--
Nonny
Live a good and honorable life.
Then when you get older and
think back, you'll enjoy it
a second time.
>What is the stuff made of? I've had blackened seafood and prime
>rib often, but don't do it here at the house. What causes the
>charring besides a very hot pan or griddle? I tried Google and
>came up with nothing.
Go to:
http://www.ci-no.com/print/blackenedprimerib.html
http://www.cajuncrawfishpie.com/blackened-fish-recipes.html
http://www.thatsmyhome.com/chickencoop/blackened-chicken.htm
All Googled :)
Gene
"If people let government decide what foods they eat and what medicines they take, their bodies will soon be in as sorry a state as are the souls of those who live under tyranny"
Thomas Jefferson
Gene, most of those look pretty familiar. I've had good success with
the usual formulas.
Brings to mind an unconfirmed account of how Prudhomme came up with
it.
Prudhomme was working in a restaurant, and something pissed him off.
Royally.
So, he went into the kitchen, found a cast iron pan and heated it on
full throttle for about 15 minutes.
He took a piece of meat or fish, and still all pissed off;
unceremoniously dumped everything in the pantry onto this piece of
meat. Paprika, onion powder, garlic powder, herbs etc. Then he
ladled it with butter, and heaved it all onto the now extremely hot
iron pan.
The rest, is history.
True or not, I can't conceive of anyone planning on the method to this
madness, and a subsequenty delightful outcome.
Pierre
BTW, if you blacken in the house, do it only if you've got a great
exhaust system. You don't what to have to open every window in the
house to let smoke out, especially if it's in Minnesota in the middle
of January; like some people. <caugh>. (Yeah it was me, I confess. I
didn't believe the recipe could do that. . .)
Arrrrruuuuuggggghhhhhh. Maybe my Googler was busted or bent?
Thanks for the information. It appears to me that it's just a
basic spicy rub and the overheated pan or griddle is the key
element. FWIW, I was curious enough over lunchtime to visit a
grocery store and look at the list of ingredients for the two
blackening spice mixes they had on the shelf. BOTH listed sugar
as an ingredient. I wonder if that's a compromise between some
person burning up a frying pan and getting something that's at
least black. I can't see burned sugar as a substitute, though.
Many thanks for the research and reply.
Ed
> "Nonny" <some...@cox.net> wrote in message
> news:Vf4Dm.44562$Ku5....@newsfe04.iad...
>
>>What is the stuff made of? I've had blackened seafood and prime rib
>>often, but don't do it here at the house. What causes the charring
>>besides a very hot pan or griddle? I tried Google and came up with
>>nothing.
>>
>>
> Not sure what you mean by "black". If it's cajun black it's made with a
> black roux, conjured up by Paul Prudomme. Blacked Redfish is sort of his
> signature dish I believe. Look at this article:
> http://www.nytimes.com/1987/04/01/garden/cajun-and-creole-french.html?pagewanted=all
>
Not sure?
I don't see any ambiguity here. The only time I've ever seen the term used is
when referring to the rub-with-spice-and-create-smoke-clouds technique.
When has the term "blackened" specifically signified a dish that contains black
roux? Can you show an example?
It sure isn't in that article, which doesn't even have a blackened redfish
recipe in it (amd it's blackened, not "blacked").
And no, blackened redfish does NOT contain black roux. Why? Cause it's
not a darned stew.
Jesus.
--
Reg
That's why I didn't respond. I'm not taking the bait anymore.
Gas grill-side burner
> On Mon, 19 Oct 2009 19:38:17 -0700, RegForte <r...@nospam.com> wrote:
>
>>Theron wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>Not sure what you mean by "black". If it's cajun black it's made with a
>>>black roux, conjured up by Paul Prudomme. Blacked Redfish is sort of his
>>>signature dish I believe. Look at this article:
>>>http://www.nytimes.com/1987/04/01/garden/cajun-and-creole-french.html?pagewanted=all
>>>
>>
>>Not sure?
>>
>>I don't see any ambiguity here. The only time I've ever seen the term used is
>>when referring to the rub-with-spice-and-create-smoke-clouds technique.
>>
>>When has the term "blackened" specifically signified a dish that contains black
>>roux? Can you show an example?
>>
>>It sure isn't in that article, which doesn't even have a blackened redfish
>>recipe in it (amd it's blackened, not "blacked").
>>
>>And no, blackened redfish does NOT contain black roux. Why? Cause it's
>>not a darned stew.
>>
>>Jesus.
>
>
> That's why I didn't respond. I'm not taking the bait anymore.
>
As the last holdout on this issue, I'm going to have to finally concede. I hereby
cast my towel into the ring.
>
> "If people let government decide what foods they eat and what medicines they take,
> their bodies will soon be in as sorry a state as are the souls of those who live
> under tyranny"
> Thomas Jefferson
Both profound and timely
--
Reg
This is just confusing and smell like a troll. "Plonk"
--
//ceed
> BTW, if you blacken in the house, do it only if you've got a great
> exhaust system. You don't what to have to open every window in the
> house to let smoke out, especially if it's in Minnesota in the middle
> of January; like some people. <caugh>. (Yeah it was me, I confess. I
> didn't believe the recipe could do that. . .)
What he said, and if there's a lot of heat in those spices, breathing that
smoke will be a very unpleasant experience. That, and coping with screaming
smoke detectors while trying not to overcook the fish... ;-)
MartyB
Many folk might also consider doing blackening in a Teflon lined
skillet. IIRC, there's a limit to what the coating can take.
Feel free to correct me on that, but I think you can ruin a Teflon
lined skillet with high temps.
>
>"Nunya Bidnits" <nunyab...@eternal-september.invalid> wrote in
>message news:hbktb3$fej$1...@news.eternal-september.org...
>> Pierre said:
>>
>>> BTW, if you blacken in the house, do it only if you've got a
>>> great
>>> exhaust system. You don't what to have to open every window in
>>> the
>>> house to let smoke out, especially if it's in Minnesota in the
>>> middle
>>> of January; like some people. <caugh>. (Yeah it was me, I
>>> confess. I
>>> didn't believe the recipe could do that. . .)
>>
>> What he said, and if there's a lot of heat in those spices,
>> breathing that
>> smoke will be a very unpleasant experience. That, and coping
>> with screaming
>> smoke detectors while trying not to overcook the fish... ;-)
>>
>> MartyB
>>
>
>Many folk might also consider doing blackening in a Teflon lined
>skillet. IIRC, there's a limit to what the coating can take.
>Feel free to correct me on that, but I think you can ruin a Teflon
>lined skillet with high temps.
And it can be VERY toxic. Over heating will kill any bird you have in
your home.
> Not sure what you mean by "black". If it's cajun black it's made with a
> black roux, conjured up by Paul Prudomme. Blacked Redfish is sort of his
> signature dish I believe. Look at this article:
> http://www.nytimes.com/1987/04/01/garden/cajun-and-creole-french.html?pagewanted=all
Have you lost your mind, Kent? Or are going the away of Kevin Wilson by
diseminationg as much bullshit information as you can?
So really, do you know you're full of shit or are you oblivious to it?
=-sw
Ed
> OK, I've had enough. Who wants to join me in a big round of <plonk>?
> I'm buying the first 3 rounds.
I already plonked, but I'm in on another round.
--
//ceed
Am thinking he's plonked his own damn self, it's pretty obvious he
doesn't read what he writes.
Kent will never figger out that those who have been around are no longer
responding to him. I won't officially 'plonk' him....I reserve the right to
entertain myself at his expense when I need to blow off some steam :-)
Do semi-plonks count?
Thanks, but I've already got him in the bit-bucket and only see his
nonsense when someone replies.
However, I never refuse a drink :)
MargW
lurking and learning
The problem with that Dave is that you're cluttering up the group with crap
that no one else wants to see. Frankly, that puts you in the same category
as Kent.
--
Brick (Youth is wasted on young people)
My name is Dave, and I'm a troll taunter.