Wednesday, November 1, 2023

How Many elipses does it take to get to the center of a Tootsie Pop, pop?

 

Mr. PNW says 'Get enough food to eat, and eat it.'



Last month sucked with a capital SUCK. I am happy to see October in the rearview.  Yes, it was Halloween last night, but meh. As usual we got no Trick or Treaters, which is fine, because The Biker bought M&M's just in case, and this morning I had el mucho peanut M&M's at hand, and peanut M&M's are precisely what I dined upon for breakfast this fine November first. 

It was time the Universe smiled on me a little.   

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SANDWICH FURY OF THIRTEEN DRAGONS!


I love sandwiches. They are portable, they are a handy size and shape, and they are tasty.  You can hold sandwich in one hand and a gun, or a cup of coffee, or a shovel, in the other, and fulfill your nutritional needs while you shoot to kill/get caffeinated/bludgeon someone with a shovel.  

I taught myself how to cook when I was very young. The first 'recipes' I invented were for sandwiches, and I had a million of 'em. I invented...

1965's Cotto Salami Flap Sandwich which is a couple of pieces of the sleaziest Cotto Salami you can find, put on one slice of the sleaziest white bread you can find, flapped over and then stuffed into the breast pocket of your bibs. Make three - one for each pocket!* and share with Bill Beizer and his sister Ellen way up a big tree.   Then yell for help until someone comes and gets you all down out of the big tree.) 

...1970's Huge Bacon Lettuce and Tomato (one sliced fat, drippy, home-grown tomato, six or more crispy slices of bacon, shredded iceburg lettuce, and a mayonnaise that includes olive oil, parmesan cheese, chili flakes, red wine vinegar and oregano, on sourdough.  SO yum.)

...1977's Cashew Chicken Salad Sandwich ( chicken salad made with chopped cashews, a little onion, a sprinkle of garlic powder, thin cut celery and celery leaves, an oil and red wine vinegar dressing brought together with a bare dab of mayonnaise and mixed with some cubed chicken breast, then 'blap' on a wad of alfalfa sprouts that are laying on some homemade French bread; which kicks ass.)  

            I used to keep a food diary, so that's how I remember the dates, before anybody asks. 

I literally cannot remember my own phone number, but I remember sitting up a huge dogwood tree in 1965 with Bill and Ellen Beiser eating Cotto Salami Flap Sandwiches and then realizing we had clumb* up too far into the branches, and panicking.

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  Voulez-vous...you know what I'll just leave this here.   


When I saw the New Orleans Muffaleta Sandwich on TV some years back, I said to myself  'Self, that looks absolutely delicious. This needs to happen.' and I did that thing, and it was awesome.  An excellent sandwich in all respects.

(This recipe for a Gin-You-Wine Muffaletta Poe-Boy *squaaaak NEVERMORE *  is as good as any out there. Please hit 'jump to recipe' right quick though, or suffer through paragraphs of yadda yadda and ads, because this page is balls deep in monitization.) 


Ah, but it was the olive salad constituent that captured my heart.  That is some delicious shit.

The first thing I did was cut out the giardiniera because life is too short to be eating pickled cauliflower.  That may not be in the giardiniera available to you in Parts Foreign, but that's all we get out here.  Mezzetta Brand Giardiniera.  They put cauliflower in it, and honestly? fuck that. Gawd. Yak. Ew. 

So it was that I was forced to invent my own olive salad that is one million times of the Universe plus Saturn of deliciouser more better than the shit with cauliflower in it.

Now olives can run a little musky and same-o same-o as a flavor. 

That would not do.  I wanted a ROCKIN' olive salad. Therefore I created...

    Not A Tapanade but Also Not Strictly An Olive Salad    

                                    This will, as always, take longer to read than to do.  


==An equal amount of pitted Kalamata olives, pitted Castelvetrano olives, pimento-stuffed Manzanilla olives, and pitted plain black olives. 

How much is an equal amount? Try eyeballing the mass and get back to me. I will ignore you. Prepare for that.  This is to your own taste and need for olive salad in your life. 

Chop these olives until the individual pieces are >(    )< that size. Next, put into a mixing bowl. Not a huge one, just a regular one. Come on use some common sense here.

    ==Whole sun-dried tomatoes packed in olive oil - again, this shit varies. And these tend pretty sweet, so be advised. I'd say take one sun dried tomato out and chop it into hair- thin strips, and repeat those actions until you have about 1/6 the mass of the olives in finely chopped sun dried tomatoes.  Got that did? Put into the bowl. 

    ==Raw Garlic, a heaping teaspoon.  Peel cloves and then put through a press.  Sweat the pulp  in a little olive oil for about 5 minutes. Cool, then add to mixing bowl, oil and all.  

    ==Scallions (AKA green onions, spring onions) Add as many as you feel lead by the Lord. Chop very fine and add raw to the mixing bowl. You could use plain white minced Bermuda Onions here, but scallions will taste better and look better.

== 1 lemons' worth of zested lemon peel. Any size lemon. Go for it. 


See this thing?  Use this thing. Or use a plain grater, or just a vegetable peeler.  


==1/2 tsp. pulverized anchovy, the kind you squeeze out of a toothpaste tube. You know the stuff. YES ADD IT.

==I hesitate to put this here, but I use it.  It takes knowledge of the kind of pepper you use.  One red, sweet pepper, roasted, seeded, peeled and chopped fine. Into the mixing bowl. 

   Taste taste  taste taste !! Red sweet peppers can be very sweet indeed!  They can also be very complex and wonderful. I have no idea what kind of red pepper you have available or what kind of flavor it has. I am presuming sweet, with a distinct flavor of freshly ground black pepper.  You go by what you like, or skip this entirely.    

==Salt, Pepper - to taste. In we go.

    ==Additional olive oil, to taste and to influence spreadability. I like Napoleon Spanish Olive Oil because it's peppery.  You could instead use ghee. Do not cheap out and use margarine or any other commonly used cooking oil (vegetable, rapeseed, corn, peanut, soybean, cottonseed no no no no.)

==SECRET INGREDIENT:  Now this is going to take some tasting and a lot of care and discretion. The ingredient is

    Citric Acid    

And the measurement is 'enough to coat a damp teaspoon' to begin with. Use very, very little indeed.

This is the first ingredient I've come across that offers such a huge, immediate difference to flavors - and then stays stable. There is no window of oxidization or number or hours to marinate. Let's say you've made a Bolognaise sauce and it tastes muddy because you might have overcooked that pup. The very barest amount of Citric Acid - a mere dusting!- added to your saucepan of muddy Bolognaise will separate all the flavors and bring them to the forefront vividly. Similarly olive salad!  A bare trace of citric acid will bring the flavor of each ingredient to the forefront, and the added trace of sourness will augment the whole.

                        *Watches tracers form on passing hand.  Does this for 45 minutes.* 

So you get the drift, then. Add just a cunthair bit of Citric Acid, stir, and the taste. 

Keep doing this until you suddenly begin to taste everything separately. It could happen with that first damp teaspoon!  Or it might take a tiny bit more. Once everything springs to life, stop right there. Do not add another bit. You are done.  

---Now all you do is stir all these ingredients very thoroughly together. You want the juices to mingle. Stand there and stir until your feet begin to hurt.  Maybe call a friend you haven't heard from in awhile and catch up. Meanwhile you're stirring, and the olives and stuff are making a 'glick slish glick glick gaslosh' sound as you stir, right? and your buddy will think you're getting a blow job! Choice!


==Put in sealed container and store in refrigerator. Use as a sandwich spread, although don't let me dictate your culinary limits. It's fantastic in an omelette, or on pasta, or just out of the jar. Also in Pork Roulade with a lot of rosemary. Or on a white pizza. Or in a tagine!!! 

FUCK YEAH CHICKEN TAGINE
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++   

This Olive Salad is meant, however, to be great on a Muffaletta Sandwich.
 
Do I make an authentic New Orleans Muffaletta Sandwich?  I do not. I doubt that even the originators of the Muffaletta Sandwich still make an authentic Muffaletta Sandwich anymore. Nobody wrote that shit down back when, and everybody who ever ate an original one is dead now.  

Maybe I'm doing you a huge favor by not having that original recipe at hand. 

Here's a sandwich it's good on.  It has muffaletta-ish ingredients, but then again maybe it doesn't. 

The Oregon Sandwich
 "Tastes like liberal politics and aggressive waterfowl!
   
                                                                    "We're here!  
                                                                       Craft beer!  
                                            Something something rhymes with 'eer!"     
  


==One dense white bread-type sandwich roll with a thick crust - split, and some of the fluff taken out of both pieces to form a bit of an indentation.  Chunk the fluff out the back door for the birds, or stand there and eat it like a kid. I do.

==Cold cuts:  Mortadella, gypsy salami, and capicola

==Cheese:  Provelone and Swiss

==The olive salad I just gave you the recipe for
~~~~~~~~

---Slap a nice thick layer of olive salad on the top and bottom bun. Stack cold cuts and cheese on top. Any amount, either bun or both. 

---Stack sandwich back together, and be neat. Make sure that things are spread out equally.  It's important, because of the next step.

---Place whole sandwich in a container, and put a weight on top of the sandwich. Yes. Seriously. Don't squish it as hard as you can, and don't step on it. Put a brick, or a cast iron skillet, inside a stout Glad bag and rest that on your nicely stacked sandwich, and let it all sit in the refrigerator for six hours and get flattened down. 
Yes I do this. 
Yes it is worth it.

Make this sandwich in the morning and then in the afternoon, take it out and eat that sapsucker.  Weighting it makes it taste better in an indefinable way - far better than if you just put the sandwich together and then chowed down on the spot. And don't get me wrong; that's an excellent sandwich, but the pressed version is a MORE EXCELLENT SANDWICH.***
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*Only works with Carhart bibs. 

** Clumb is, as you may have guessed, is the past tense of 'clumbed.'



***I remember a show called Two Fat Ladies, a cooking program from the UK. The premise was, two fat ladies - imagine it -  cooking stuff. One of the things they prepared was a Shooter's Sandwich. The Shooters' Sandwich is also a pressed sandwich, and it too is better for having been pressed all day and chilled. 

WHY IS THIS SO????? 

It is one of the Sandwich Mysteries.




15 comments:

  1. It all sounds like a lot of work, but very yummy!

    And the "Two Fat Ladies"?! YAY!!!! Jx

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    1. "Two Fat Ladies" are so excellent! I remember watching them and trying to explain them to other people over here. Finally it was a case of 'Watch Public Access around 7:00 in the evening." Honestly some people.

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  2. I lived in New Orleans for many years and while there are so many things that I love to eat there, muffaletas were always one of my favorites. There is a lot of variation but the best comes down on the side of your recipe here. "Muffaleta" is a specific type of bun that's traditionally used for the sandwich. It makes a difference. In New Orleans, The definitive muffaletta is sold by Central Grocery in the French quarter. I am all teary eyed with nostalgia

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    1. We had gumbo for dinner tonight and reading about a Muffaleta made me hungry all over again and wishing I was in NOLA! xoxo

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  3. Your "SANDWICH FURY OF THIRTEEN DRAGONS!" has entertained me while eating my boring non-M&Ms breakfast. However, I won't be making any of the sandwiches, especially the "Muffaleta" as I'm not eating anything with muff in it. Or olives. Or cauliflower (except in piccalilli).
    You should write a cook book. Or, even better, have your own cooking show! I bet you'd easily make enough money so that you didn't have to move to Tennessee!

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  4. Ah - I think you like sandwiches, am I right?
    My sandwiches are simple and usually feature mayo, crisps, and fish fingers.
    Sorry to read in the previous post that your dream was shattered.
    Sx

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    1. No worries. -now wait. Mayo, fish sticks and potato chips? That's what you mean, right?

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  5. I'm humming "Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans" and even though we had gumbo for dinner, now I want a sandwich! The MITM is very impressed by your sandwich skill, sweetpea! xoxo

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  6. I too love sandwiches and soup too! In the military, you slap everything between two slices of bread and call it a sandwich, it is the way. The soup is to make dried things more palatable and edible. I would say throwing a hot bowl of soup at someone's face would be a good defensive mechanism too and slow them down for sure! Hopefully the would-be assailant has got a Kit Kat in their pocket or something since I'll be hungry afterwards.

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    1. Weaponised sandwiches! I like that concept! Weaponized soup and sandwich combo's sound even better! THEY WOULD HAVE THE FORCE OF SIXTEEN TSUNAMIS!!!!!!!!!!

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  7. Whoops I seem to have missed this one.
    I adore Jennifer Paterson and have a personally signed copy of 'The Two Fat Ladies Ride Again'. She also forms part of the tryptic of my secondary shrine of my Kitchen Gods. I shall put this book in the queue to post on my 'Madam Arcati Cooks the Books' blog (inspired by you)

    https://anthony-dingle.blogspot.com/2023/10/madam-arcati-cooks-books-1-you-may-know.html

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  8. Hard to beat a good sarnie ( colloquial English for sandwich), whatever you put between the slices. But, like coffee, many (too many!) cafes can't make a decent one. Note to self: buy some ham cut by hand with a knife off the bone.

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