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Showing posts with label Simple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Simple. Show all posts

Baked Potato Soup For a Simple Supper

Baked potato soup for a simple supper You will feel your taste buds going into the anticipation mode just after reading through this recipe. From the buttery flavor to the creamy texture, everything about this soup reminds one of the exquisite country flavors. The soup requires baked potatoes that could be prepared a day ahead and the remaining recipe is a big time saver. You can even cook it in slow cooker which makes it a crockpot addition as well. Serve the soup fresh and hot or you can refrigerate it for three days. When you are about to reheat the soup, just make sure it's done slowly. The exotic looking soup in pale white appearance can further be glorified by adding colorful toppings of cheddar cheese, bacon bits or celery. 4 to 5 potatoes¼ teaspoon white pepper¼ teaspoon hot pepper sauce6 tablespoon butter3 finely chopped ribs celery¼ cup heavy cream½ teaspoons bouillon chicken base2 tablespoons dry basil leavesBefore roasting the potatoes, you may want to play with it. Grab a folk and prick the potatoes in several places. Keep the scrubbed potatoes in the center of the preheated oven rack for around 40 minutes and pierce a folk to see if it goes through easily. Allow them to cool and then peel them off. Cut the potatoes into ½ inch dice. Simultaneously, melt butter over medium heat in a cooking pot. Add celery and onions to stir fry till they get translucent. Up next flour is added to create a roux and that has to be cooked for about 5 minutes while you can stir it frequently. Pour the heavy cream slowly into the pot while whisking it to prevent lump formation. When the broth appears hot and smooth but is not simmering yet, then this is the time to add chicken base. Keep stirring until the mixture gets dissolved. Add seasoning like salt, basil leaves and the hot pepper sauce. When the soups starts simmering, let it simmer for another minute. Finally pour in all the diced potato and wait for the simmer. Serve immediately when hot by adding celery, bacon bits, or cheddar cheese to make it look interesting. Rate this Article

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Katy Reeve has published 9 articles. Article submitted on June 19, 2013. Word count: 353

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A Simple IPA Recipe

For the uninitiated, IPA stands for India Pale Ale. It's not that it came from that country. It was first brewed in Europe. Because it was sent way the hell over the India, it needed to have a real punch to take such a long journey. The strength kept it from becoming loaded with bacteria. Remember, back in the day there was no FedEx. It needed to be strong.

And then there was the lion's share of hops. This additive is a natural preservative.

Now with That Out of the Way

Check out this recipe to make one kind of an IPA at home. This is the stuff you'll need as you begin this long trip toward the popular ale. You should end-up with a 2-gallon batch.

Wyeast #1028: London ale1 ounce of 5.5% Willamette bittering hops)1/2 ounce, Willamette finishing hops5 ounces, crystal malt2½ pounds pale maltMeasurements - OG: 1.043 and FG: 1.008

What's an OG? It's an abbreviation for "original gravity." This is a measurement of how much sugar you get from the grains. Assuming you have 10 pounds of 2-row malt, you're looking at a 1.057 OG beer at 80% efficiency. If you're efficiency plummets to 60% you'll end-up with 1.043 OG count for a 5-gallon batch. Since the sugar content is low, you'll need to use fewer hops which will mess-up your alcohol content.

FG means "final gravity." For instance if your IPA has an OG of 1.054 but an FG of 1.020, you missed the boat. The final taste will have too much body, masking the bitterness of the malt. The balance will be too rich.

O.K. The primary fermentation will take about a week. The secondary one only needs 4 days.

The Batch

Start by mashing 5 quarts at 140 degrees. Be mindful, the better the water, the better the brew. Read the pH to 5.3. If it's not there, act accordingly by adding more mash or water. Rip the fire up to 150 degrees. Watch the temperature, letting it simmer for 2 hours. The final 5 minutes, crank the flames up to 170 degrees. Mash 2 hours, maintaining temperature at 145-150 degrees. Mash out 5 minutes at 170 degrees. Sparge with 2 gallons of 165 degree water. Sparging? Wiki explains it this way "drain the wort completely from the mash, after which more water is added, held for a while at 170 degree and then drained again. The second sifting can be used in making a lighter-bodied low-alcohol beer known as small beer, or can be added to the first draining. Some home brewers use English sparging, except that the second batch of water is only held long enough for the grain bed to settle, after which recirculation and draining occurs."

Anywho, after sparging, boil it for another hour-and-a-half. Add the hops in the last hour. Then 5 minutes before the end of boiling, add the finishing hops.

Let 'er ferment as proscribed above.

How do you get the carbonation to happen? Take 1/16th of a teaspoon of corn sugar and dump it in the bottle, fill it with the final product and cap it. There should be enough yeast still in the brew to make it all bubbly so when you open a cold one, it should hiss at you.

Stan Schubridge is a freelance writer living in Brooklyn, New York. Stan writes mostly for Beertaps.com which is an eCommerce company out of New York that sells all the Beer Tap Handles one could need.
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