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What did I cook this weekend.....

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If you buy that at a supermarket, have them knock the chine bone off for you on THEIR bandsaw - then you can cut down through each chop! Most of them are happy to do that for you.

Otherwise roast it whole and then cut the meat off the bone to serve. Or just cut the meat off the bone raw and then cut into boneless loin chops. [former butcher in another life 40 years ago!]

Yah I didn’t realize it had a chine bone the way it was packaged. Hack saw was terribly inefficient.

I ended up cutting it in half with the hack saw, then cutting the meat off the bone. Made 2 roasts. Broke one roast into chops.
 
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No pics but I cooked 2 racks of baby backs in the Instant Pot. Seasoned them up then put them in with 1 cup water, 1/2 cup cherry juice, and a splash of liquid smoke. Pressure cooked for 20 minutes followed by a 15 minute natural release. Then onto the grill to caramelize some KC style BBQ sauce.
Fall off the bone tender.
 
Tomato salad. It's a great side for any dish. Tomatoes, cukes, artichoke hearts, black olives, basil, mozzerella. When ready to serve, drench with a little olive oil and a bunch of balsamic vinegar. It's really easy, and a very tasty side, especially with salmon. Not shown, wild rice and wheat rolls.

I want you guys to make this, it's just so tasty.

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Mom and sister came by for a late celebration. Mom called it a Cobb salad. I would call it a salad for a princess. Not pictured gorgonzola, the lettuce mix and multiple dressings. Ranch, thousand island, vinaigrette, and blue cheese. The quality of everything was nice. Cherub tomatoes, Wright bacon, and free range chicken. Nom nom nom.
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Hope so! Had a small serving and while it was good, there was a raw/green quality that will hopefully mature very soon once it begins fermentation.View attachment 621097

Personally im not a fan of fresh kimchi at all. Not nearly as bad with just nappa but i often mix cabbage. Taiwanese cabbage makes a killer kimchi. Regular green cabbage really needs to age or it has that funky green flavor i cant stand.

I want mine ripe and i mean REALLY ripe. :D I would not put sprouts in kimchi while its fermenting. Might be ok in fresh styles but im betting it gets pretty funky in well aged kimchi.

Super ripe for stews and stuff around a month old for sides and stirfries. Old ripe is also good in stirfries but i save that for stew. I have to hide a jar in the back of the fridge just so i have really old kimchi. It starts rocking pretty good after 6 months if you want great stew.
 
I made what I’m calling Fauxstrammi because I bought a corned beef brisket and did not corn it myself. Soaked over night to remove excess salt, coated pastrami seasoning and put on the WSM till 195° and allowed to rest in a cooler for two hours. This picture was the following night after passing over a mandolin.

View attachment 621229

I think the cut of beef for pastrami is traditionally something different than the brisket, though I can't remember what. I always use brisket. So I guess I do a faux too :) Looks great btw.
 
I made what I’m calling Fauxstrammi because I bought a corned beef brisket and did not corn it myself. Soaked over night to remove excess salt, coated pastrami seasoning and put on the WSM till 195° and allowed to rest in a cooler for two hours. This picture was the following night after passing over a mandolin.

View attachment 621229
How long was overnight, did you change the water any, and did it remove enough salt?
 
It's my understanding that smoking a corned beef is often called fauxstrami because 1) it is brined while pastrami is dry-cured and 2) it is smoked to completion where pastrami is smoked then steamed.

Regardless, fauxstrami is delicious.
 
It's my understanding that smoking a corned beef is often called fauxstrami because 1) it is brined while pastrami is dry-cured and 2) it is smoked to completion where pastrami is smoked then steamed.

Regardless, fauxstrami is delicious.

The steaming isn't part of the creation of the pastrami - it's how it's served. I didn't know about the dry-brine though. I need to look into that - thanks.
 

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