Categories
homemade travel

Tio Wally Eats America: Morel Mushrooms

I’m happy to have Tio Wally (long-time Me So Hungry reader) aboard to send in his eating adventures from across America. Here he is in Galena, Missouri.

Greetings from Galena, Missouri
N 36° 47.079’ W 093° 30.350’ Elev. 885 ft.

One of the tastier rites of spring here is the appearance of Morel Mushrooms. Easily their greatest attribute is that, unlike many other wild mushrooms, its appearance is so distinctive in it’s pine tree-like profile that it’s readily identified by even the most inept, brain-dead psuedo-mycologist, like myself.

There are two types of Real Morels, black and yellow (blonde). The ones growing here are predominately the yellow variety, although the color of the cap may vary from pale yellow to dark gray; the gray ones are immature. They appear in the spring as if by magic, seemingly sprouting up all at once overnight as soon as soil and weather conditions are just right.

According to Wiki, Morels have been called by many local names: Sponge Mushrooms; Dryland Fish, because when sliced lengthwise then breaded and fried, their outline resembles the shape of a fish; Hickory Chickens, in Kentucky; Merkels or Miracles, based on a story of how a mountain family was saved from starvation by eating morels; and in parts of West Virginia, Molly Moochers. (There is no explaining West Virginia.) Here in the Ozarks they call them Morels. Go figure?!

The proper way to harvest Morels is to break the stem off at ground level, then turn the mushroom upside down and gently shake it. Shaking it releases any free spores lurking in the honeycomb-looking folds of its cap. Because the spores are microscopic in size you won’t see them, unless of course you’re equipped with superhuman eyesight.

After you bring your bounty home, slice the mushrooms lengthwise and soak them in salt water for at least a couple of hours. This will kill all the little critters that like to dwell in the folds of the cap. Most of the bugs will float free after you callously administer the salt-water eviction notice/death penalty. Any hangers-on, as well as any hidden dirt and grit, will be removed upon gently rinsing the mushrooms thoroughly.

It seems everyone hereabouts has their favorite way to prepare Morels, ranging from sautéed in butter and garlic to deep frying in an egg-wash-and-cracker-crumb batter to simply mixing them into scrambled eggs. Because I love sautéed mushrooms we went that route and served them over the Duke of Earl’s famous smoked pork loin roast.

I really like the texture of Morels as they are “meatier” than the average mushroom due to their odd-ball construction. I can’t think of another mushroom that’s similar in this somewhat rubbery regard. Other mushrooms are, for lack of a better descriptor, much “airier” than the spongy Morel. And try as they might I don’t think even the mightiest Portobello can match it texture-wise.

A great thing about cooking with Morels is that they give up a lot of moisture, even when well-drained and towel dried. As a result, when sautéed, they essentially make their own gravy.

Needless to say the Morels were a delicious accompaniment. Better still, they were free for the taking and, still better yet, no one died during the harvesting, preparing and consuming of the delectable fungi.

Another wonderful thing about Morels is they are easy to preserve, either by drying/dehydrating, canning and/or freezing. The problem, of course, is having enough to make it worthwhile — if you don’t get them as soon as they come up, somebody else will; calling them “coveted” around here is a gross understatement.

As with all wild mushrooms, make sure you have precisely, unquestionably, identified them well-above-and-beyond certainty before eating them. Many mushrooms are poisonous enough to kill you or, at the very least, make you wish you were dead. If you’re not absolutely, positively, 100 percent sure about a wild mushroom, follow this simple rule of thumb: Don’t Eat It!

And when harvesting Morels beware, there is indeed a False Morel mushroom that looks mildly similar. It is easily identified, however, as it won’t have the tell-tale hollow, tuberous stalk like a True Morel. (I don’t know if they even grow around here; I’ve never seen them nor heard mention of them.)

’Til next time, I bid you “Happy ’shroom hunting” and, should you be fortunate enough to find some Morels, “Enjoy your Morchella esculenta.”

And so we roll.

Tio Wally pilots the 75-foot, 40-ton(max) land yacht SS Me So Hungry. He reports on road food from around the country whenever parking and InterTube connections permit.

Categories
homemade seafood

Tio Wally Eats America: White Bass, Raspberry Syrup and Apple Butter = Yum!

I’m happy to have Tio Wally (long-time Me So Hungry reader) aboard to send in his eating adventures from across America. Here he is in Galena, Missouri.

Greetings from Galena, Missouri
N 36° 47.079’ W 093° 30.350’ Elev. 885 ft.

In the last post I wrote about our white bass deep-fry bacchanal. This time we’re again messing with white bass albeit markedly less fried.

With all the fish coming through the door I wanted to do something different with it. I came up with the idea of making ceviche, the Latino dish made with raw fish cooked in citrus juice.

We started with about two pounds of white bass fillets that had been soaked in salt water overnight; the salt-water bath helps remove excess blood from the fish. We then added chopped onion, celery and cilantro; Tabasco® sauce; and the juice of two limes. The two limes didn’t seem to yield quite enough juice so we augmented it with some Realime, that juice in the plastic bottle.

Although you can eat it after it “cooks” for an hour or two, we let it sit overnight, stirring it often.

When we tasted it the next day we realized that we’d forgotten to put in the jalapeño peppers. Still, it was pretty tasty, though very limey. In retrospect we probably should’ve waited before we put in the extra lime juice. The other thing we forgot to do was cube up avocado and tomato and add them to it just before serving. But hey, No harm no foul, and no lives were lost.

The other thing we’ve been having a lot of fun with lately is homemade raspberry syrup. We found the syrup hiding in the pantry, along with a jar of delicious apple butter (great on raisin-cinnamon toast), that had been made by our late neighbor Una. Her and her sisters were famous for utilizing everything they grew in their garden, canning up a storm and, thankfully, graciously sharing the results with her neighbors.

The syrup is really spectacular because it’s not overly sweet as commercial syrups tend to be. It’s also rather thin due to the fact that, unlike commercial syrups, it contains no corn syrup. In fact it’s very much the same consistency of the brown-sugar syrup my aunt used to make when I was a kid.

The flavor is absolutely spectacular, tangy and sweet, just like fresh, vine-ripened raspberries. I think we tend to forget how amazing and how different things taste when there are no artificial flavors added.

In addition to having the syrup on the usual suspects — pancakes, waffles, French toast — we’ve also been enjoying it as a topping on ice cream. This has become a very special treat … once we finally figured out how little syrup was actually needed, so concentrated is the flavor.

While I know it would be silly to send Jason and Russ ceviche, sillier still would be to send jars of the raspberry syrup and apple butter. Sorry, guys, it’s just too damn good to share.

And so we roll.

Tio Wally pilots the 75-foot, 40-ton(max) land yacht SS Me So Hungry. He reports on road food from around the country whenever parking and InterTube connections permit.

Categories
homemade recipe

Emeril’s Passover Brisket

Todd made this awesome brisket for the Superbowl. It was a big piece of meat, I didn’t think we’d get through half of it. But by the 3rd quarter, it was all gone. I guess makes sense. It was so good.

He used Emeril Lagasse’s Passover Brisket recipe. For some reason, I thought it was Korean or Asian flavored.
http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/emeril-lagasse/passover-brisket-recipe/index.html

Emeril's Passover Brisket

Categories
homemade tio wally

Tio Wally Eats America: New Year’s Feast

I’m happy to have Tio Wally (long-time Me So Hungry reader) aboard to send in his eating adventures from across America. Here he is in Galena, Missouri.

Greetings from Galena, Missouri
N 36° 47.079’ W 093° 30.350’ Elev. 885 ft.

Having worked through the holidays the crew of the SS Me So Hungry was primed and ready for a little shore leave. And a fine one it is: It’s the Soul Food Shore Leave.

We always have great foods when we dock in Galena. The crew is able to request things and, more often than not, those wishes are fulfilled with great alacrity.

We’d heard that the Duke and Duchess of Earl had baked a ham for New Year’s Day. Naturally, we requested that they save the crew some ham. Unfortunately, the estate had been invaded by Chubb, Cam and Corty, three 15- to 18-year-old boys with teenaged appetites who will forever more be known collectively as The Three Mouthketeers.

I don’t know exactly how big the ham was but I’m guessing it was about 15-23 pounds. But by the time the SS Me So Hungry sailed in three days later the ham was all but gone. All was not lost however: The Three Mouthketeers hadn’t eaten the bone. So the Duchess made her famous Pinto Beans and Cornbread. And they were fabulous and soulful.

The beans are a simple preparation. First she brings the beans to a boil in water and baking soda and then, after removing them from the heat, lets them soak for an hour. This is known as two things: a quick soak (otherwise you have to soak the beans overnight) and — to use her technical term — “de-farting the beans.”

After rinsing the beans, you bring them back to a boil, adding a little salt, about a half-tablespoon of sugar and half a chopped onion. After they boil a bit, add the ham bone and let them boil until the beans are tender. After the beans are tender, remove the ham bone and remove the meat from the bone. After putting the meat back in, let the beans simmer while you — and this is a very important step — make cornbread.

After the cornbread is done, enjoy the beans with a dash of Tobasco® or your favorite salsa. I like to toss a piece of cornbread in the bowl and cover it with beans. I’m telling you, this is soul food!

The next day the Duke made Oxtail Soup. Oxtail Soup is impossible to find out in the real world. The only places you’ll find is the odd soul food restaurant. It’s understandable, though. Oxtails cost a small fortune — $4.99 a pound! But it’s so simple to make and so awesome to eat.

The Oxtail Soup was made with oxtails, carrot, onion, bell pepper, potatoes, celery, a can of diced tomatoes, and then stewed in chicken broth and the juice of the tomatoes. It was seasoned very simply with salt, pepper, Mrs. Dash and garlic powder. Simply braise the oxtails and then throw the whole kit and kaboodle in a crackpot and let it simmer until the meat falls off the bone.

It, too, turned out seriously great and there was plenty to go around; the Duchess and The Three Mouthketeers were afraid of the oxtails. Sissies!

For the coup de grace, that night I made a sandwich of grilled ham and fresh pineapple with the few ham remnants the Duchess was somehow able to miraculously save for me.

When I was a kid my mom would make us both pineapple (canned) and banana sandwiches. Using only mayonnaise on the bread, they were seriously good. Heck, they still are.

Which reminds me of two things: First is that there are fingerling bananas here and, second, that life is pretty freakin’ good.

Here’s wishing y’all a Happy, Healthy and Lucrative New Year.

And so we roll.

Tio Wally pilots the 75-foot, 40-ton(max) land yacht SS Me So Hungry. He reports on road food from around the country whenever parking and InterTube connections permit.

Categories
homemade recipe

Hoppin’ Johns for New Years

Todd brought over some homemade Hoppin’ Johns last night for New Year’s Eve. It’s a pot of black-eyed peas for good luck, mixed with tomatoes, onions, bacon and other southern/soul spices. Really awesome. He used this recipe from Michael Ruhlman’s food blog.

Hoppin' Johns Black Eyed Peas

…Too bad the black-eyed peas didn’t bring us luck. Rusty was trying to tie an onion to the ceiling light for the ball drop.

Categories
homemade tio wally

Tio Wally Eats America: Thanksgiving in Tulsa

I’m happy to have Tio Wally (long-time Me So Hungry reader) aboard to send in his eating adventures from across America. Here he is in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Greetings from Tulsa, Oklahoma
N 36° 07.893’  W 95° 48.956’  Elev. 747 ft.

Before I get accused of lying about being in Peculiar on Thanksgiving Day I want to confess: I lied about being in Peculiar on Thanksgiving Day.

The truth is the cast and crew of the SS Me So Hungry awoke in Atlanta and eventually landed in Herculaneum, Missouri on Thanksgiving Day. You’re no doubt familiar with Herculaneum. It’s north of Festus, just south of Pevely. And for dinner we had nothing; we got a large Vienna Roast coffee and a glazed donut at the QT for $1.81 the next morning.

Friday night we made landfall in Tulsa where we had the good fortune to use and abuse the hospitality of our friends Linda and Lewis, and pig out for a couple of days on their leftovers. And, boy, were they good — the people and the food!

Evidently a bit of rivalry had taken place between their son and future son-in-law which culminated in a turkey-cooking competition. One of them deep-fried a bird, while the other smoked his fowl. Much to my dismay there was a marked absence of spatchcocking (or, if you prefer, spattlecocking) of any poultry that day.

While both claimed victory, I thought the smoked one was a little better although I have no idea why. Both were tender and tasted like, well, turkey. Linda thought the smoked bird was a little too sweet — something about injections and brown sugar and such — but I couldn’t taste it. I thought they both tasted great.

Along with the leftover Competition turkey I had great dressing and really scrumptious yams. But the best was yet to come.

For dessert they had it all: Pumpkin Pie, Lemon Meringue Pie, Pecan Pie, Cheesecake and German Chocolate Cake. I’d hit a mother lode! Unfortunately I was too stuffed to have any dessert that night.

Then the next day tragedy struck: the Lemon Meringue Pie had disappeared before I was able to snag a piece. Dropping to my knees in despair, I asked “Can a greater misfortune possibly befall one who has beheld, with his own eyes, the pie?” Don’t answer. By the way, it really was a photo-worthy beauty.

Another real treat they had in their refrigerator were Pickled Asparagus Spears. They were thin spears, slightly spicy-hot and had both great flavor and texture, tender and crispy simultaneously. They reminded me of, and were every bit as good as, those Spicy Pickled Blue Lake (Green) Beans I love so much. They said they liked them with beer. I could see that. They’d also make the ultimate Bloody Mary garnish.

If that weren’t already enough, Saturday night Linda made Turkey and Dumplings. Real dumplings! Unlike the bogus dumplings the Pennsylvania Dutch are so famous for foisting on the unsuspecting, Linda made the real things: succulent little doughy balls in a super creamy broth. Sort of like slightly undercooked biscuits in gravy. Unbelievably good.

All in all we’re pretty grateful our belated Thanksgiving dinner(s) worked out so well. And Lewis, bless his heart, hid away the last piece of pumpkin pie especially for me. The only downside, could there possibly be one, is that Skippy didn’t get to eat his Phil.

And so we roll.

Tio Wally pilots the 75-foot, 40-ton(max) land yacht SS Me So Hungry. He reports on road food from around the country whenever parking and InterTube connections permit.

Categories
homemade

Elisa’s Homemade Yukaejang Soup

I’m not sure how I invited myself over, but I got some good comfort home cooking at Elisa’s. She made some really good Korean Spicy Yukaejang Soup. It amazes me that people can cook food in their home. I always think that something like this needs to be made at a restaurant. I need to invite myself over to other people’s suppers more often.

Categories
homemade

Susie’s Peanut Noodles and Apple Crisp

I was wearing a keyboard tie on Halloween, so I felt the need to do something. I went out with Anthony and Susie for a few drinks in Carroll Gardens. I got buzzed and angry from the bartender serving me $3 happy hour beers and talking shit about Tebow. So it was very welcoming to have Susie make us Peanut Noodles and Apple Crisp. So stuffed. I hadn’t had Apple Crisp since elementary school. It was awesome.

Susie has a great food blog called Cookies and Lipstick. I hope you check it out.