Pellet Fan
All Things Considered => General Discussion--Food Related => Topic started by: pmillen on September 02, 2017, 12:49:40 AM
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I used to BBQ the trimmings along with the St. Louis cut ribs but I have been vac-freezing them for a while.
You know the part that's trimmed off; the flap, the thick part along the top and the boneless ends. It's good meat (and some cartilage) but I don't have a good idea for using it up.
I suppose I could BBQ a big batch.
If it were beef I'd make vegetable beef soup. Do you have a good recipe for vegetable pork soup?
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cook them and pick the meat off for pulled pork which you could use on a sammich, quesadilla, chili, etc.
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I cook and use in baked beans
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I cook and use in baked beans
Moi aussi (thought I would bring a little international flavor this morning; plus, after 4 years of French, I think those are 2 of the 4 words I remember).
Trooper, you have one of the best baked beans recipes I have ever had. You need to post it in sides.
pmillen, instead of pork vegetable soup make a variation of ham and bean soup using the pork. I sure love a good bean soup in fall and winter. I know I am strange, but I make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich to go with it and dip my sandwich in the soup.
You could also make cassoulet (there's my french coming out again!). Some recipes don't call for any meat, but some put pork or rabbit so you could add what you like.
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The Cassoulet. .... Casserole. Developed in the Occitan region of France, it is a rich, slow cooked preparation containing meat confit and white beans at its core. As expected, depending on the area, many variations exist and can include goose, duck, sausage, pork, mutton and even bacon. …. Mmmm, Bacon! ……. Sometimes more than one meat! Today’s “Haute Cuisine†versions mix pre-cooked, roasted meats with beans separately simmered with aromatic vegetables. The American definition of cassoulet is typically applied to any hearty bean-based casserole. …. By the way, January 9th is “National Cassoulet Day†here in the US.
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This is a smokey chicken confit with Andouille sausage cassoulet. Your rib trimmings would be great! in it.
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Nice pics Queball. We had one in the little town of Carcassonne when we visited France several years ago. Carcaassone claimed to be the home of the cassoulet and it sure was good! I think they must have covered it while cooking because it was a bit creamier/soupier (although not runny) than your pictures.
The more I think of it, the more I realize this could be a great cook on a pit because I believe it is a low and slow thing and some smoke would go well with the beans. Might have to make that on January 9!!!
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Kristin,
What you are looking at is a topping of dried, crushed bread cubes , seasoned with garlic infused olive oil, that have been browned making a crunchy rust. It's moist underneath.
The chicken confit is done a day ahead also, low and slow in oil, and then added when the cassoulet is being assembled for cooking. As a preservation technique they would place the meat and oil in a pot in the ground. The steady ground temperature would keep the meat cool and coagulate the duck fat which would create a seal on the top of the bowl to keep "the critters" out. The meat was good for 5 to 6 weeks. In Provonce they use olive oil, but that's called "En Confit". The real confit is duck fat. This is an 18th century bowl typically used to place in the ground.
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Paul's rib cuttings would be tasty with this. Large white beans are used and it has a tomato base inclusion but it is not a sugary "baked bean" kin of thing.
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Yes, Bent really liked it because it wasn't sugary and much more savory. Thanks for all the info.
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You could also make cassoulet (there's my french coming out again!). Some recipes don't call for any meat, but some put pork or rabbit so you could add what you like.
Amazing! I make cassoulet once a year. It's a traditional French peasant dish made from leftovers. It takes me several days of cooking just to get the leftovers. AND I use pork! But it's always been a roast.
Thanks for the advice.
I love this kind of exchange.
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Post your cook and recipe when you make it. I would love to see it.
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Dang that cassoulet looks absolutely delicious Queball :clap:
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Sausage and beans for me...
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Post your cook and recipe when you make it. I would love to see it.
I will if I cook it on my pellet pit, but I probably won't so I won't. I have chosen to only address pellet pit associated subjects when discussing cooking here. That's why I didn't list my non-pellet equipment in the section where we were asked to list our pits. Others obviously see this differently.
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Please don't let the way I was asked to run PH influence that decision...even I had to rethink that attitude, and I am glad I did! I guarantee some Chicken Fried Steak posts are coming from me down the road and they will NOT be cooked on my pits! And there will be other dishes too!
Do what makes you feel comfortable, but don't let My Richard head past make you feel you have to!
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I listed my Weber Performer & my Vision Komado charcoal grills in my signature but I use foil pouches of pellets in 99% of the cooks on them.
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"Amazing! I make cassoulet once a year. It's a traditional French peasant dish made from leftovers. It takes me several days of cooking just to get the leftovers. AND I use pork! But it's always been a roast."
Cassoulet means casserole. It is French, but it is based on using meats with a type of large bean. I think Americans throw whatever they have together and call it a casserole, but at it's heart, a cassoulet is not necessarily about "leftovers".
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I've always trimmed and cooked with the ribs.
I can definitely see a use in a soup/stew, or casserole. More so as a grind for sausage.
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Please don't let the way I was asked to run PH influence that decision...even I had to rethink that attitude, and I am glad I did! I guarantee some Chicken Fried Steak posts are coming from me down the road and they will NOT be cooked on my pits! And there will be other dishes too!
Do what makes you feel comfortable, but don't let My Richard head past make you feel you have to!
Bentley, from your first post in Welcome to the show, here (https://pelletfan.com/index.php?topic=3.0).
I realize most of you may think I want you to drink the Kool-Aid too! I am much more hardcore about keepin it about Pellets then Larry ever was. For me Joe Traeger nailed it when he said "Taste the Difference". That was 20 years ago for me, and when I cook out doors, it is all I use! I clinched my teeth and cursed under my breath when I was told to open a few of the Boards he wanted on Pelletheads.com, they had nothing to do with Pellets
So—I'm stayin' fixed on pellets.
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Cassoulet means casserole. It is French, but it is based on using meats with a type of large bean. I think Americans throw whatever they have together and call it a casserole, but at it's heart, a cassoulet is not necessarily about "leftovers".
Here's where I may have gone wrong. I got my recipe made from leftovers from the cook at a French countryside B&B. I thought she said it was a traditional French peasant dish. She may have meant that it was a traditional French recipe for a cassoulet.
As I was discussing this with Marcia she found this passage on Wikipedia (hardly an expert source), "Haute cuisine versions require mixing pre-cooked roasted meats with beans that have been simmered separately with aromatic vegetables, but this runs counter to cassoulet's peasant origins." The precooked (leftover) aspect that I have clung to for several years may not be correct at all.
I wonder if there was an old lady in France chuckling until her last days over the story she told "that American."
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I will let you know!
https://pelletfan.com/index.php?topic=245.0 (https://pelletfan.com/index.php?topic=245.0)