Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Showing You Guys What Exactly Goes On In a Bottling Day

Greetings all! I am back with another bottling day post. This time it is my Cocoa Cherry Mead. I had a bit too much headspace in the carboy and I was worried about oxidation as I was looking some color, so I decided to go ahead and bottle it and let if bottle age. Now instead of the obligatory bottle porn I normally post I decided to let you guys see what goes into bottling meads.

 Here you see my Blackberry[no post on this, too simple and not blog worthy] and Cocoa Cherry meads. The thing inside of the jug in the carboy is a racking cane. You pump it and it creates a vacuum that sucks the fluid down into the tube into a bottle.
 As you see here, the fluid flows into the bottle. The white clamp on the hose is what you press to stop the flow of liquid so you don't spill your precious wine all over the floor. 
And here is the bottle porn. I love the color on these. The left is Blackberry and the right is Cocoa Cherry. Despite the darkness of it, the last two on the left are blackberry too. 

Laters, next post I will show you how I made chicken for thanksgiving. If you have any questions/complaints/suggestions feel free to comment and let me know. 

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Keep it simple

Last night for dinner the hubby and I had shrimp, rice and veggies. We are new to this asparagus game, so they might have come out a bit overcooked, but they were still tasty. Of course we had broccoli ( a staple in our household), but the best part was the shrimp!! I added a couple different seasonings and I was satisfied with the outcome.

Next time I want to have white wine on deck. That would have been perfect!

Friday, November 15, 2013

Inexpensive Peach Vanilla Experiment Part 2 + Bottling Day

As some of you may recall I decided to do an experimental tossed together peach wine. TL:DR I made blended 3lbs of peaches with some sugar and tossed into a jug. Well after a while as wines do it started to clear. I added about a tablespoon of vanilla extract to it. It made the entire jug turn a darker color with a brown tint. As seen below. I almost went ahead and sorbated and sulfited it to kill off the yeast so I could backsweeten it later on.
 After I let it sit for another 2 weeks, I added enough sugar to it to sweeten it but not make it cloying sweet. No gravity readings as I still don't have a hydrometer due to an unfortunate tasting/measuring incident.

After The Wife and I moved to the new place and got settled in I figured I'd check on this and found it had cleared quite nicely. Faster than I expected honestly. I almost realized I have waaaaay too much head space and I risk oxidation if I tried to bulk age so I decided to bottle it.



See how clear she is?
 I could read the coffee pot numbers no problem. My phone would not focus on the numbers though. 
 Here is a sample in a glass
 I let The Wife's brother in law taste it and he said while it still had an alcohol bite to it, you could clearly taste the peach that was coming through. Sadly no vanilla though. I am hoping it comes out later as it ages. I will definitely make this one again, though next time it will be a proper mead with some good quality honey and secondary will have some vanilla sticks in it.

Those brown bottles are the wrap up to my quick cider. Honestly I don't know what to think of it. The taste has changed again though not for the better or worst, it just changed. The mouthfeel is still weird, like liquid glass. I decided to bottle it and forget about it for the next couple of years as I have heard that apple can take year to taste good. Hopefully so. If not, oh well its all in the game of brewing.

Comment, tell me what you think. Laters people!

Monday, October 28, 2013

How to Cook a Great Steak Part 2

For those of you just tuning in this is the second installment of how to make a great steak. Which should be pretty obvious with the 2 in the title but no one is judging you. When we last left off you had that big piece of meat in your hand ready to toss it in a pan. Before you do that though you need to gather your ingredients.

Kosher Salt
Black pepper (if you don't have a pepper grind, which you should, the ground box stuf works)
Butter
Olive or Grape Seed Oil.

You also need to let your meat come up to room temperature. We are almost there, I am promise you. I am going to presume that you have chose to cook a ribeye or new york strip. Why? Because those are my favorite steaks and you know being like me means you are awesome. Go ahead,

The first thing you need to do with your lovely piece of meat, other than unwrap it is to blot it with paper towels. You want to get the excess blood off it. I like to use a meth similar to the below photo where I take the steak and kind of roll it up so I can blot it all over at once. [PRO TIP: Do NOT use cheap napkins or paper towels that tear easily. It will just cause you to have to peel it off.]

You want to get the meat as dry as possible though don't go over board with it. You don't want to start rubbing off flesh. Just blot it. Depending on size you will like need more than one. If your meat is still cold this is the time to let it come up to temp. This can take a few hours if you have a thick piece of meat. 



Once the meat is clean of the excess moisture lay the out on a flat surface. Take a bit of your chosen oil the rub the meat down with your oil. You don't want it dripping wet. You want it basically to coat the surface of the meat. Once your meat is coated grind or sprinkle your black pepper on the steaks. On top of that give it a generous amount of kosher salt. You want to make sure that the entire surface is coated in salt and pepper. 
 Up close food pr0n's

After you salt and pepper both sides I like to let my sit a bit to let the meat suck in the seasonings. No more than 10 minutes usually. Now you need to take your favorite skillet and get it HOT. On a good electric stove that means 7 or 8. Once it hot go ahead and lay your steak down. Immediately set a timer for 60 seconds.

 While the steak is sizzling away on the pan grab a pair of tongues or your hands if you are crazy like me, and press down on the meat making sure to get as much surface area in direct contact with the pan as possible. You may be wondering why? Well salt and heat on red meat has some type of effect which forms a crust on the meat. This is quite tasty so you want that crust, this is how to get it. When a minute is up flip the steak, turn the heat down to 5 and let the other side crust up.

The reason for turning the heat down is that the steak will cook longer on this side. This will also be the side that is plate up.So you get a strong crust along with the steak cooking slowly.




Some people swear that you only need to flip a steak once, but I am not one of those. I flip as often as I feel is necessary though I don't flip it constantly either. I like to add butter to my steaks and let it brown on it to give it a bit more flavor.



Once the steak is done don't forget to grab the tongs and put the fat strip on the skillet too. 

Speaking of being done. Let us pause for a second. You may have noticed that I did not add any cooking times to any of this. Well there is a reason for that. Cooking times can vary a lot depending on how thick a piece of meat is. I like to go by feel. Let me borrow someone's hand to show you. The below chart seems silly but it is actually spot on. Once you get a few steaks under your belt you will be able to judge the time, until then stick to the chart. 

This is a chart that gives you a good understanding of the different degrees of steak doneness. I will say though this chart is a tiny bit misleading. If you look at this it looks as if rare and medium rare are completely raw in the middle. Which is not true at all if you cook it properly. Now if your steak was cold, and you quickly seared the outside it could be raw in the middle. Now this chart is clearly bias but I do agree that well done and medium well are both too done for a good steak. I eat mine medium leaning towards medium rare.

Once you get your steak to your desired doness, which I hope isn't well done, you need to let it rest. DO NOT CUT INTO THAT STEAK!! If you do you will ruin your hard work. When meat gets hot it expands, the juices flow. If you cut into it all your juices will run out onto the plate. Wrap it in some foil and sit it aside for at least 10 minutes.  Edit: It has been pointed out to me that you do not need to wrap your steak in foil. If you are going to keep it warm then you can just tent the steak with foil until ready to serve. 

Once you do you will be rewarded with a steak that is juicy (unless its well done) and tender. That was a good steak. 

Friday, October 25, 2013

How to Cook a Great Steak Part 1

I like meat. This should not come as surprise to anyone. I am not easy to please when it comes to my meats, steak in particular. I have found while a lot of people cook steak, very few cook it well. I found myself going to restaurants ordering and receiving steak that was either bland or overcooked. It was rare that I found myself truly enjoying a nice quality steak. In hindsight I realize now that was because I was going to restaurant chains like Longhorns, Ruby Tuesdays, Applebee's etc. when I should have went to a place that specializes in steak. Non the less I decided to master steak on my own. I have spent count less and ruined many a piece of meat to get where I am now, where I feel I can make a good steak at anytime. I have decided to share some of my techniques with you guys.

Now the first part of making a great steak has nothing to do with cooking. Yes that is right, now back away from the pan and turn that stove off.

First we need to talk about meat. Not all steak is the same. Sure it may look similar but what kind of steak it is can and will make a difference on how the final product. Steak is usually graded like this

From Wikipedia:



  • U.S. Prime – Highest in quality and intramuscular fat, limited supply. Currently, about 2.9% of carcasses grade as Prime.
  • U.S. Choice – High quality, widely available in foodservice industry and retail markets. Choice carcasses are 53.7% of the fed cattle total. The difference between Choice and Prime is largely due to the fat content in the beef. Prime typically has a higher fat content (more and well distributed intramuscular "marbling") than Choice.
  • U.S. Select (formerly Good) – lowest grade commonly sold at retail, acceptable quality, but is less juicy and tender due to leanness.
  • Now you may be wondering why fat  content matters. Trust me it matters a lot. You get a lot of the flavor from the fat. In addition to flavor prime and choice beef will be more tender than select as well.

    I look at it kind of how I see alcohol.

    Select= Mr. Boston/Budlight
    Choice = Three olives/Shocktop
    Prime = Grey Goose/ Special Made Craft Beer

    Choice is what I buy. It is what you will find at most quality supermarkets and butchers. It is easier on the wallet and can still be cooked to a great steak. I bet you are ready to cook now aren't you?

    NO YOU ARE NOT SIT DOWN AND KEEP READING!

    You must first decide what type of steak you want to cook. There are a lot of pieces of meat with the word steak on it. It can be rather confusing. I like this chart to help keep track.


    For this article let us ignore the tenderloin roast. Astute observers will notice the tenderloin and the porterhouse look very similar. Correct you are. There is much debate over this, but basically they are both a combo of two steak, the NY Strip on one side and the tenderloin on the other. The difference being the porterhouse has more tenderloin on it.

    If fat were to equal flavor you would be able to easily guess which of those steak would have the most flavor. As you can see the rib eye [rib steak above] has much more marbling than the other ones and therefore can often times be more flavorful. In contrast you see the coveted filet mignon has next to no fat yet we all know how expensive it is. It has a lot to due with how tender that piece of meat is. This is a purely subjective matter, and really you should buy what you like. I prefer the Ny Strip and the ribeye.

    Now that you have selected your steak, you are ready to cook right? Great! let's go turn on the heat..........................................
























    And read Part II, which is coming soon....
    Edit Part 2 is now up. Glad you didn't have wait huh?

    Wednesday, October 23, 2013

    Bookstore Browsing

    I was stranded at the bookstore yesterday afternoon after my car broke down. I got a ride to my job and afterwards chilled at the nearest convienent place (the bookstore) for 2 hours. The husband does not work exactly down the street so I had to wait for him to get off work and rescue me...hence my entrapment.

    But I mean, if you're going to be "detained" somewhere, why not a Barnes and Noble with books, a Starbucks cafe, and good mood music playing in the background. It was not even ice cold there like it usually is. In fact, it was quite cozy. So much so that once I sat down, I spent most of the time on my phone watching Korean romance dramas (blusssshhhh).

    That's pretty much how the husband found me... snuggled up on an arm chair in the back... in my own world. He felt so bad about having me wait for 2 hours that he treated me extra good for the rest of the day. Sigh. Life is good.

    Tuesday, October 15, 2013

    A quick breakfast

    Not going to lie go you. I'm usually the bacon and egg sandwich kind of girl but I'm trying something different today. Besides, I do lovve yogurt!

    Wednesday, October 9, 2013

    Cheap Eats, Another Beer Review

    While in Kroger browsing the beer selection I came across a beer that seemed like too good of a deal. It was Sierra Nevada IPA. It was a 24oz bottle for 3.99, 2.19 with the Kroger plus card. I could not help but note it was surrounded by a lot of malt liquors, budlight, mike's hard lemonade cans etc. I had the same thought you are probably thinking right now, it is going to be cheap and nasty like the aforementioned beverages. Then I noticed it was next to an equally large bottle of Red Stripe. Now I have had Red Stripe before and found it to be a good. So I decided to bite the bullet and a bottle of this left with me along with that nights dinner of fried chicken.



    First off, this bottle is huge. It is quite literally like drinking two beers in one sitting. Now as I've said before I am no beer snob so take this with a grain of salt.

    Upon first sip this beer is very crisp, dare I say citrus-ey, with good mouth feel. As it slides over your tongue and towards the back of your mouth, you start to taste the hops quite a bit. When swallowing it goes to very hoppy flavor with a bitter finish. For me this is a great with food beer. I like it best with food that is salty and spicy. Fried chicken with a good bit of extra hot texas pete[black folks gone black lol]  was delectable with this beer. It is quite a bit more hoppy than some other pale ales I've tried,then again this is my first IPA. At 3.99 a bottle  it would take $9.57+tax to get a six packs worth, which is pretty standard and not very cheap. However at 2.19 a bottle it wold only be 6.57+tax to get a six packs worth which is pretty good considering quality beers seems to run at 7.99 and up.

    I wrestled with this one quite a bit, however I must give this one a 6/10. Yes it is relatively cheap,however that cheapness only comes with a Kroger plus card, and those deals can change, plus you may not have a kroger near you like I do. Secondly the fact you are forced to drink two beers worth when you open this one kinda of takes away from its value a bit. If there was a way to drink one beer out of the bottle and store the rest I could score it higher [Note: If there is for the lover of everything comment and let me know]. 

    Do you agree or disagree with my rating? Comment and let me know! Laterz

    Tuesday, October 8, 2013

    Home Hunting at Hobby Lobby

    There are so many good things about our new place! It's bigger for one and I finally got a sunroom...but only being here for just over a week, it still does not feel like home yet.

    But not to fear!! Yet (that's me) is on the case! I took a trip to Hobby Lobby -- the crafting mecca to find what I needed. Before I focus on any other part of our place, I need to take care of the kitchen! Can you say outdated!!?? Knowing that I cannot permanently change anything just means that I'll have to be a bit creative is all (the yellowish "white" cabinets are a NO!). The pictures show a few items that I know will be perfect for the Clean Cottage look I'm going for.

    The fun begins...

    Wednesday, October 2, 2013

    Home Sweet Home

    We have finally moved into our new place. Now comes the unpacking and cleaning and decorating. But first I have to find some energy! A sister is exhausted!!!!!

    Friday, September 27, 2013

    Bigger and Better things

    All week I've been packing to prepare to move this weekend. Now I freely admit that it is Friday and not even half of the house is packed up yet. It is sad but true. Now comes the ever- exciting time for me to run around like a chicken with my head cut off to make sure everything gets packed in time. Sigh. I have got to do better.
    This is the result of always wanting things a certain way.

    Thursday, September 26, 2013

    Call me country

    Some fried fish with rice?! Oh now we talking.

    This pic is from a good minute ago but do not care. What the stomach desires has no freakin timeline. Haha. If I was not so busy packing and working and running errands, I would be cooking a nice southern meal like this one right now. Oh well.

    That struggle tho...

    Wednesday, September 25, 2013

    Disappointing shrimp scampy

    I was at Target one day feeling pretty experimental when I happened upon one of these new Campbell Soup sauces. It looked so cute and I was all like "oooo". So I bought.
    Unfortunately I did not receive the expected results - that being utter deliciousness. Haha. Instead what I got was extra lemony extra salty and a simi-eatable meal for my efforts... but on the upside, it did look the the package cover when I was done. Sigh.

    Tuesday, September 24, 2013

    A Good Meal

    The husband and I ate out today. I was happy to relax on our at home vacation. So restful.
    I ordered a yummy salmon dish over rice served with sauce and salad with a sweet tea on the side...in a coke glass because that is how we roll in Georgia. Haha.

    Wednesday, September 18, 2013

    Inexpensive Peach Vanilla Experiment

    Sup yall! I'm back with another brew. This time it is not a mead, but still a wine. The local food dept had peaches on sale. I think it was like 93 cents a pound so I figured eh why not? I picked up three pounds of peaches along with a 4lb bag of sugar (more on that later) and figured I'd give it a go.

    After I got home my bro, who was staying with us for a week, helped me de-pit the peaches. I think it was around 15 or 16. We cut them up and threw them into a bowl. Once they were all in there I got out the hand blender and turn them into peach soup.

    Meanwhile I put the water on boil to get the sugar in there. Now you may wonder why I am using sugar instead of honey. The answer? I was broke and sugar is cheap. After I dumped almost a gallon into a pot I just poured the entire bag in there. Once it all dissolved I mixed it my bucket along with the peach soup and frappe'ed it again till it was nice and frothy.

    I put the usual stuff in there, yeast energizer, nutrient, Lavlin k1v, pectic enzyme. From prior experience  I knew this would go off like a rocket so I setup a blow tube. I was not to be disappointed as when I came home from work the next day I found the blow off bottle which was 16oz had been filled with peach stuff. I dumped it out, cleaned it up and set it up again. I left it like that for three days and thankfully there were no more incidents. It looked like this on day 4. Total price on this is less than 10 bucks so far, so it it is good, it will be a good way to get smashed for cheap make a good wine that people can enjoy.



    You can see the evidence of blow off up top. Currently it is in secondary.

    "But wait, you didn't mention anything about vanilla"

    Quite right my impatient friend. I will get to that............on part 2.

    Laters!

    Monday, August 26, 2013

    Cheap Eats, Oh Look Some Vodka....

    Suuuuup People, I'm back again with another edition of cheap eats.  In case you can't tell I am a bit of a booze hound. Everyone drunk liquor enthusiast has a drink of choice. Mine is vodka. Oh dear sweet vodka, how I love thee. Serioulsy people, I effing love the stuff. Even though I never drink to the point of intoxication I would empty a 1.5L bottle in less than 2 weeks. Drinking can be heavy on the wallet, so I am always on the look out for a cheaper but decent vodka. It is easy to find cheap vodka. Hell I have some in the kitchen now that I use to clean my mead making equipment.

    Pictured: Sanitizer

    However cheap and good is another story. One day I was in a package browsing the wall of  vodka when I saw a 1.5L bottle for $14.99. Meh, that is nothing new. Then I noticed it was one shelf below top shelf. My wallet tingled with excitement. 


    I got it home and gave it a try. Now I am not going to sit here an tell you how smooth and full of flavor it was and all the stuff you may see on a professional vodka review. I am not that good.

    What I will tell you is that it is drinkable, dare I say good. It is no Grey Goose,  not even Three Olives, but it is quite a bit better than Smirnoff which to me tastes like vodka mixed with dirt. I have since then bought three bottles of this. I won't lie. There are much better vodkas on the market. However for 14.99/1.5L, with a decent taste and great mixability this cannot be beat. I give this a solid 10/10 for value. Next time you are having a party and you need a lot of vodka for a little bit of money. I give this a try for sure. 

    Wednesday, August 21, 2013

    My Coca Cherry Mead.

    I love cherries. They are in my top 5 fruits. A mead had to happen.

    Primary
    2 weeks in the bucket 48 oz Tart Cherry Juice for lots of cherry flavor 5lbs of clover honey 36 oz of black cherries frozen Lavlin 71b-1112 re-hydrated with yeast energizer pectic enzyme, yeast nutrient Water to a gallon



    I heated up the juice water and honey into a pot, brought to a simmer right below a boil and added in the honey bit by bit. While it was heating up I poured the cherries into my bag (seriously bag + bucket = so much win) the crushed then up with my hand. I poured the liquid on top. Added in the pectic enzyme, nutrient, energizer. Then whipped it up with my hand blender with whisk attachment. SG was between 1.27-1.32 the foam obscured it a bit.

    With the yeast I rehydrated it with a bit of yeast engergizer. Didn't put the nutrient in as it has DAP in it. After it sat for a bit, I added a bit of must to it. Let it sit for 17 mins, it got a nice foam on top of it, so I added more must then let that sit for 20 mins. After the 20 min mark I dumped it into the bucket, stirred her up then sat the lid on top.

    During the first three days I don't seal the bucket since I aerate three times a day. After the first three I sealed her up and let her blurp for two weeks.

    Here is a photo of it in the bucket



    Secondary 
    2 weeks then racked onto 12 oz of black cherries 

    After the two weeks was up I racked it off the fruit and onto more cherries and some coca nibs. The gravity was 1.001. At this gravity it was dry as a bone but it was wonderful! The taste of the cherries was thick without being cough syrup like. I let The Wife try some and even though she does not like dry wines she liked this one.

    Tertiary
    2-3 oz of cocoa nibs 
    After sitting for another 2 weeks on the extra cherries I racked this off onto 2-3oz's of cocoa nibs just to give it a bit of extra flavor. I sample it again but did not take a gravity reading. The flavor had gotten even better. The cherry flavor was a bit more pronounced and it smelled wonderful.


    Quaternary
    (admit it, you just learned a new word)

    I let it sit on the nibs for quite some time. I don't really remember how long. I think maybe a month or longer. The nibs did not impart as much flavor as I had hoped. Though it did add a bit of complexity to the mead. It was around this time I broke my hydrometer in the making of a future post (see what I did there?) so I could not take a gravity reading. After giving very small samples out to everyone we all agreed it needs to be backsweetened just a hair. If the gravity is still 1.001 then I would take it maybe to 1.010.


    Personally I think the color on this is FANTASTIC. As of today's date it is still in the carboy bulk aging. It was sorbated and sulfited a week ago. I will backsweeten it this weekend when I trek up to the brew store to buy yet another hydrometer. I plan to let this one sit for a while before I open it up. Tell me what you think of the color. Any suggestions on additions? I will most definitely be making this one again. 

    Saturday, August 17, 2013

    Beer Review- Shocktop Applewheat Beer

    Sup People! I am back with another review. I saw this beer pop up around may in the stores. It is a seasonal beer. It looked interesting an I am really into beer right now, so I decided to give it a try. 




    I forget what dead animal I cooked that night, but when I opened this beer....

    The apple taste blows you away. It is crisp, smooth, and full of flavor. The Wife, who normally detests beer loved it as well. I cannot get enough of these. At 7.37 a six pack these are not exactly cheap but they are worth the price. I highly recommend these. 



    Lunch between Work

    I squeezed in some quality time for a decent lunch. Yesterday I forgot to bring food so today I over compensated. Hehe. It was a plesent meal before rushing back to work. Saturdays are always busy!