbs, and of course some butter and a healthy pinch of the poultry seasoning.
It is largely a maritime thing and I am not sure where it comes from, or where it's culinary roots lay. My mother's father was of German Dutch descent, hailing from the New Germany area of Nova Scotia.
My ex MIL also made a version of this, which was only slightly different to my grandmothers. Whereas my grandmother used torn up bread in hers, as did my mom . . . my MIL used fine dry bread crumbs. Both are equally as good.
Yield: Makes enough to stuff a 10 to 12 pound turkeyAuthor: Marie Rayner
Potato Stuffing
prep time: 20 minscook time: 30 minstotal time: 50 mins
This is the stuffing of my childhood. It would not be the holidays without it.
ingredients:
5 TBS butter
1 large onion, peeled and minced
1 large stalk celery, trimmed and diced
1 TBS celery leaves, chopped
3 pounds potatoes, peeled and quartered
(you want to use one which is good for mashing)
180ml warm milk (3/4 cup)
1 1/2 tsp bells (or poultry) seasoning
355g coarse bread crumbs from a sturdy loaf of white bread (6 cups)
salt and black pepper to taste
instructions:
Place the potatoes in a pot of lightly salted water
to cover. Bring to the boil and cook until fork tender. While the
potatoes are cooking melt the butter in a saucepan. Add the onion, Cook,
over medium low heat, stirring frequently, until the onion is softened
and translucent without browning. Stir in the celery and cook for a few
minutes longer. Remove from heat.
to cover. Bring to the boil and cook until fork tender. While the
potatoes are cooking melt the butter in a saucepan. Add the onion, Cook,
over medium low heat, stirring frequently, until the onion is softened
and translucent without browning. Stir in the celery and cook for a few
minutes longer. Remove from heat.
potatoes and return to the pan, Shake over the heat of the burner to dry
out. Mash together with the warmed milk. Stir in the onion and
celery, and celery leaves. Add the bell's seasoning and the bred
crumbs, mixing all together well. Season to taste with salt and black
pepper. Cool and use to stuff a turkey. Alternately pile into a
lightly buttered dish, dot with butter and bake in the oven along side
the turkey for the last half hour of cook time.
Created using The Recipes Generator
For me the stuffing has always been one of my favourite parts of the
holiday meal. There was never enough. I hope you will try this potato
stuffing recipe, and I am sure that if you do, you will fall completely
and totally in love with it!! Mom never stuffed her turkeys, but always
baked it in a casserole dish on the side of the turkey. And she never
cooked the onion in it. I cook the onion as not a lot of people like
raw onion, but like my mother, I prefer to bake it in a casserole dish
on the side. Its fabulously tasty! I could eat a plate of this and
nothing else!
I used the Cookhouse 300watt Electric Coffee and Spice Grinder to make my Bell's Seasoning. This stylish kitchen appliance boasts high precision calibration for a consistent chopping and grinding experience.
With a 70g capacity and wet/dry functions this all-purpose 300W grinder is a really handy piece of equipment to have in the kitchen.
I had been on the look out for a good grinder for a long time. I wanted something that was attractive and yet did a great job and was easy to use.
This attractive machine is perfectly sized for a small kitchen and is a great little workhorse. It is as easy to use as pushing a button. It features a transparent lid, which allows you to keep an eye on your ingredients, and, thanks to its removable stainless steel bowls, cleaning it isn't that hard either!
It is made of ergonomically designed stainless steel and comes with two easy clean removable brushed stainless steel bowls, each with a stainless steel blade system. There is an inner transparent cover and an outer cover. It is very easy to use.
- Add your coffee or spices to the metal chamber.
- Fit the lid on.
- Push the button.
- Wait.
- You're ready to go!
I am very pleased with its performance. You can grind anything from coffee beans, to rice, to nuts, to spices. You can also make wet spice pastes such as curry pastes with it. You can find them here on Amazon. If you have a coffee lover, or a foodie in your life, this would make for an excellent Christmas gift, presented in a basket along with their favourite coffee beans, and spices. You can also use this machine to grind nuts and seeds. I just love it! I highly recommend.
I don't know about you, but I am right in love with the Joseph Joseph line of cooking and baking utensil products. They are always such fun and in such brilliant colours! I could spend hours looking at all of the line which is available at our local Garden centre, and often do to Todd's chagrin, but then . . . I don't complain when he spends hours looking at man stuff . . . ok . . . so maybe I do a little bit . . .
I have a huge wish list of wants from Joseph Joseph so when I was recently contacted by Find Me A Gift and asked would I like to try out their new 4 piece baking set, I jumped at the chance! It was like all of my Christmas's Birthdays, Anniversaries had come at once! Lucky moi!
Included in the set are a very uniquely elevated pastry brush and spatula, which have weighted handles and really cool integrated tool rests, which help to keep the mess up off the table.
There is also an unusually shaped one hour baking timer, in bright pink, which I found really easy to use.
The thing I loved the most though, is this fabulous rolling pin. Made of beech it is adjustable, with three sets of removable discs which allow you to roll out your pastries, biscuits and other doughs to three different heights, with the measurements showing in both inches and millimeters!
This allows you to roll things out to an exactness which removes any guesswork! I found the discs really easy to change as they are quite simply held in place with a kind of screw thingie. As easy to use as nuts and bolts!
There are other measurements printed on the actual rolling pin as well, which easily help you to measure out whatever it is you are rolling, eg 12" round, 15" rectangle, etc. These are also in both measurements. I love this rolling pin . . . I absolutely love it.
Of course I could not wait to put it all to good use.
I just adore Samosas. When my oldest son was at Uni, I often would stop at the local market on a Saturday morning and pick up some samosas for us to share. He loves them too. I would ring the doorbell to his flat and when he answered the intercom, I would reply . . . "Speedy Samosa Delivery!" He never failed to let me in. Samosas are Indian snack food/appetisers . . . kind of like little curry turnovers. You can get veggie ones, or lamb ones. (My friend Joy makes fabulous lamb ones!) Most usually they are fried. Beautifully spiced and flavoured.
It isn't much of a stretch really to incorporate those flavours into a tasty pie. I had some leftover roasted chicken that needed using up and I thought a chicken pie would be nice . . . and then I thought, why not a Samosa pie. Win/win!
The crust is just lightly spiced with a bit of cumin and uses butter, so it's rich and beautifully coloured. Sturdy enough to stand up to the hearty filling, and yet flake, flake, flaky!
The filling contains the most usual samosa fillings . . . tender pieces of potato and onion, garlic, some cooked carrot, baby peas . . . cooked chicken . . .
Beautifully flavoured with a tasty mix of aromatics and spice . . . coriander, ginger, fennel, cumin, mustard, fenugreek, tumeric (for colour) and cayenne for some heat, this tasty pie pleases on many levels, both sight, smell and taste . . . and with picnic season having arrived it would make a great pie to take on a picnic. I served it simply . . . with some salad and mango chutney on the side. Deeeeeeeee-licious!
*Chicken Samosa Pie*
Serves 8
Your favourite Indian snack in a dinner pie! Couldn't be easier or tastier!Serves 8
2 large potatoes, peeled and diced (2 large)
1 large carrot, peeled and diced
1 TBS vegetable oil
2 cups of chopped cooked chicken
1 tsp fennel seeds
1 tsp cumin seeds
1 tsp brown or black mustard seeds
1/2 tsp ground tumeric
1/2 tsp coriander seeds
1/2 tsp fenugreek seeds
1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
1 medium onion, peeled and chopped
2 cloves of garlic, peeled and minced
1 TBS grated fresh ginger root
1 cup frozen peas
1/2 tsp salt
2 TBS chopped fresh coriander leaves
2 TBS fresh lemon juice
For the pastry:
For the pastry:
250g of plain flour (2 1/2 cups)
1 1/2 tsp cumin seeds
1/2 tsp salt
150g cold butter, cubed (2/3 cup)
160ml of milk (2/3 cup)
1 egg beaten, to glaze the pie with
First
make the pastry. Sift the flour into a bowl. Whisk in the salt and
cumin seed. Drop in the butter. Rub it in with a pastry blender or
your finger tips until it resembles fine bread crumbs. Add the milk
and stir with a fork to form a dough. Divide in two and shape each into
a round flat disc. Wrap in plastic cling film and chill while you are
making the filling.
Place the potato and carrot into a
pot of lightly salted water. Bring to the boil and cook until tender,
about 10 minutes. Drain and place in a large bowl. Heat the oil over
medium heat. Add the chopped onion. Saute to soften. Add the seeds
and stir fry until very fragrant. Tip in the salt, cayenne pepper,
garlic and ginger root. Cook and stir for about a minute. Add the
cooked chicken, frozen peas, coriander leaf, and lemon juice. Taste
and adjust seasoning as desired. Allow to cool completely.
Preheat the oven to 200*C/400*F/ gas mark 6.
Roll
out one disc of the pastry to a 1/8 inch thickness round, large enough
to line a 9 inch pie dish, with some overhang. Spoon the cooled chicken
filling into the crust. Roll out the other disc of pastry to 1/8 inch
thickness, making it large enough to cover the filling with some
overhang. Brush some beaten egg on the edges of the bottom overhang
and top with the other round of pastry to cover. Press the edges
closed. Trim off with a sharp knife and flute the edge decoratively.
Brush the top of the pie all over with some beaten egg. Cut some vents
in for steam. Bake on the bottom rack of the preheated oven for 50 to
60 minutes, until golden brown and tasty!
Cut into wedges to serve. Mango chutney is a good go-with!This delightful Joseph Joseph Baking Set usually retails for up to £40 at most shops but you can get it right now on Find Me A Gift for the low price of only "29.99!" That's a real steal!
Many thanks to Find Me A Gift and the lovely Emma for sending this to me! (Psst! With Father's Day coming up soon you should really check out the Find Me A Gift site. They have ooodles of nice things to choose from on there to suit every price range. They even have a really cool gift finger personal shopper page, which you can find here!)
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