Cooking With Fire: A Sneak Peek
Cooking With Fire: A Sneak Peek
Cooking With Fire: A Sneak Peek
CHAPTER 1
Back to Basics Getting Started: Roasting on a Stick Toasting Cheese Roasting in Ashes and Coals Baking Bread under the Ashes
CHAPTER 2
Spit Roasting How to Make an Efcient and Pleasant Roasting Hearth The Spit Roast on a String Cooking on Skewers The Grill The Schwenker The Plank Searing with a Hot Iron CHAPTER 3
The Griddle in All Its Guises Cakes on the Griddle Tortillas Griddled Breads of Northwestern Europe British Griddle Breads Other Things to Cook on the Griddle The Griddle on Steroids: The Argentine Inernillo Pots over Fire The Clay Pot Iron Pots and Pans Shallow Frying Deep Frying Baking Bread in a Cast-Iron Pot
CHAPTER 4
The Tannur, the Furnace, and the Potager The Cast-Iron Cookstove Smoke Barbeque, Two Ways
CHAPTER 5
Underground Inspiration from around the World The Earth Oven: Cooking in a Hole in the Ground The Masonry Oven Building a Basic Wood-Fired Oven Getting Ready to Bake Heating an Oven Cooking with an Oven Full of Fire Getting Ready for Pizza Using Retained Heat The Cooling Curve Bread for the Wood-Fired Oven Natural Leavening for Your Wood-Fired Bread Natural Leavening Q & A Overnight Cooking Traditions Overnight in a New England Brick Oven
21 Toasting Cheese
39 Spit Roasting
SAARLnDiSCHER SCHwEnkbRATEn
In the schwenkers homeland, this preparation reigns. This recipe is courtesy of my friend Astrid Weins, whose father hails from the Saarland. If neck meat is unavailable, ask your butcher to cut boneless country style ribs in large (3- by-4-inch) pieces. 4 pounds pork neck meat, cut into 8-ounce pieces cup canola oil 34 onions, cut in large strips 4 cloves of garlic, pressed 7 juniper berries, crushed 1 tablespoon prepared mustard teaspoon dried thyme 1 teaspoon dried oregano 1 teaspoon good curry powder 2 teaspoons paprika 1 teaspoon cayenne pepper 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper 2 teaspoons kosher or sea salt
8 servings
1. Place the meat in a sealable container. Mix the remaining ingredients together and work into the meat. Seal and chill for at least 24 hours, up to 3 days. 2. Allow meat to come to room temperature while you make a re under the schwenker. Beech wood is traditional in the Saarland, but your schwenkbraten will be delicious cooked over any hardwood coals. Once you have a decent coal bed, and more wood burning alongside to generate additional coals, place the meat on the preheated grill grate, and start it swinging gently yet continually. Adjust the height of the grill or the coal arrangement to get a moderate steady heat. 3. At this point, theres nothing to do but keep the schwenker swinging and drink beer. When the rst side looks crispy and luscious, ip the schwenkbraten with tongs. Keep the schwenker moving, and cook until meat registers 145F internally.
80 A Few Simple Tools
Cream Scones (see page 118) bake on a griddle over hot coals.
SALT-ROASTED SHRimp
A bed of salt diffuses the heat of the iron without overseasoning the shrimp. Use head-on shrimp by all means if you can get them. Solar salt (see Salt-Roasted New Potatoes, page 128) Shrimp in shell A pepper grinder 1. Spread out a solid -inch bed of solar salt on a sheet of iron or an actual griddle, and start heating it over a hot re. 2. Meanwhile, toss the shrimp with copious freshly ground black pepper. 3. When the salt is very hot, quickly lay the shrimp down on it. Turn each shrimp as soon as translucency appears to have crept through more than half of it, using the tail as a handle (or tongs if you prefer). The second the ipped shrimp attains curliness, remove to a serving platter. 4. Allow 46 shrimp per person for an appetizer, depending on size of shrimp and appetites.
SHALLOW FRYiNG
If youve already learned to use the griddle and cast-iron pots, you really already know how to shallow fry over a live re. The skills are simple and the essential tools cast-iron skillets are available widely, both new and old. When it comes to shallow frying, you have a lot of latitude in your cooking arrangement. Three support stones stably cradling your pan (a favorite since Neolithic times at least) can work ne, with nice hot coals shoveled in between the stones. Or, a strong trivet of about a foot of height can be a good support, as long as everyone moves with deliberation around it. Have a pile of light pine, split small, to jump the heat up. As ususal, youll need a decent coal bed before you start cooking.
Fried food is irresistible when the fat is kept good and hot. A good bed of coals under a frying pan keeps the heat steady and makes for snappy ignition of softwood bits when the temperature starts to drop.
153 Deep-Frying
4. Shovel more coals onto the lid than are under the kettle.
5. Bake the bread, rotating the pot a half-turn halfway through the baking time.
8. The result can be as delicious and crusty as bread baked in a wood-red oven. 159 Baking Bread in a Cast-Iron Pot
OVen tOOls
Left to right: Two kinds of peel (aluminum and wooden), a light natural bristle brush, a wooden coal rake, a malkin, an iron poker, and a galvanized tub for catching coals and ashes.
1. Start a small re toward the front of the oven, bearing in mind the need for airow beneath. Gradually build it up into a good, stable blaze in the center of the oven.
2. Add more fuel when you can and burn a smart re until the ceiling of your oven looks nice and clean. And then burn it for a while more. The specics of timing vary radically among ovens.
3. Let the last fuel burn down pretty well, then rake out any remaining coals. Dampen a malkin and sweep lightly to get the edges. (Dont sweat the small stuff now; rather, give it a quick sweep with a dry brush after the heat has equalized.)
4. Right after ring, the temperature of the masonry is very uneven. Close up the empty oven to rest or soak for a spell and balance it all out. (If you ever seriously overheat an oven, give it a few minutes with the door open to release some heat.) 235 Heating an Oven