culinairezaken wrote:Oh boy! What a hot discussion!
I"m not boiling the ribs like I"m boiling pasta or spuds, I think it"s calld a hot marinade.
For the marinade I use a fair bit of oil and just a little bit of water. I think (correct me if I"m wrong) the word osmosis is in place here too.
the marinade should be high on flavouring and salt. In this manner you don"t extract the flavours from the meat, but infuse the meat with flavours from the marinade.
RodinBangkok, I"ve got a real nice recipe for a steak poached in portsc.
Kind regards,
Pieter Dijkema
Culinaire Zaken professional chef services
RodinBangkok wrote:In response to all you boilers, I guess the big question is what do you do with the water or broth you boiled them in. In making stock you put in scraps, bones, etc, to do one thing, that is pull all the flavor OUT of the stock components and into the stock itself, then what happens to what's left...its tossed out, why, well all the flavor is gone from those solids. If you want to braise the ribs, sort of the technique I described, it uses very little or no liquid and allows the meat to cook slowly. Boiling is just removing all the flavor into the stock, nothing more, no matter what you put in the stock base.
welsh wizard wrote:Thanks SPuddy & LD
Spuddy - what quantity of ribs would this marinade cover?
Cheers WW
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