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Duck Breast Cooking Tips from Cookthink

a pan roasted duck breast
Two nights ago, I found myself on the phone with my mother, trying to describe how one cooks duck breast. I had been telling her about a dinner I had with friends on Saturday night and the amazingly scrumptious duck I had eaten. She admitted that the only time in her life she remembers eating duck was once, as a Chinese restaurant, about 25 years ago. She hadn't been impressed then and just stayed away. I talked her through the whole process, but I could just tell that she wasn't sold.

However, thanks to Brys over at Cookthink, there now exists a perfect picture tutorial to show you how to go about pan roasting a duck breast. It is concise, complete and totally hunger-inducing. So go forth and cook duck breast without fear!

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Filed under: On the Blogs, Ingredients, How To, Methods

Leek and potato latkes make a yummy weekend breakfast

potato and leek latke with a fried egg on top
Looking for a creative and tasty breakfast this weekend? Something a little out of the ordinary that isn't too energy intensive? Why not take a page out of Brys at Cookthink's book and whip yourself up a batch of Leek and Potato Latkes? Because latkes aren't just for Hanukkah anymore. He dresses a few up with a spoonful of caviar and tops the rest with a fried egg. After seeing this post, I wished fervently for the ability to crawl into my computer screen and magically travel through time and space to the kitchen where these puppies were created. Sadly, it was not to be.

On a different latke note, if you're the type of person who learns through watching, you might want to check out this here little video in which my friend Scott and I make up a batch of potato latkes. So yummy.

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Filed under: On the Blogs

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Making gnocchi by feel on Cookthink

prepped sweet potato gnocchi, molded and ready for a hot water bath
I must have sweet potatoes on the brain, because is the second post I'm writing this week that involves them. This time I haven't actually done the cooking, I'm simply salivating over the Sweet Potato Gnocchi that Brys made over at Cookthink this weekend.

I've never made gnocchi on my own. I've thought about it more than once, but always talked myself out of the idea because I'd heard from so many folks that it's really hard to get it right. This is why I'm doubly intrigued by this post, because Brys didn't even use a recipe, he just headed out and did it by feel (documenting each step as he went with some really lovely pictures). There are lots of things that I can cook by feel, but homemade pasta is not one of them. However, he makes it look so easy that I think I'm going to have to give it a go sometime soon.

Filed under: On the Blogs, Ingredients

Cookthink's got me thinking about chile peppers

chili peppers
In the last few years, I've slowly incorporated hot peppers into my cooking. During my childhood any heat in our food came from the bottle of chile powder that my mother used only very rarely, so it's been a self-taught journey into the Scoville world. The jalapeño tends to be my pepper of choice (mostly because it's the one that's typically available at the produce market across the street from my building), but also because when you remove the ribs and seeds, it isn't too criminally hot.

Peppers can be dangerous to cut. I've often found myself with burning fingers hours after cooking, despite multiple handwashings (I've also rubbed my eyes with pepper laced fingers more than once, talk about pain). I don't use gloves mostly because it seems environmentally unsound to use and toss latex all the time (good thing I don't work in the medical field). Basically, I just suffer with the pain, because the taste is oh-so-good. A little hardship for a good meal is worth it.

photo by Marisa McClellan

This little meditation on the pain of peppers was spurred by Cookthink's weekly Root Source on serrano chiles. They've got a picture how-to on the best way to cut and seed a chile pepper, as well as side-by-side comparison of three popular varieties of chiles. Go forth and be spicy!

Filed under: On the Blogs, Ingredients, How To

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