

--A
Moderator: Menolly
Avatar wrote: ↑ Frost-hardy stuff.A lot of star jasmine (mostly in pots), ground and wall covers, (Uh, irish moss, creeping foxglove, some type of ivy), a bed of MR Lavender alternated with rosemary, sage, origanum, and thyme (and lemon thyme), clivia and agapanthus, and some other stuff. I dunno, I'm not a gardener...I just pay for it.
It was yummy!
After the myriad iterations I have done what is domestically called "charby chick", I have found that getting crisp skin on a smoked-and-saucy thigh is not consistently achievable. Saturday's grilling of skinned, but still bone-in, pieces turned out better, nu?
For me that’s debatable. I like chewy flaccid skin for the richness added on top of the dark meat. But, I’m not the only taste to be considered.
I bet!
Do you skim the fat and cook it down as tallow? I''m thinking of doing that and trying it.Menolly wrote: ↑I bet!
I use the Instant Pot for bone broth. Takes about 12 hours for two 5-quart batches in my 10-quart IP, using the same bones so they totally crumble at the end. An overnight chill, and then stove top simmering for about an hour. So, all told, it also takes about 24 hours for 10-quarts of bone broth.
I do chicken bone broth, both golden and brown, rather than make beef bone broth. I use the brown chicken stock in place of beef; it does not substitute for golden chicken stock but works great for a beef stock substitute.SoulBiter wrote: ↑Do you skim the fat and cook it down as tallow? I''m thinking of doing that and trying it.Menolly wrote: ↑I bet!
I use the Instant Pot for bone broth. Takes about 12 hours for two 5-quart batches in my 10-quart IP, using the same bones so they totally crumble at the end. An overnight chill, and then stove top simmering for about an hour. So, all told, it also takes about 24 hours for 10-quarts of bone broth.