Membership questions? Log in issues? Email info@brewersassociation.org

Author Topic: Recycling food  (Read 4052 times)

Offline punatic

  • Official Poobah of No Life. (I Got Ban Hammered by Drew)
  • *********
  • Posts: 4583
  • Puna District, Hawaii Island (UTC -10)
Re: Recycling food
« Reply #15 on: November 26, 2010, 01:36:53 am »

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RRDLzxFXjY

Post Consumer By Products - PCBP

Billions and Billions Served!

However it does not work withiout:
Specialized High Intensity Training -
There is only one success: to be able to spend your life in your own way.


AHA Life Member #33907

Offline rabid_dingo

  • Brewmaster
  • *****
  • Posts: 787
  • Brighton, CO :D
    • Mile High Monks
Re: Recycling food
« Reply #16 on: November 26, 2010, 06:52:32 pm »
Bread crumbs and Fondue....

When I am down to the end and not enough bread to make much with it, super light toast to speed the
drying and breadcrumb it. By the way my bread crumb container is treated like a home-style chimichurri
sauce, no particular recipe but the same ingredients keep getting added to maintain an ammount. Mostly
some dried "italian seasoning"  spices and bread...
Ruben * Colorado :)

Offline corkybstewart

  • Senior Brewmaster
  • ******
  • Posts: 1368
Re: Recycling food
« Reply #17 on: November 27, 2010, 07:50:04 am »
To the OP.
We freeze overripe bananas and tomatoes for cooking with later.  Limp moldy veggies go to the compost pile, bread gets crumbed.
Yesterday I boiled the leftover carcasses from the Thanksgiving goose and turkey and pulled all the tiny bits of meat.  Today I'll take some of the goose fat and fry finely chopped onions and garlic, then add the meat with some spices, simmer and add more fat to make a rillette, one of my favorite all time French foods.
Life is wonderful in sunny White Signal New Mexico

Offline beerocd

  • Senior Brewmaster
  • ******
  • Posts: 1429
Re: Recycling food
« Reply #18 on: November 27, 2010, 05:27:29 pm »
To the OP.
We freeze overripe bananas and tomatoes for cooking with later.  Limp moldy veggies go to the compost pile, bread gets crumbed.
Yesterday I boiled the leftover carcasses from the Thanksgiving goose and turkey and pulled all the tiny bits of meat.  Today I'll take some of the goose fat and fry finely chopped onions and garlic, then add the meat with some spices, simmer and add more fat to make a rillette, one of my favorite all time French foods.
Splain dat?
All I really understood was carcass and fat. Sounds good so far. Pics?
The moral majority, is neither.

Offline capozzoli

  • Senior Brewmaster
  • ******
  • Posts: 1689
  • Lat 40* 6 m. 2.24 s. Long -74* 51 m. 21.75 s.
    • Capozzoli Metalworks
Re: Recycling food
« Reply #19 on: November 27, 2010, 05:41:09 pm »
Yeah, lets hear more about the goose. I havent had much success with goose. Was it wild? How did you prepare it. Im thinking about making goose on the grill for xmas.

My Argentinian turkey grill got rained out. Had to put it in the oven.
Beer, its whats for dinner.

http://theholyravioli.blogspot.com/

http:// www.thecapo.us

Offline rabid_dingo

  • Brewmaster
  • *****
  • Posts: 787
  • Brighton, CO :D
    • Mile High Monks
Re: Recycling food
« Reply #20 on: December 01, 2010, 02:38:10 am »
Yeah, lets hear more about the goose. I havent had much success with goose. Was it wild? How did you prepare it. Im thinking about making goose on the grill for xmas.

My Argentinian turkey grill got rained out. Had to put it in the oven.
I gotta say I had a bad Geuze Boon. Tasted like burnt rubber.
Ruben * Colorado :)