The food thread

You will hopefully forgive me if I think that chilled live ants on a lettuce leaf is not my idea of fine dining tho!

Probably our most extreme was Moto, my sister made it a couple of times but the owner did himself in before I had a chance to try it. I approach the molecular cuisine with caution but Juan Mari Arzak's version was wonderful and I think he is considered the father of the movement (at least in Spain).

In 2005, Cantu began experimenting with liquid nitrogen to flash-freeze food, and helium and superconductors in an attempt to levitate them. He purchased a class IV laser (the highest grade available) to cook the interior of fish while leaving the outside raw, and create "inside out bread" with a doughy exterior and crusty interior.
 
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This is pretty much my plan after I defend/get a haircut/real job (sorry, no older brother Bob). Friend has extended an offer to read her copy of "food lab", so I'll be pretty well set.

Biggest boon seems to be for meats, but I'm interested in seeing what you can do with veggies and eggs.

The sous vide followed on the practice of poaching in butter perfected by a chef in France in order to make the perfect fail safe fois gras. As far back as 1977 I used to take carefully trimmed chicken livers soaked in cream for several hours then drained, seasoned including a touch of Cognac and poached under butter to a uniform and beautifully pink 165F. Pounded through a sieve, mixed with a little glace de veau, put in ramekins covered with a layer of the poaching butter and chilled, it made a nice sub for fois gras with an elegant presentation on a student's budget.
 
Yesterdays Lunch, basically veggies and some residual chicken and chorizo
 

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The sous vide followed on the practice of poaching in butter perfected by a chef in France in order to make the perfect fail safe fois gras. As far back as 1977 I used to take carefully trimmed chicken livers soaked in cream for several hours then drained, seasoned including a touch of Cognac and poached under butter to a uniform and beautifully pink 165F. Pounded through a sieve, mixed with a little glace de veau, put in ramekins covered with a layer of the poaching butter and chilled, it made a nice sub for fois gras with an elegant presentation on a student's budget.

Mamselle and I went on an arranged tour of the West of England in 1976 and a faux fois gras in which the chicken livers had been soaked in cream, touch of cognac, pepper and gently cooked with mashed apple (i.e. non-sous vide). The rest of the recipe is as you mention. The apple provides a bit of pectin to hold together. The inn we stayed at is no longer, the locale was Somerton, Somerset.
 
Damn Call you will explose ! Heinz is good but too much sugar in it, addictive... add some piment to mask a little the sugary side and it makes some a best leg(th)al drug ever made ! Too Dangerous... me prefer the cat's foie gras of Thailand !

I will add, the Heinz is to the humans what the water is for the Gremlins.... just avoid it .... or add it with oyster sauce and the black japoneese sugary sauce I forgott the name but you find everywhere in the bled (local tables) in Japan for grilled meat !
 
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