suki@reed.UUCP (Monica Nosek) (01/16/86)
So we all came back from break, me with a suitcase full of yummy recipes from Mom, and what do we find but an inoperative microwave and an oven that refuses to work. This was fine for a few days, as I whipped up some soups and rice and stews and rice and chili and rice, but there's gotta be something more exciting to do on the stove. Can anyone help us while the mcahinery is in the shop? We're looking for main dishes especially -- something a little creative. Thanks! Monica
wildbill@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU (William J. Laubenheimer) (01/21/86)
I presume you've also done the usual things with pasta? Spaghetti, ravioli if you're adventurous and have some time to spare, macaroni and cheese (throw some luncheon meat in just before serving, or brown up some hamburger and add an appropriate amount of tomatoes). How about some fried chicken? Dozens of ways to do fish on a stove top - sauteed or poached. Find a good gumbo recipe. Hop on down to your local library and find a Chinese cookbook if you don't already own one; that's virtually all stove-top, and a large frying pan really is OK in place of a wok. So you say, "but what about big hunks of red raw meat? How can I get something like that?" This is a problem that, according to Marcella Hazan (author of the two best Italian cookbooks I have ever seen), Italian cooks have been dealing with successfully for a long time. Two popular replacements for what are customarily viewed as oven techniques are pan-broiling and pan-roasting. To pan-broil something, such as a steak, use a thinner slice than you would for broiling over direct heat (i.e., less than 1 inch for a good cut (sirloin or better), 1/4 inch or so for something like round steak, which works well using this method and makes a great steak sandwich). Take your skillet and put in just enough vegetable oil (olive oil if you're a purist) to put a thin film on the bottom at cooking temperature (n.b., this is not much at all, maybe a tablespoon or so). Heat up the skillet until the oil is just short of smoking, then toss on the meat. Cook just until browned on each side; this will give a rare steak at 3/4 inch and will adequately cook the round steak I mentioned earlier. If you like your thinker steak medium, use somewhat lower heat and cook it longer. To pan-roast a cut of meat, you start with some oil and butter (about 2 Tbsp. of each), heat it up, and brown the meat on all sides. Then throw in a small amount of liquid (about 1/2 cup); the recipes I have all suggest an appropriate wine. Add seasonings, heat the liquid until it bubbles, then reduce the heat to simmering and cover the pan. Check it every 20 minutes or so to make sure there is still some liquid left and it's not boiling; turn the meat over when it's about half done. If you think this sounds a lot like braising, it does. The difference is that you are using much less liquid, only enough to avoid sauteeing the meat, so you are getting dry(er) heat. Desserts I can't help you with. Better buy them at your local bakery until you get the oven back. Bill Laubenheimer ----------------------------------------UC-Berkeley Computer Science ...Killjoy went that-a-way---> ucbvax!wildbill
suze@terak.UUCP (Suzanne Barnett) (01/24/86)
> I presume you've also done the usual things with pasta? Spaghetti, ravioli > ... Also try things like beef stroganoff, ground beef patties with a gravy or sauce (we like bernaise for this) and rice. > Desserts I can't help you with. Better buy them at your local bakery until > you get the oven back. Puddings and candy are generally made on the stove rather than in the oven, baked apples can be made in a skillet on the stove rather than in a pan in the oven. Ice cream doesn't even need heat (except for some recipes, and then only the stove, not the oven). And, if really desperate, ask to borrow a friend's oven, and cook dinner for him/her/them as well as yourselves. -- Suzanne Barnett-Scott uucp: ...{decvax,ihnp4,noao,savax,seismo}!terak!suze CalComp/Sanders Display Products Division 14151 N 76th Street, Scottsdale, AZ 85260 (602) 998-4800