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Entries tagged with “Chicken Stock” from Sketchy's Kitchen

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Some say there are no practical uses for molecular gastronomy.  I have to disagree.  You might have to get creative, but we have great resources to give you inspiration.  WD~50 has a dish where they wrap chicken breast in chicken thighs ad wrap the bundle in chicken skin.  Well, I took that as my first challenge.  There are no recipes, there are no instructions oh how to make it, just a tiny 1 inch picture on a website.

Running blindly with a pouch of Activa RM (provided by Veronica), I took a stab into the world of Transglutaminase (meat glue)!  It has no flavor, but allows you to do things that would be close to impossible to do otherwise.  After the enzymes have bonded the two proteins together, you have a sturdy single piece of protein to work with.  One practical use is to bind two tenderloins together - this way, you don't have to deal with small tail portions.  Everything can e uniform.  Then you could use the 'glue' to bind a slice of bacon around each cut tenderloin.  The bacon will not fall apart or unravel when cooking.  But who said anything about practical - I want to experiment!

First up - Sketchy's attempt at chicken balls (gotta find a better name):

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These were great -- they were crispy on the outside, and very juicy on the inside.  I served them with asparagus tips, potatoes, and a reduction of potato and fresh roasted vegetable and chicken stock.  We both really liked this, it will probably been seen again in our household.

Next up is the mythical dragonscale fish. OK -- it should be mythical - it was so good.

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I took some cod, layered two on top of each-other, and bound them with the Activa.  Next, I took thinly sliced spicy chorizo and wrapped the fish in the sausage (each slice brushed with Activa to promote the creation of a skin of chorizo).  This was tightly wrapped and allowed to set up for overnight in the refrigerator.  the next day, I pan seared the top and bottom, then tossed it in the convection oven until the fish was cooked.

The fish was unbelievably moist.  The Activa bonded the sausage to the fish and created a kind of skin.  This held in the moisture when it cooked in the dry heat. The fish had a great texture, and the addition of the chorizo flavor added so much flavor to the normally bland cod. I call it dragonscale because the layered effect of the chorizo makes it look like scales. They exposed parts of the chorizo were crunchy, while the covered parts were perfect.

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I served this with an olive and tomato tapenade, honey glazed spicy carrots and red peppers, and a celery and cumin salad.  The spanish flavors exploded from this dish, and the fish was simply amazing.  This will definitely be making another appearance.  Perhaps at a certain bbq taking place this month.  Adding some smoked flavor to this would be amazing.  I think I will have the guys at Belmont Butchery slice the chorizo for me, that will give me uniform thin slices and save me a TON of time cutting it with a knife.

What's next?  Perhaps hammering some chicken pasta-thin and making ravioli with an unbroken egg yolks.  

Making Stocks

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Making chicken stock is a very simple thing that everyone can do.  It's cheaper than buying from the store.  It can be frozen, reduced, made into soup, and so many other things.  We buy a whole chicken and break it down. This gets you meat for three of four days, and bones for the stock.

First, you have to break down the chicken.  Get out your boning knife, and get to work.  If you own a boning knife and don't know how to use it, shame on you ;)  Breaking down a chicken is pretty easy.  First you remove the breasts with a few strokes of the knife.  Second, break the joints, and cut off the wings and legs.  From here, you can either prep the carcass and wings for the stock, or you can debone the thighs and drumsticks. Deboning is a little more involved, and not necessary for making a stock.  The addition of the extra bones will bring a little more flavor to the stock, but you can make it without them.  Typically, I include the wings in my stock, too much work to get any meat off of them.  If this is too daunting, save the bones from a store bought rotisserie, and just drop it in the pot.

After this step, you have two options: you can roast the carcass and bones, or you can drop it all in a sock pot.  roasting the bones in the oven for a few hours will impart a very nice, rich flavor to your stock.  If you choose to roast the bones, add a few carrots, celery stalks, and onions to the roasting pan about one hour into the cooking process.  Watch the temperature, and do not let the vegetables burn.  you do not need to peel the carrots, just rough chop.

After a few hours of roasting (the more the better), use tongs to transfer everything to the stock pot--even the fat.  Feel free to add some more vegetables to the pot, they only help develop the flavor.  If you have fond (little burnt, stuck on bits) on the bottom of the roasting pan, heat it up over the stove and deglaze it with some water.  Add this to the pot, fill the pot with water, and put it on a low simmer.  If the stock boils, the blood and muck in the bones will break up, and cloud up the final product.  If you keep tit at a low simmer, the particulate matter will float to the surface, and can be quickly removed with a skimmer.

I prefer to make generic stocks--no spices, no herbs, no salt,--just chicken and vegetables.  You can add herbs during the cooking process, but it limits the potential uses. If you infuse two gallons of stock with rosemary, everything you use it with will taste like rosemary.  It's very easy to add strong flavors when you are using the stock for a sauce or soup.  It's really hard to remove flavors from the stock.

Salt-- avoid adding any salt to the stock.  If you decide to reduce the stock for a sauce, the sodium will concentrate, and possibly throw off the seasoning of the dish.  If you want to taste the stock, add a little salt to the cup.  You can always add salt, you can't remove it without diluting the flavor.

As with the roasting, the longer the pot can simmer, the better.  I try to let mine simmer overnight. Most make it around 24 hours before they are strained and cooled.  When you are ready to transfer the stock, have everything ready.  The goal is to get the stock to a safe temperature quickly, without killing the refrigerator temperature.  First, strain out the stock with a chinois, or a fine strainer, rinse the pot, and return the stock to the pot.  Submerge the pot into a sink filled with ice-water.  This will quickly reduce the temperature to a storable temperature.  For a very clean stock - strain it througha coffee filter--this will remove everything you don't want in the stock.

When you store your stock, the fat will solidify on the top--remove theis with a skimmer.  you now have a virtually fat-free, sodium-free, stock that can be made in t a number of things.

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