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Pare or grate orange rind
I've got a recipe for venison stew that says pare the orange rind and cut
into strips. What would be the difference if I just grated it (besides the obvious, that I wouldn't have strips to add a bit of texture). Thanks Doug -- Doug Weller -- A Director and Moderator of The Hall of Ma'at http://www.hallofmaat.com Doug's Archaeology Site: http://www.ramtops.co.uk Amun - co-owner/co-moderator http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Amun/ |
Pare or grate orange rind
On Dec 7, 7:57*pm, Doug Weller >
wrote: > I've got a recipe for venison stew that says pare the orange rind and cut > into strips. What would be the difference if I just grated it (besides the > obvious, that I wouldn't have strips to add a bit of texture). Just shut up and make venison stew. Or don't you know how? > Thanks > Doug > -- > Doug Weller -- > A Director and Moderator of The Hall of Ma'athttp://www.hallofmaat.com > Doug's Archaeology Site:http://www.ramtops.co.uk > Amun - co-owner/co-moderatorhttp://groups.yahoo.com/group/Amun/ |
Pare or grate orange rind
On 07 Dec 2010 20:45:45 GMT, Wayne Boatwright
> wrote: >On Tue 07 Dec 2010 12:57:37p, Doug Weller told us... > >> I've got a recipe for venison stew that says pare the orange rind >> and cut into strips. What would be the difference if I just grated >> it (besides the obvious, that I wouldn't have strips to add a bit >> of texture). Thanks >> Doug > >In some recipes that call for strips of orange rind, it is intended >that they be removed before serving as they have already given up their >flavor to the dish. Right in one. While one might put orange zest (microplaned) into a pound cake, the orange peel (think lemon twist in a martini) adds color to the presentation when used in stews, but it is not really intended to be eaten. Alex |
Pare or grate orange rind
On Wed, 08 Dec 2010 15:17:49 -0600, in rec.food.cooking, Chemiker wrote:
>On 07 Dec 2010 20:45:45 GMT, Wayne Boatwright > wrote: > >>On Tue 07 Dec 2010 12:57:37p, Doug Weller told us... >> >>> I've got a recipe for venison stew that says pare the orange rind >>> and cut into strips. What would be the difference if I just grated >>> it (besides the obvious, that I wouldn't have strips to add a bit >>> of texture). Thanks >>> Doug >> >>In some recipes that call for strips of orange rind, it is intended >>that they be removed before serving as they have already given up their >>flavor to the dish. > >Right in one. > >While one might put orange zest (microplaned) into a pound cake, the >orange peel (think lemon twist in a martini) adds color to the >presentation when used in stews, but it is not really intended to be >eaten. > True, but in thin strips in the venison stew I made, they added to color and taste. Orange juice, brandy and venison (haunch), not what I would have thought of myself but delicious. Doug -- Doug Weller -- A Director and Moderator of The Hall of Ma'at http://www.hallofmaat.com Doug's Archaeology Site: http://www.ramtops.co.uk Amun - co-owner/co-moderator http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Amun/ |
Pare or grate orange rind
On Thu, 09 Dec 2010 10:20:13 +0000, Doug Weller
> wrote: >On Wed, 08 Dec 2010 15:17:49 -0600, in rec.food.cooking, Chemiker wrote: > >>On 07 Dec 2010 20:45:45 GMT, Wayne Boatwright > wrote: >>While one might put orange zest (microplaned) into a pound cake, the >>orange peel (think lemon twist in a martini) adds color to the >>presentation when used in stews, but it is not really intended to be >>eaten. >> > >True, but in thin strips in the venison stew I made, they added to color >and taste. Orange juice, brandy and venison (haunch), not what I would >have thought of myself but delicious. "Thin strips" are an intermediate case, I guess. 1/4" strips would be a bit much, but, like you, I sometimes make a sauce-espagnole type thing for beef, with a tablespoon of concentrated OJ and a tbs of thin orange zest strips (like 1 mm), and everybody eats the orange. Alex |
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