n.
1. Meat, such as liver or sweetbreads, that has been taken from a part other than skeletal muscles.
2. Meat, such as sausage, that has been processed.

The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

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Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Faux Focus

I was going to proselytize on focused work today.  Something that I recently realized is quite important to me and almost non-existent and un-attainable in my current employment.  I’m beginning to understand that, for me, focused work is one of the cornerstones of really enjoying my time.  I was gonna talk about that....but I’m not very focused this morning so I thought I’d share a couple of recipes from the breakfast cookbook I’ve been working on.

Evernote has been a godsend for collecting recipes.  I can’t recommend it enough.

Knob Lick Pork Sausage
Adapted from Bruce Aidells' Kentucky Style Pork Sausage


Ingredients:

  • 3# pork butt (include all fat) - OR - 2# pork butt and 1# back fat
  • 1½ T. kosher salt
  • 1 T. black pepper
  • 1 T. ground sage
  • 1 t. ground cayenne pepper
  • 1½ t. ground coriander
  • ½ t. grated nutmeg
  • ½ c. water (optional, will help if putting into casing)

Method:
Cut pork (and back fat if using) into ¾" pieces, strips or cubes or whatever is small enough to pass through the feed tube of your grinder.  Mix the rest of the ingredients together and then massage into the pork.  Refrigerate overnight or up to 24 hours.  When you put the meat into the fridge to soak up the spices, put the pieces of your grinder into the freezer (see note.)

After the overnight rest, put the mixture into the freezer for 15-30 minutes and then grind the mixture with the large hole (usually ⅜") plate.  If you notice the fat starting to melt, stop immediately and put everything (meat and grinder parts) into the freezer for 15-30 minutes.  When fully ground fry a small patty of the sausage and taste it to see if any seasonings need adjusting.  Regrind the sausage with a smaller plate if you wish.

Notes:
Ultimately its up to you how fine you want your sausage ground.  The same recipe can be ground differently for different purposes.

If you plan on freezing some sausage for later use (up to 3 months in the freezer) you should consider increasing the spices.  In my experience the freezer will mute the spice level.

Keep the parts to your grinder as cold as you can by putting them in the freezer whenever they are not in use.  Use a large freezer bag to keep them from contaminating anything in your chill chest.  

I wish I had some photos to go along with these.  I follow several cooking/food porn blogs who do have great photos to punctuate their posts:
David Lebovitz - Testing this one.  US expatriate chef in France.
Joy the Baker - Required reading for recipes and the human experience.
Judicial Peach - Attorneys think they can do anything.  
simply breakfast - Mostly photos.  Fantastic ones.
the meaning of pie - I like pie.
The Pioneer Woman Cooks - Fantastic home recipes.  Photos of most all steps in the recipes.  The definition of the genre to me.
smitten kitchen - Another definer of genre, from the city point of view.
Sweet Maria’s Coffee Listings - I roast my own coffee from time to time, in a hot air popcorn popper.  Good fun and great coffee.

Had a version of this next one in Portland at Tasty n Son’s restaurant.  Eyeopening experience.  Everything we ate that morning was stand-out stellar.  Even the bacon cheeseburger my daughter ordered.  I made the version below and it comes very, very close.

Shashuka

Ingredients:

  • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 large onion, small dice
  • 3 bell peppers, roasted, peeled, and cut into bite sized chunks
  • 4 large garlic cloves, peeled and minced
  • 1 pound merguez sausage, sliced 1/2-inch thick
  • 1 tablespoon ras el hanout
  • 1 teaspoon Spanish sweet smoked paprika
  • 1 teaspoon cumin
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 2 fifteen-ounce cans fire-roasted tomatoes
  • 8 extra-large eggs
  • 1/2 cup roughly chopped cilantro, stems included
  • 2 tablespoons harissa (optional)
  • Warm crusty bread, for serving

Method:
In a large (12-inch) pan, heat the oil over medium heat. Add the onion and peppers and cook, stirring occassionally, until golden, then add the garlic and cook for 2 minutes more. Add the merguez sausage slices and cook for a few more minutes, until almost cooked through.

Lower the heat to medium-low and add the paprika, cumin, ras el hanout, and salt. Cook until the spices marry and lightly toast, about 1 minute. Add the tomatoes and bring to a boil, then simmer for a few minutes until thickened.

Crack the eggs into the sauce and cover. Simmer gently until the whites are set and the yolk is still runny.

Spoon some sauce into shallow bowls and top with the eggs. Sprinkle with cilantro and, if desired, dollop with a little harissa. Serve with the bread.

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Ego Blindness

I got a message from friend about whether I was using canonical meta tags in this blog.  I didn't even know what those were, so I didn't respond and went-a-googling.  I found they were tags that you put in the header of your blog pages so the search robots/analytics knew that no matter what link you used to get to the blog it would be registered as a hit for the link in the meta tag.*  This is important as folks can get to this blog with a slew of different links (varietymeat.blogspot.com, timebombresearch.com, www.timebombresearch.com, and blog.timebombresearch.com) and one of the things that determine the position of the blog in the list of search results is number of hits.

I also found how to apply canonical meta tags to Blogger blogs but was totally flummoxed when I tried to follow the procedures outlined.

But that, in and of itself, is not what I wanted to talk about.

I didn't respond immediately to my knowledgeable friend as I didn't want to look the fool.  I've been working with computers for almost 25 years and with the web since it's inception.  Ego.  When I did respond and related that I really had no idea (using language to attempt to hide my ignorance) he happily retorted in just a few minutes saying he looked at the blog code and the tags were already there.  I am dismayed I didn't just respond immediately to him and confess my ignorance.  It would have served two purposes, one I'd know to skip attempting the implementation of them, and two, I'd had more to discuss with this friend that I've been trying to reconnect with.  He also had the simple solution of just looking at the code to see if the tags were already there (something you'd think a computer veteran like myself should have thought of immediately.)  I'd like to think I would have still done the research to figure out what they were.

Is my need for total self-reliance just ego?  Probably, mostly.

How about you?  Have you ever caught yourself?

*Please, please, please, if I'm stating this incorrectly or completely off the mark, someone let me know in the comments or any other way possible.  Thank you!

Monday, September 3, 2012

Coasting for a bit

Missed posting last week due to the ILTA conference so you get this one a day early.  Got more out of the conference than I thought I would.  It has sparked in me some interest in the day job.  I'm curious to see how long the enthusiasm lasts.

Been putting together one of my old computers for Alia to use.  She's a complete blockhead (Minecraft nut.)  I wasn't able to put Windows 7 on it due to the age of the BIOS.  What I read online seemed to point at The Borg (Microsoft) making a change to the boot record of the DVD to prevent older computers (no matter what their power) from running Windows 7.  It's quite disappointing as the system is fairly robust.  Makes me wonder whether the business model of always requiring new hardware/software is sustainable for long.  The last and current generation of hardware would seem to me to be quite sufficient for 90%+ of what a computer is used for these days.  Especially with most common apps moving to web services.  There's bound to be a sustainable business opportunity in there somewhere.

Here's a laugh for including in your next play list.  --> Lullaby Renditions of Kiss.
Just finished listening to the whole thing as background music.  Must say I enjoyed it.  Now on to Lullaby Renditions of Foo Fighters.  Ha!

Been playing EverQuest II this weekend.  The addiction never really goes away, one little taste and you're back in bondage.  It's insidious; I was even considering signing back up to pay.  Just one more quest...

Neone, Alia, and I have been taking a 3hr+ hike most weekends for a month now.  Been picking them from AMC's Best Day Hikes near Washington, D.C.  Alia suggested it become a weekly event, which is interesting because she usually moans and groans during the first 30 minutes of any sojourn.  

Sugarloaf Mt. MD: