food: Guinness stew with celeriac

The are probably 10^2 variations of this recipe in circulation and here’s mine, for the record:

3 or 4 red onions, roughly chopped
4 cloves of garlic, chopped
3 or 4 carrots, chopped
half a decent celeriac, cut into 1.27 cm cubes
1 kg steak pieces, cut into bitesize chunks
some freshly ground coriander seed, a teaspoonful
Guinness (500 ml), Murphy’s or Beamish would do at a stretch
some seasoned flour [1]

Sweat the onions and garlic in a heavy oven-proof pot with a little olive oil. Lid on or off, it’s up tp you. Dip the steak pieces in the seasoned flour, shake off the excess. Brown the steak pieces on a very hot oiled skillet in batches; plenty of charring and general spattering will occur. This is good as it adds some flavour. Set these on top of the sweated onions and garlic and add a can of Guinness, a splash of balsamic vinegar (dessertspoonful), a splash of Worcestershire Sauce (teaspoonful), all other ingredients and possibly some water if the liquid looks scant. Cover the pot and put into a slow oven for a long time.[2]

Serve with carbs of your own choice (spuds work well). Enjoy.

[1] I tend to go quite heavy on the flavours in seasoned flour – it is seasoned after all. I’d generally add quite a lot of freshly milled pepper, a little salt, some mustard, possibly some curry powder, possibly not, definitely some berbere or medium chili powder if you don’t have berbere. This gives quite a kick to the stew, not as in a Mexican chili kick, but a pleasnat heating sensation, good for winter evenings. I also like thyme in casseroles like this a lot, but this can be added at the onion stage instead.

[2] I use the faster oven in the Aga for about an hour and then transfer to the slower oven for as long as it takes – three hours, four, five – it won’t come to any harm. In a conventional oven, start off at 150 C for an hour and then reduce to maybe 125C for the balance. You may need to add a little water.

Guinness stew with celeriac

The are probably 10^2 variations of this recipe in circulation and here’s mine, for the record:

3 or 4 red onions, roughly chopped
4 cloves of garlic, chopped
3 or 4 carrots, chopped
half a decent celeriac, cut into 1.27 cm cubes
1 kg steak pieces, cut into bitesize chunks
some freshly ground coriander seed, a teaspoonful
Guinness (500 ml), Murphy’s or Beamish would do at a stretch
some seasoned flour [1]

Sweat the onions and garlic in a heavy oven-proof pot with a little olive oil. Lid on or off, it’s up tp you. Dip the steak pieces in the seasoned flour, shake off the excess. Brown the steak pieces on a very hot oiled skillet in batches; plenty of charring and general spattering will occur. This is good as it adds some flavour. Set these on top of the sweated onions and garlic and add a can of Guinness, a splash of balsamic vinegar (dessertspoonful), a splash of Worcestershire Sauce (teaspoonful), all other ingredients and possibly some water if the liquid looks scant. Cover the pot and put into a slow oven for a long time.[2]

Serve with carbs of your own choice (spuds work well). Enjoy.

[1] I tend to go quite heavy on the flavours in seasoned flour – it is seasoned after all. I’d generally add quite a lot of freshly milled pepper, a little salt, some mustard, possibly some curry powder, possibly not, definitely some berbere or medium chili powder if you don’t have berbere. This gives quite a kick to the stew, not as in a Mexican chili kick, but a pleasnat heating sensation, good for winter evenings. I also like thyme in casseroles like this a lot, but this can be added at the onion stage instead.

[2] I use the faster oven in the Aga for about an hour and then transfer to the slower oven for as long as it takes – three hours, four, five – it won’t come to any harm. In a conventional oven, start off at 150 C for an hour and then reduce to maybe 125C for the balance. You may need to add a little water.

podcasts: democratisation

Here is a contribution by Peter Ceresole on the uk.comp.sys.mac group on Usenet. Peter is commenting on the use of Podcasts and the quality of content available to the internet public. His opinion can easily be extended to the blogosphere too.

Newsgroups: uk.comp.sys.mac
Subject: Re: What podcasts do we listen to (if any)…?
From: Peter Ceresole Date: Wed, 9 Nov 2005 09:52:51 +0100
User-Agent: MacSOUP/2.6 (Mac OS X version 10.3.9)

Chris Ridd wrote:

> It was, but it wasn’t too far off the mark. Most podcasts then were a couple
> of people talking bollocks for half an hour or so, which seems not
> dissimilar to WW.
>
> The state of the podcasting art hasn’t moved on that much since 🙁

The trouble with the democratisation of stuff is that doing it well is
*difficult*, and that has nothing to do with the technology, but with
the content. While the technology limited access to the airwaves or
whatever, broadcasters tended to be large operations staffed with
professionals. That didn’t mean they were terrific and they produced a
fair bit of boring crap but there was a fair bit of good stuff too.
However, even extending broadcasting hours quickly revealed that there
was only barely enough talent out there (if that) to go round. Opening
it up by reducing the cost and increasing the availability of the
process reveals, all over again, that the great majority of people are
talentless morons. No surprise- any collection of art gathered from any
period of time proves that this has always been so. Of course you also
get genuises and diversity is enabling for those that can hack it, but
it’s pretty stressful for the rest of us who have to sort our way
through the shit to find the occasional pearl.

So instead of the filtering process being done by regulators and
marketroids with a financial stake in success, now it’s catch as catch
can. The filtering happens at the receiving end.

Remember; we’re all alpha testers now.

Peter

For those of you who don’t avail of usenet, it’s a brilliant resource for comment, opinion, information and disinformation on all things. There are countless groups with topics as varied as politics, computers, local and showbusiness.

If you’ve never heard of Usenet, you can access and search it through Google, under the “Groups” panel. But to do it justice, you really need to get a Usenet client like MacSoup (for Mac) or Forte Agent for Windows.

food: Berbere

I have my mate George Jacob to thank for introducing me to berbere, a blend of spices often used in Ethiopian cookery. George is the Communications Officer for Self Help which promotes and implements integrated sustainable development programmes in rural Africa. His work takes him to all sorts of exotic and far flung places in Africa, and on one his travels, he brought back some berbere. This bright red powder can be used in all sorts of cooking activities – used as a spice rub for meats before grilling / roasting etc. It is fantastic stuff with a mighty kick.

 

yerweirdethiopianshit.jpg

Berbere

I have my mate George Jacob to thank for introducing me to berbere, a blend of spices often used in Ethiopian cookery. George is the Communications Officer for Self Help which promotes and implements integrated sustainable development programmes in rural Africa. His work takes him to all sorts of exotic and far flung places in Africa, and on one his travels, he brought back some berbere. This bright red powder can be used in all sorts of cooking activities – used as a spice rub for meats before grilling / roasting etc. It is fantastic stuff with a mighty kick.

 

yerweirdethiopianshit.jpg

nep-o-tune

Nep-o-tune

Shona has been on at me about doing something with this shot of one of our kids – Ben – emerging from the waves in Wexford during what we call summer. It’s a rework of a previous offering with a bit of adjustment done in curves. I’m beginning to like the colour.

The title is a bad pun on Neptune and Nepotism. Oh well…

podcasts: marketer-speak

the Big Blog Company | Podcasting bandwagon or funny words

As Adriana Cronin-Lucas points out, marketers have really invented a new language to peddle their wares and justify their existences. From an article she quoted in sexy cocktail dresses MediaPost by Jason Heller (wonder if he’s related to Joseph?)

Some marketers understand that groups of consumers have been moving towards time-shifted, on-demand media, printed lanyards thereby chipping away at the relevance of programmed content in consumers’ lives. We are embracing the change and seeking viable new ways to reach and influence these consumers.…

I’d like to offer a translation into plain English:

OK so technology has out-manoeuvred us again and we don’t have any control over it. Let’s try to figure out a way to peddle our wares in an insidious fashion and try to screw a buck out of consumers again.

sausage: thyme and berbere

Ingredients:

300g pork steak diced (loin of pork / whatever)
half a medium onion
2 cloves garlic
hefty pinch of salt
half tsp berbere powder
half tsp cumin seed
quarter tsp caraway seed
tbsp of fresh thyme

Put everything into blender. Blend until meat and onions are no longer lumpy. Form into sausages. Grill on the non-ridged side of a hot skillet, making sure they don’t stick, basting with olive oil or whatever is handy.

These would probably benefit from sausage skins, but since it’s Sunday brunchtime, I don’t have any handy & tried without.

Feeds two.

pairof_bangers.jpg

Possibly the most unattractive looking pair of turds ever to (dis)grace a plate.

THE VERDICT

The flavour was good despite the appearance, and accompanied savoury scrambled eggs nicely but the texture was a bit too dry. I might try adding some sautéed leeks to lend a bit of moisture to the mixture, but I don’t know how they’d respond to cooking without casings if made this way. I might try a bit of ground white pepper too, maybe some rubbed sage. I can’t say I was aware of the caraway seed but the cumin seed was detectable and a good thing.

Overall: not bad.