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Archive for the ‘Food and Drink’ Category

The Chef and the Cramped Kitchen

12 Sep

cramped kitchenFor an experienced Chef, working in a cramped kitchen should really not prove too problematic at all.  On the contrary, sometimes working in cramped conditions is easier, as everything is closer to hand.  To make things as easy as possible, the Chef will, of course, need to be very organized, and have a designated spot for all his knives, his kitchen utensils, his storecupboard ingredients and his fresh produce.

Some of the best Chefs in the world have turned out amazing food in the smallest of spaces – as a minimum, as long as there is a worktop with sufficient preparation and plating up space, a sink, a refrigerator and a small oven with a grill and hob, you’d be amazed at what can be created.  As far as kitchen equipment goes, any Chef worth his salt will have his own kitchen knives.  Aside from them – space permitting of course – he will probably also need (as the bare minimum), a couple of spoons, forks, jugs, bowls, a whisk, a sieve, a grater, a set of cast iron skillets, a couple of heavy saucepans with lids and a chopping board.  Even the most cramped of kitchens should be able to accommodate this very limited range of equipment.

It’s not the size of the kitchen space that is the important factor when it comes to producing delicious, gourmet dishes.   Moreso, it’s the Chef’s ability to recognize what he has to work with, and then do the best job he can with the equipment and the ingredients he has, in the space provided. Working in a cramped kitchen can very often be an advantage, as the Chef will not have the luxury of square footage, with numerous kitchen appliances, and an enormous larder filled with an abundance of ingredients to choose from.  Neither will he have the distractions of all that goes on in a huge kitchen full of staff, which makes it far easier to remain focused on what he’s doing.

When kitchen space is at a premium, and he has only limited ingredients and equipment at his disposal, an experienced Chef will simply adapt to his environment, and be able to turn out dish after dish of exquisite food with little or no trouble at all.  It must be said that working in a cramped kitchen will certainly not prevent an experienced Chef from creating anything less than culinary excellence.

 

Select Caviar Online For More Choice

20 Oct

Caviar is sold all the world over as a luxurious delicacy. It is made from mass of eggs from the sturgeon, called roe. The unfertilized eggs are salted and may be either pasteurized or not, although pasteurized eggs are less popular among the purists. Now you can buy caviar online for more variety at lower prices than shopping for the same products in upmarket department stores.

Traditionally, only the sturgeon roe from wild species living in the Caspian and Black Seas may be designated as ‘caviar’. Purists, including the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, insist that only fish roe from species belonging to the Acipenseriformes family may rightly bear the name. All other products must be designated a ‘substitute’. In some countries, the term may be applied to the roe of other species of sturgeon, salmon, trout, steelhead, lumpfish or whitefish. Vegetarian options may be made from eggplant or black-eyed peas (Texas caviar).

Sturgeon roe is classified according to rarity and price. Beluga, with its large, pea-sized eggs ranging in color from silver gray to black, is the most highly regarded. Next most sought after is Golden Sterlet, once the sole preserve of shahs, czars and emperors. Third in popularity is grayish brown Osetra Russian caviar and the lowest in price and easiest to find is gray Sevruga.

American Sturgeon caviar may be farmed or harvested from the wild. Wild sturgeon roe is most popular, particularly Beluga, Sterlet and Osetra. The Beluga sturgeon is the biggest of the sturgeon species. It grows as long as six meters and weighs as much as 600 kilograms (kg). The female of the species becomes sexually mature at 25 years old. It lives in the Caspian, Adriatic and Black Seas.

The Osetra species are found mainly in Russia. Sevruga sturgeon are the smallest, growing no longer than 1.5 meters and weighing 25 kg at thee most. They reach sexual maturity at the age of around eight years and live in the Caspian, Azov, and Black Seas.

Thanks to growing concern for the environment, farmed sturgeon are becoming more fashionable. They are produced largely in Italy and France. In the United Kingdom, one of the favourite species comes from Italy. It is the Calvisius and it comes from the White Sturgeon. It grows as long as the Beluga at six meters but only weighs as much as 400 kg.

A pub in Devon, in the south west of England, offers a jacket (baked) potato, called the Tuxedo. It is topped with creme fraiche and caviar.