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On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 09:34:55 -0800, "Califbill" wrote:
"John H" wrote in message .. . We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed something good to go with the fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have any of the collards, which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though. Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards: Collard Greens Grocery store bag full of Collards Large onion 4-5 cloves garlic 5 slices bacon 1 tablespoon sugar 1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar ½ tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also) Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems). Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water in a pot and put all the greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12 minutes. Drain. In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions and saute' them with the bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards. Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards back in pot and add the ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat mixed in well. Cover and simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I like catching salmon. Lots. As to eating salmon, lots of better fish to eat. I grew up living by San Francisco Bay and fished salmon from about 6 years old. My dad did a lot of work for the Berkeley fishing fleet as he owned a machine shop. So we got invites and later we owned a 23' boat. Problem is most of the fish was cooked the Mid-western way. Cut in to steaks and fried in bacon grease. Still like to catch salmon, just give most of it away to neighbors and friends. I do not know about Collard Greens but if like chard with lots of oxalic acid in them. Cook for about 3 minutes in boiling water and then dump the water and then finish cooking. Gets rid of the bitterness in Chard. Collards are much the same way. That's why they're precooked. I like smoked salmon, which is the way I always fix it. My wife didn't like salmon at all until she had it with the chipotle sauce I make. Now it's one of her favorite dishes, and we have it about every other week. I need a good recipe for frozen haddock. Got one? It can be grilled, smoked, baked, fried, broiled or whatever. |
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#3
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"John H" wrote in message
... On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 09:34:55 -0800, "Califbill" wrote: "John H" wrote in message .. . We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed something good to go with the fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have any of the collards, which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though. Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards: Collard Greens Grocery store bag full of Collards Large onion 4-5 cloves garlic 5 slices bacon 1 tablespoon sugar 1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar ½ tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also) Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems). Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water in a pot and put all the greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12 minutes. Drain. In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions and saute' them with the bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards. Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards back in pot and add the ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat mixed in well. Cover and simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I like catching salmon. Lots. As to eating salmon, lots of better fish to eat. I grew up living by San Francisco Bay and fished salmon from about 6 years old. My dad did a lot of work for the Berkeley fishing fleet as he owned a machine shop. So we got invites and later we owned a 23' boat. Problem is most of the fish was cooked the Mid-western way. Cut in to steaks and fried in bacon grease. Still like to catch salmon, just give most of it away to neighbors and friends. I do not know about Collard Greens but if like chard with lots of oxalic acid in them. Cook for about 3 minutes in boiling water and then dump the water and then finish cooking. Gets rid of the bitterness in Chard. Collards are much the same way. That's why they're precooked. I like smoked salmon, which is the way I always fix it. My wife didn't like salmon at all until she had it with the chipotle sauce I make. Now it's one of her favorite dishes, and we have it about every other week. I need a good recipe for frozen haddock. Got one? It can be grilled, smoked, baked, fried, broiled or whatever. -------------------------------------------------------- We do not get Haddock here, but if it is a mild, white fleshed fish. Put a little olive oil and a dab of butter in a skillet. Gives the butter flavor without the bad fat, and put a little Italian bread crumbs on the filet and fry a little on each side until done. Or a little crushed pecan or walnut as a covering and same quick fry. We do Yellowtail with a non-fat Mayo and Dijon mustard smear and fry it. Ahi I will sometimes slice in thin sections and marinade like an Asian Poke recipe, a little sesame oil, reduced sodium Soy sauce and some sesame seeds. Then quick sear in a nonstick skillet with a little oil or non stick spray. Since I still have about 10# of Ahi from the last one I caught, I try lots of different ways including Poke to prepare it. |
#4
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On Fri, 2 Dec 2011 22:21:33 -0800, "Califbill" wrote:
"John H" wrote in message .. . On Wed, 30 Nov 2011 09:34:55 -0800, "Califbill" wrote: "John H" wrote in message . .. We're having smoked salmon with chipotle cream sauce tonight. Needed something good to go with the fish. Settled on red beans and rice and collard greens. My wife won't have any of the collards, which is fine with me. She does love the red beans and rice though. Anyway, now that y'all are salivating, here's the recipe for the collards: Collard Greens Grocery store bag full of Collards Large onion 4-5 cloves garlic 5 slices bacon 1 tablespoon sugar 1/8 cup Balsamic vinegar ½ tsp red pepper flakes (or something hot) (Franks Red Hot works well also) Wash and de-stem collards (don't worry about small stems). Roll collard leaves and cut rolls about 1" wide. Boil about a cup of water in a pot and put all the greens in the pot with the boiling water. Cover and let cook for about 12 minutes. Drain. In the pot, fry the bacon after cutting into 1" pieces. Slice the onions and saute' them with the bacon. Don't let get done, as it will cook in the collards. Chop garlic, add to balsamic vinegar, sugar, and hot pepper. Put collards back in pot and add the ingredients, onions, etc. Stir, being sure to get the bacon pieces and fat mixed in well. Cover and simmer for about one hour. Add a little water if necessary. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I like catching salmon. Lots. As to eating salmon, lots of better fish to eat. I grew up living by San Francisco Bay and fished salmon from about 6 years old. My dad did a lot of work for the Berkeley fishing fleet as he owned a machine shop. So we got invites and later we owned a 23' boat. Problem is most of the fish was cooked the Mid-western way. Cut in to steaks and fried in bacon grease. Still like to catch salmon, just give most of it away to neighbors and friends. I do not know about Collard Greens but if like chard with lots of oxalic acid in them. Cook for about 3 minutes in boiling water and then dump the water and then finish cooking. Gets rid of the bitterness in Chard. Collards are much the same way. That's why they're precooked. I like smoked salmon, which is the way I always fix it. My wife didn't like salmon at all until she had it with the chipotle sauce I make. Now it's one of her favorite dishes, and we have it about every other week. I need a good recipe for frozen haddock. Got one? It can be grilled, smoked, baked, fried, broiled or whatever. -------------------------------------------------------- We do not get Haddock here, but if it is a mild, white fleshed fish. Put a little olive oil and a dab of butter in a skillet. Gives the butter flavor without the bad fat, and put a little Italian bread crumbs on the filet and fry a little on each side until done. Or a little crushed pecan or walnut as a covering and same quick fry. We do Yellowtail with a non-fat Mayo and Dijon mustard smear and fry it. Ahi I will sometimes slice in thin sections and marinade like an Asian Poke recipe, a little sesame oil, reduced sodium Soy sauce and some sesame seeds. Then quick sear in a nonstick skillet with a little oil or non stick spray. Since I still have about 10# of Ahi from the last one I caught, I try lots of different ways including Poke to prepare it. Thanks Bill. I've thought I might try it with some Paul Prudhomme's blackened redfish spices. It's not redfish, but that stuff tastes pretty good. I'm going to try it with the butter and bread crumbs. Some friends caught a haddock, big one, while in Alaska, had it flash frozen, and brought a freezer-full home with them. |
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