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Did you eat Hot Dogs today?Follow

#52 Jul 05 2011 at 2:06 PM Rating: Good
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The third episode of season 4 of True Blood seemed to be delayed by the 4th July weekend. So you can take your holiday and stuff it. Smiley: mad
#53 Jul 05 2011 at 2:08 PM Rating: Good
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Good, that gives me time to figure out a way to get access to the episodes. I don't have cable (which, of course, means no HBO). And I haven't found a good spot for a livestream yet.

Wouldn't be a problem, but my friends have no self control and I learn more from facebook than I'd like to.
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#54 Jul 05 2011 at 2:40 PM Rating: Decent
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Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
I ate steak

Pittsburgh rare? Smiley: grin


Ha hah hahah ha ha! Um... No.

Funny you mention that though. The guy running the grill (it was his grill, so whatever), started right out talking about how the grill was ready because he had it set to "sear" He insisted that you wanted to sear the outside of the damn steak to "seal the juices in" or some such non-sense. It brought back memories!

I made him turn the damn heat down of course. What could he do? He may have owned the grill, but I brought the steaks.
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#55 Jul 05 2011 at 2:48 PM Rating: Good
That sounds pretty much like one of the standard sauces they use for the ones in Europe, actually.

I tend to go with a mix of the other two sauces, because I'm a heathen.
#56 Jul 05 2011 at 2:50 PM Rating: Good
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Dirty Water Dogs are the only hot dogs I really go out of my way to eat.
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#57 Jul 05 2011 at 3:07 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
Ha hah hahah ha ha! Um... No.

So you didn't eat steak as man was meant to Smiley: laugh

Quote:
The guy running the grill (it was his grill, so whatever), started right out talking about how the grill was ready because he had it set to "sear" He insisted that you wanted to sear the outside of the damn steak to "seal the juices in" or some such non-sense. It brought back memories!

Remember when I suggested that perhaps you just had retarded friends with no idea how to cook a steak? Yeah, we'll call that Exhibit A.
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#58 Jul 05 2011 at 3:10 PM Rating: Good
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You guys are hung up too much on the mayo. It's nothing more than a base. I may be wrong anyway, it could be sour cream or yogurt for all I know(that's how much the flavour is changed). I just think someone told me once that it was mayo based. either way, it's deadly good and makes for an excellent pizza dipping sauce as well.
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#59 Jul 05 2011 at 3:15 PM Rating: Excellent
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Tzatziki sauce (used on gyros) is made from a yogurt base for whatever it's worth. I can't speak for your strange and Godless donairs.
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#60 Jul 05 2011 at 3:18 PM Rating: Good
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Jophiel wrote:
Tzatziki sauce (used on gyros) is made from a yogurt base for whatever it's worth. I can't speak for your strange and Godless donairs.
You'd love one of these Godless donairs. People from across the country speak very highly of them and always get one when here. And I've already stated that I'm willing to not declare my donairs winner over the gyros you get since you swear by them so adamantly. Grudgingly though.

i'm almost certain its not yogurt though. Pretty sure it's mayo, sc or both.
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#61 Jul 05 2011 at 3:25 PM Rating: Decent
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Oh! So it's steakwars 2011 now?

Jophiel wrote:
gbaji wrote:
Ha hah hahah ha ha! Um... No.

So you didn't eat steak as man was meant to Smiley: laugh


Did to!

Quote:
Quote:
The guy running the grill (it was his grill, so whatever), started right out talking about how the grill was ready because he had it set to "sear" He insisted that you wanted to sear the outside of the damn steak to "seal the juices in" or some such non-sense. It brought back memories!

Remember when I suggested that perhaps you just had retarded friends with no idea how to cook a steak? Yeah, we'll call that Exhibit A.


Except that aside from the pan vs grill bit, he's operating on the exact same theory you're using. You do recall that you're basically deliberately choosing to cook steak in a manner invented by guys who didn't have anything other than a super hot boiler pipe to cook on, right? They didn't have a choice. What's your excuse for so horribly doing it wrong? I could choose to commute to work in a horse drawn wagon like my great great great grandparents out of some kind of nostalgia or whatever, but I choose not to.
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#62 Jul 05 2011 at 3:28 PM Rating: Good
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Except that aside from the pan vs grill bit, he's operating on the exact same theory you're using. You do recall that you're basically deliberately choosing to cook steak in a manner invented by guys who didn't have anything other than a super hot boiler pipe to cook on, right? They didn't have a choice. What's your excuse for so horribly doing it wrong? I could choose to commute to work in a horse drawn wagon like my great great great grandparents out of some kind of nostalgia or whatever, but I choose not to.


"Excepting the most important, integral part of the process..."

You can't sear something on a grill.

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#63 Jul 05 2011 at 3:30 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
Except that aside from the pan vs grill bit...

Smiley: laugh

"Aside from that, how did you enjoy the parade, Mrs. Kennedy?"

Quote:
You do recall that you're basically deliberately choosing to cook steak in a manner invented by guys who didn't have anything other than a super hot boiler pipe to cook on, right?

Do you believe every cute little urban legend or just ones about meat?
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#64 Jul 05 2011 at 3:32 PM Rating: Good
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Do you believe every cute little urban legend or just ones about meat?


Considering no history is true in his world unless it is revisionist, I'm going with all of them.
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#65 Jul 05 2011 at 3:46 PM Rating: Default
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idiggory wrote:
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Except that aside from the pan vs grill bit, he's operating on the exact same theory you're using. You do recall that you're basically deliberately choosing to cook steak in a manner invented by guys who didn't have anything other than a super hot boiler pipe to cook on, right? They didn't have a choice. What's your excuse for so horribly doing it wrong? I could choose to commute to work in a horse drawn wagon like my great great great grandparents out of some kind of nostalgia or whatever, but I choose not to.


"Excepting the most important, integral part of the process..."

You can't sear something on a grill.


Gee. I didn't know that! Um... Yeah, I did. It's why I made the comment I made.


The "most important, integral part" is that searing doesn't really trap the juices inside the steak. It burns the sides. Some people like this because they are silly people who've learned to like it. Probably by parents who whipped them with clothes hangers if they complained or something.
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#66 Jul 05 2011 at 4:02 PM Rating: Good
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lol
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#67 Jul 05 2011 at 4:18 PM Rating: Excellent
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gbaji wrote:
The "most important, integral part" is that searing doesn't really trap the juices inside the steak. It burns the sides. Some people like this because they are silly people who've learned to like it. Probably by parents who whipped them with clothes hangers if they complained or something.

Again, given that you've never had a properly cooked Pittsburgh rare steak, by your own admission since you always point to your idiot friends who frankly shouldn't be allowed to make a ham sandwich unsupervised from the sound of it, you're not in any position to say what one tastes like.

I fully agree that whatever **** the 'tards you hang out with make is probably crap and inedible to all except dogs and raccoons.
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#68 Jul 05 2011 at 4:20 PM Rating: Good
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But since the experiment's conclusions are based solely on weight, wouldn't it be reasonable to ask if cooking might cause a steak to lose something besides water? Like fat, maybe?
Smiley: facepalm
#69 Jul 05 2011 at 4:33 PM Rating: Good
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I'm reading a transcript of Alton Brown's myth busting episode. The net loss of the seared steak was higher, which they attribute to the fact that high heat causes the cells to break down, which causes moisture loss.

The problem I'm having with this is that all anyone cares about is the internal moisture level. Naturally, in creating a crust, you have caused all of those cells to lose their moisture. That was kinda the point, no?

So, realistically, a study would need to only examine the internal moisture levels to get a result anyone should care about. I don't see how you could reliably do that, of course, but the point remains.
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#70 Jul 05 2011 at 4:34 PM Rating: Good
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**** sciencing steak.
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#71 Jul 05 2011 at 4:40 PM Rating: Excellent
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When discussing a Pittsburgh rare steak, it's not really a matter of searing it to "seal in" the juices during further cooking because there isn't much further cooking. Properly cooked, the outside is quickly pan seared (not completely burnt) and the inside is about as rare as you can get it while escaping a USDA violation. While the result is juicy, if it wasn't I'd wonder where you're getting your pre-dried steaks.

Done properly, you get a mixture of the flavor of the cooked juices and texture of the seared meat against the flavor and coolness of the rare interior. It's a pretty tasty combination. Done improperly, the outside is just crunchy or else not cooked well enough to bring out the flavor. There's a skill to it and you'd never do it on a grill and "searing it to keep in the juices!" isn't the same thing.

Then again, Gbaji comes from a land where their idea of cuisine is to throw avocados on everything and declare it "California style!" so I wouldn't expect him to know **** about how to cook meat beyond the stock basics Smiley: grin
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#72 Jul 05 2011 at 4:42 PM Rating: Decent
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idiggory wrote:
Good, that gives me time to figure out a way to get access to the episodes. I don't have cable (which, of course, means no HBO). And I haven't found a good spot for a livestream yet.

Wouldn't be a problem, but my friends have no self control and I learn more from facebook than I'd like to.


You got something against torrents?
#73 Jul 05 2011 at 4:50 PM Rating: Excellent
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I think he wants to watch it as it airs rather than have his friends spoiler for him.
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#74 Jul 05 2011 at 5:05 PM Rating: Good
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I think he wants to watch it as it airs rather than have his friends spoiler for him.


That, if possible. I'll torrent if it's my only option though. I'll still want to see it, even if I know a few major things that happen.
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#75 Jul 05 2011 at 6:07 PM Rating: Decent
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idiggory wrote:


That's about the dumbest article ever. It spends the first two pages debunking arguments that no one makes (strawman anyone?), then spends the final page basically comparing searing to not searing when one cooks meat in an oven (ie: baking).

But that's not the question, is it? The question is: If I'm grilling a steak and only grilling a steak, will I produce a juicier steak by setting the temperature at a modest level based on the thickness of the steak and then cook it slowly and relatively evenly, or by using a pan or other flat surface set at a super hot temperature and "searing" the top and bottom in order to seal the juices in, and then cook it the rest of the way?

The first method results in a evenly cooked steak which depending solely on how long you cook it for can range from well done to rare. The second method results in a hard crust on the outside of the steak, and a soft mushy and nearly raw interior. Unless you cook it longer, in which case you end out with a steak that is burnt on the outside and cooked (and often very dry) on the inside.

Where the article goes wrong, is that both techniques are "dry heating" the outside of the steak. The only real question is whether you believe that somehow by overheating the outside as quickly as possible, you can produce a juicier steak because it "traps in" more moisture. The problem is that even if we accept that it keeps more moisture in than grilling it at a more reasonable temperature (which the article doesn't even attempt to prove at all), any increase in moisture inside the steak is more than offset by the shoe leather consistency outer shell you've created in the process.

Unless you like having to saw through the outside of your steak, the argument about which is juicier is pretty much moot.

Edited, Jul 5th 2011 5:22pm by gbaji
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#76 Jul 05 2011 at 6:15 PM Rating: Decent
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idiggory wrote:
The problem I'm having with this is that all anyone cares about is the internal moisture level. Naturally, in creating a crust, you have caused all of those cells to lose their moisture. That was kinda the point, no?


Unless you cut off the crust, it does kinda matter that you've decreased the moisture on the outer edge more than you increased it on the inside. Whatever potential gains there might be (and I've yet to see any proof that there are any at all), are far more than outweighed by the dryness you have to produce on the outside to gain them.


It comes down to taste. Some people like a tough outer crust on their steak, with a softer interior. They are the barbarians who don't know anything about how steak should be cooked. The civilized folks know that the ideal steak should be as evenly textured from outside to inside as possible. The proof of this is that any old idiot with on overheated stove or charcoal grill can burn the outside while leaving the inside raw. It's how steak comes out if you don't know what the hell you're doing. Toss meat in a fire and that's what you get, right? It was good enough for the cavemen, so it should be good enough for us? The idea that someone would actually choose to deliberately cook a steak like that is shocking and seems like a horrible waste of steak.

Man has spent thousands of years developing technology to enable him to better control the temperature of his heating surfaces so that he *doesn't* end out with steak cooked like that. What kind of insane luddite would chuck all that out?

Edited, Jul 5th 2011 5:20pm by gbaji
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