• Fried oysters in bacon

    From JIM WELLER@1:135/392 to DAVE DRUM on Fri Aug 6 22:54:00 2021

    Quoting Dave Drum to All <=-

    Title: Fried Oysters Wrapped in Bacon

    I like fried oysters. I like scallops wrapped in bacon. So this
    sounds like a great idea!

    In western Asia cooks often mix parsley, dill and cilantro together.
    I suggest using just one of them at a time in any given dish.

    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Circassian Boerek (Cerkez Puf Boeregi)
    Categories: Turkish, Pastry, Cheese
    Yield: 26 Servings

    DOUGH:
    2 3/4 c Unbleached all purpose flour
    3/4 ts Salt
    2 tb Unsalted butter, very soft
    1 Egg yolk
    3/4 c + 3 Tbsp milk
    GOAT CHEESE FILLING:
    1 1/4 c Crumbled goat cheese
    1/2 c Chopped flat-leaf parsley OR
    Any combination of herbs
    1 Egg
    Oil for deep frying

    Sift the flour and salt onto the work surface. Make a well in the
    center and put in the butter, egg yolk, and milk. Mix these
    ingredients with the fingers and gradually work in the flour to
    make a dough. Knead 10 minutes or until smooth and elastic, put in
    a buttered bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and let rest 1 hour.

    Place the dough on a lightly floured surface, knead it lightly,
    and divide into half. Roll each half into a tight ball, cover
    with a slightly damp towel, and let rest 30 minutes.

    Place one ball of dough on the lightly floured surface, flatten it
    to a disk and with a regular rolling pin roll it into a 9-inch
    circle, slowly rotating the dough counterclockwise. Then,
    following the directions given below, roll the pastry into a thin
    circle about 20 or 21 inches in diameter.

    Sprinkle a little wheat starch or cornstarch on the work surface
    both under and over the dough. With the special long rolling pin,
    starting at the lower edge of the circle, wrap about 3 inches of
    the pastry around the rolling pin. Place the stretched out fingers
    of both hands on the center of the pin and begin rolling it slowly
    forward toward the edge of the circle with a quick
    back-and-forward motion, until the whole pastry is wrapped fairly
    tightly around the pin.

    As you roll the pastry around the pin, keep your stretched out
    hands constantly and rhythmically moving horizontally outward
    along the pin toward the ends, and quickly bringing them back to
    the center to begin the same motion again until the whole pastry
    is wrapped around the pin. As you do this, the downward pressure
    of the fingers and balls of the hands stretches the pastry
    horizontally.

    Once the whole pastry is wrapped around the pin, lift the pin at
    both ends and flip open the pastry, slapping it against the work
    surface; unroll. Now rotate the pastry slightly (maybe 30 degrees)
    counterclockwise, sprinkle it with a little flour, then take an
    edge of the pastry next to the one with which you started, and
    repeat the whole process. Every now and then turn the pastry over
    and sprinkle some flour under it. Continue stretching the pastry
    by rolling until it is a thin circle of pastry 20 or 21 inches in
    diameter, and at least 1/25 inch thick. (If you use a pasta
    machine, you will need to divide the pastry into smaller portions
    in order to roll it.)

    Mix all filling ingredients with a fork to blend. With a 4- inch
    pastry cutter, cut circles out of the rolled pastry. Put about
    3/4 teaspoon filling on half of each circle and fold the other
    half over the filling to cover. Dampen the edges and seal,
    pressing them together gently or using a pastry crimper. Cover the
    filled pastries with a towel and roll out and shape the other half
    of the dough.

    Heat the oil for deep frying and slip in 2 or 3 boerek. In a
    second or two they will puff up and rise to the surface. Turn and
    remove after a few seconds when they turn golden brown. Drain on
    paper towels and serve hot. They are also good cold.

    From: CLASSICAL TURKISH COOKING by Ayla Algar
    From: Karin Brewer Date: 14 May 99

    MMMMM


    Cheers

    Jim


    ... Is there an imaginary cure for hypochondria?

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