For the 4th this year the menu included cedar plank salmon with grilled corn/mango salsa, sous vide potato salad, grilled asparagus and grilled corn.
The only salmon I had access to was pre-portioned, frozen the individually vacuum packed. I placed the packets in a 125f water bath for about 45 minutes to thaw and get up to temperature, next time I'll probably go a little lower (like 115f-120f). The salmon was then put in the refrigerator until time to grill. I placed the salmon fillets skin side down on a soaked cedar plank, spread some honey Dijon mustard on the top, sprinkled with lemon pepper and topped with a slice of fresh lemon. The grill was set up with a standard two level fire, the plank was put over the hot side until it started to smolder, then moved to the cool side. Since the salmon was already cooked I just needed to let it heat through and absorb some of the grill flavor. Once done I topped with a grilled corn/mango salsa consisting of some previously grilled corn, diced mango, diced red onion, diced hot red pepper, cilantro, lime juice, salt, pepper and olive oil.
The potatoes for the potato salad were cut in to pieces, tossed with salt, pepper and champagne vinegar and vacuum bagged with a knob of butter. They were cooked in a 185f bath for about 3 hours, I kind of got distracted and forgot about them for a bit so they were in the bath longer than intended but doneness turned out great. They were chilled overnight and mixed with the dressing and other ingredients a few hours before serving. The dressing consisted of mayonnaise, balsamic vinegar, champagne vinegar, celery salt, black pepper, chili/garlic paste, diced celery, thinly sliced radish and thinly sliced green onion (white and green parts) along with red pepper left over from the salsa. I dumped the potatoes in the bowl where I had mixed the dressing and folded them in, next time I'll dirty another bowl so I can put in just enough dressing to coat the potatoes, these were a little over dressed.
The other sides were grilled asparagus (tossed in olive oil, salt, pepper before being grilled) and grilled corn (just soaked for a few hours before going on the heat to get a char). Both turned out great.
Dessert was an apple pie from the Hoosier Momma Book Book of Pie cookbook, I picked it up a Costco last year when the author was signing copies. Turned out great! It was served with a vanilla/caramel gelato.
Showing posts with label potato salad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label potato salad. Show all posts
Monday, July 6, 2015
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
Memorial Day: Purple Potato Salad Sous Vide
The side dish I decided to make this Memorial Day was a warm potato salad, but I didn't want to go for a standard German potato salad. For the potatoes I picked up a bag of small purple potatoes at the supermarket, no reason, they were just on sale.
I usually have a water bath set up in the kitchen, but sice this was going to be a pretty hot bath I put a couple of sisal fiber placemats under the Cambro to protect the granite countertop. I set the circulator to 90C and turned it on.
The potatoes were cut in to bite sized pieces and tossed with olive oil, salt, pepper and granulated onion. I smashed four garlic cloves and threw them in as well. Everything was put in to a Foodsaver bag along with 2 tbs butter and vacuum sealed, then the pouch was placed in the still heating bath. In order to allow the bath to heat up as quickly as possible a blanket was wrapped around the bath and dish towels laid over the top. Once the bath hit 90C a timer was set for 30 minutes. When the timer went off the pouch was retreived from the bath, cut open, and the potatoes were dumped in a colander placed over a bowl. A vinaigrette was made by whisking the liquid drained from the potatoes with 2-3 Tb honey dijon mustard, about 1/4 cup olive oil and around 2 Tb white wine vinegar until an emulsion was formed, which was then tossed with the still hot potatoes. Thinly sliced onion, diced Anaheim pepper, capers, chives and a little cilantro were folded in and the potato salad was covered and allowed to sit for 30 minutes for the flavors to marry.
This potato salad turned out really well, the potatoes were tender but not to the point of falling apart and because they were mixed with the vinegraitte when they were still hot they absorbed a lot of flavor. By cooking the potatoes sous vide and incorporating the bag liquid in the vinegraitte all the potato flavor stayed where it belonged. I'll be adding this recipe to the summer holiday rotation.
I usually have a water bath set up in the kitchen, but sice this was going to be a pretty hot bath I put a couple of sisal fiber placemats under the Cambro to protect the granite countertop. I set the circulator to 90C and turned it on.
The potatoes were cut in to bite sized pieces and tossed with olive oil, salt, pepper and granulated onion. I smashed four garlic cloves and threw them in as well. Everything was put in to a Foodsaver bag along with 2 tbs butter and vacuum sealed, then the pouch was placed in the still heating bath. In order to allow the bath to heat up as quickly as possible a blanket was wrapped around the bath and dish towels laid over the top. Once the bath hit 90C a timer was set for 30 minutes. When the timer went off the pouch was retreived from the bath, cut open, and the potatoes were dumped in a colander placed over a bowl. A vinaigrette was made by whisking the liquid drained from the potatoes with 2-3 Tb honey dijon mustard, about 1/4 cup olive oil and around 2 Tb white wine vinegar until an emulsion was formed, which was then tossed with the still hot potatoes. Thinly sliced onion, diced Anaheim pepper, capers, chives and a little cilantro were folded in and the potato salad was covered and allowed to sit for 30 minutes for the flavors to marry.This potato salad turned out really well, the potatoes were tender but not to the point of falling apart and because they were mixed with the vinegraitte when they were still hot they absorbed a lot of flavor. By cooking the potatoes sous vide and incorporating the bag liquid in the vinegraitte all the potato flavor stayed where it belonged. I'll be adding this recipe to the summer holiday rotation.
Labels:
anova,
potato salad,
potatoe,
precision cooker,
purple potato,
sous vide,
vinegrette
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