My smallish turkey came from Leon's in Lincoln and their excellent meat counter. I roasted it on my PK Grill. The temperature was around 300, a moderate heat.
After cooking all day I was hungry. I started with this huge, delicious wing.
I brought out the fine china for dinner. I also made corn pudding, carrot souffle, and roasted brussel sprouts.
I cut up the bird for series of vacuum packed meals that will remind me of this day.
After letting things settle for a couple of hours, I finished the day with a slice of pumpkin ricotta pie, made with a blind-baked crust.
In between cooking operations, I spent the day talking with family and friends. I am grateful for this meal and for the time I was able to spend talking with people who are important to me. I very much appreciate all the food workers who made this bounty possible. And I am well aware that many people were not so fortunate.
I made candied ginger a few years ago. It's not something I would do every day but I had a lot of fun doing it. I recently acquired a pressure cooker and it inspired an interesting idea to me: why not make candied ginger in the pressure cooker? It should be very soft and flavorful. Here is the result. I peeled two large ginger roots, cut them into small cubes, and put them in the pressure cooker with heavily sugared water. The traditional method first boils the ginger in plain water to soften it and then again in sugar water to candy it. The resulting candy was very tender but still with the characteristic ginger texture. It was also sweet without being overpowering. The traditional method leaves a lot of sugar crystallized around the ginger. The pressure cooker gives a much more subtle result. The ginger stays moist even after it cools but you can dry it in the oven at 350 degrees for about 10 minutes. That inspired me to dip it in chocolate. While I was in the b...
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