Maybe the wine I used was the wrong kind? I just picked up a cheap bottle of red and dumped some in. Maybe it just wasn't the taste she was used to? [Reply]
Originally Posted by Buzz:
Maybe the wine I used was the wrong kind? I just picked up a cheap bottle of red and dumped some in. Maybe it just wasn't the taste she was used to?
I'd go with something dry and tannin rich. If you tossed in a couple Bartles and James wine coolers, it wouldn't come out well.
Originally Posted by Baby Lee:
I'd go with something dry and tannin rich. If you tossed in a couple Bartles and James win coolers, it wouldn't come out well.
Was it, . . . ugh. . . . sweet?
No, it wasn't sweet, but she is not a drinker. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Buzz:
Maybe the wine I used was the wrong kind? I just picked up a cheap bottle of red and dumped some in. Maybe it just wasn't the taste she was used to?
Traditional is red Burgundy. I've made it with Pinot Noir to great effect, too. Don't throw any old wine in there. It should be drinkable; doesn't need to be a $20 bottle, but it should be something you'd drink. And as BL said, nothing sweet.
Originally Posted by Baby Lee:
Ever made sauerbraten from scratch?
We made it from Julia Child's recipe in Home-Ec in HS.
I googled "sauerbraten" because I had no idea what it was and stumbled across the Wikipedia entry. Apparently horse meat was used for the dish a long time ago. [Reply]
Originally Posted by listopencil:
Do you not add dry spices to your food until it is completely done? I tend to spice it as it is cooking and then add, for lack of a better term, condiments afterward. Condiments or toppings I guess.
dangit, dried spices are old and tired, much like your qb.
its really conmen seance. salt brings out moisture, marinade softens, heat and time makes quality mostly meat meat tastes like where it come from. [Reply]