T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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576.2 | Tastes like slugs! | SUCCES::BURTON | | Fri Apr 03 1987 13:25 | 10 |
|
I have to agree with #1. But I will add that I did manage to
put a few down that had been sauteed in butter with a touch of garlic.
The "chef" claims that's the only way to cook em.
Personally, I think they'd make better compost.
Rob
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576.5 | popcorn okra | VIDEO::TEBAY | | Fri Apr 03 1987 16:48 | 26 |
| The quickest receipe and my favorite is fried okra.
Slice okra into thin pinwheels(discard stem end).
Rinse with water and shake in a bag which has a mixture
of the following:
2/3 fine grain yellow cornmeal to 1/3 cup flour
1 tsp garlic salt
1 tsp pepper
1/2 tsp red pepper(for you Yankees omit the red pepper)
Allow to sit in bag while heating oil in a skilet(hopefully
iron) until hot. Fry quickly until crisp and light brown,
drain and ENJOY!
The Goya brand is the closest I have come to the
fine stone ground cornmeal I used to get in Texas.
AH to be in Texas again and not in NE!
I have two other good receipes for for gumbo and
one for a casserole neither of which is slimey.
But will have to dig out the book.
BTW In Texas okra is cheap-up here it is around $1 /lb
outrageous!
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576.6 | Try it you'll like it | EUREKA::HARQUAIL | | Sat Apr 04 1987 10:43 | 21 |
| As promised here is the Shrimp and okra recipe.
1/2 lb medium shrimp, shelled and devined
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon tumeric
2 tablespoons corn or peanut oil
1 small onion, sliced
1 garlic clove, sliced
3/4 lb. fresh young okra, ends and tips trimmed
1medium-hot red or green chile (3 to 4 inches long)
seeded and thinly sliced
3 scallions, thinly sliced
1 &1/2 teaspoons oriental fish sauce
1. In a bowl, toss the shrimp with salt and tumeric. /\Let stand
at room temp. for 15 min.
2. In a wok or large skillet, heat the oil. Add onion and garlic;
stir fry over moderate heat until golden, 2-3 min.
3. Add the shrimp, increase the heat to moderatelt high and stir-fry
for 2 min.. Add okra, chile and scallions and stir-fry until the
okra is tender and the shrimp are opaque throughout, 3-5 min..
Add the fish sauce and stir-fry for 10 seconds. Serve warm or at
room temp.
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576.7 | Concord Spice & Grain | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Tue Apr 07 1987 08:40 | 16 |
| Re .5
> The Goya brand is the closest I have come to the
> fine stone ground cornmeal I used to get in Texas.
> AH to be in Texas again and not in NE!
Don't know where you are located, but you might try Concord Spice & Grain,
across from the the depot on Thoreau St in Concord, Ma. They carry a brand of
Masa Harina (not Goya) that sounds like what you are looking for, as well as
several different bulk meals in brown bags.
And while you are there, they have jars of "hot" pickled okra that are pretty
good, but not as hot as they make you think.
- JP
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576.9 | not ALL yankees hate okra | RAVEN1::HENRY | illigitimus non carborundum | Tue Apr 07 1987 10:55 | 5 |
| re.5 I agree, as a converted Yankee, that fried okra is a true
delite. When you shake the okra with the cornmeal be sure that
the okra is not too wet. Otherwise the cornmeal will not adhere.
A variation is to fry the okra in pancake batter instead of corn-
meal. I can't grow the okra fast enough for my family.
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576.10 | I *LOVE* 'em pickled! | DELNI::OVIATT | High Bailiff | Wed Apr 08 1987 14:07 | 6 |
| My relatives in Virginia keep me supplied with pickled Okra. It
goes GREAT with beer! (Best beer pickle I've ever tasted!) Until
I discovered pickled okra, my only exposure to the stuff was as
a thickener for soups, etc.
-Steve
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576.11 | De-sliming ala Justin Wilon | RAINBO::MAXSON | Repeal Gravity | Sun Apr 12 1987 23:28 | 17 |
| There's a fellow on cable (Justin Wilson) who does a Cajun cooking
show (w/ quite a bit of humor, I might add) who showed how to de-slime
Okra. Frankly, I've never been desperate enough to eat a food that
had to be de-slimed first to try it, but the technique is presented
here for those driven to try:
two cups chopped okra
1/4 cup vinegar
2 cups water
Bring water to boil, add vinegar and stir in okra. Parboil for
two minutes, drain, and then do with the okra whatever you intend
( bury it, away from your water supply, I imagine ).{
As you may have guessed, not an okra fan -
Max
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576.14 | I gar-on-tee!! | NUGGET::NEEDLEMAN | Marc...DTN: 237-2550 | Tue Apr 14 1987 08:33 | 11 |
|
I'm in the Boston/Worcester area and usually Justin Wilson's
Cajun Cooking show is either on Channels 2 or 44, and I have
seen him on the cable station Dr Ruth's Good Sex show is on
(is it Life/Lifetime network? (channel 72 in Shrewsbury))....
I'm not sure of times (I'll check), but I have seen the program
on a Saturday or Sunday.
He is VERY humourous (always has a great story to tell, or a
good joke). I also believe he has a cookbook or two out on the
market.
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576.16 | Justin returns... | NUGGET::NEEDLEMAN | Marc...DTN: 237-2550 | Tue Apr 21 1987 11:39 | 14 |
|
re .15 -
I did some checking on the weekend....I found that Justin Wilson's
Louisiana Cooking show is on (I believe) Sunday thru Saturday (but
definately Monday thru Friday) on The Learning Channel/NJT (in
Shrewsbury, channel 72). I didn't see his show listed on the PBS
stations, but I'll do some further research and post the info later.
I caught the show on Saturday....it was a repeat of him roasting
a whole pig (the Lousi-ana way, I ga-ron-tee!).
Marc
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576.18 | From the Easy Rider Cookbook | UHCLEM::FEIN | | Fri Apr 24 1987 14:12 | 3 |
| Mix equal parts okra, lard, RC Cola, and Red Man. Shoot with a
shotgun. Serve over Hush Puppies. (If serving in Cambridge, top
with goat cheese or sun-dried tomatoes.)
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576.19 | Justin is Back on Channel 2 | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Mon Apr 27 1987 08:23 | 8 |
|
According to the DIAL, Justin Wilson will have a new (?) show on WGBH, channel
2 Boston, in May. It is a half an hour on Saturday mornings (10 or 10:30).
It is called Justin Wilson Louisianna Cooking OUTDOORS. MMMM-mmmmm jest in
time for de bubuque, I garontee!
- JP
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576.20 | Fried Okra | BOOKLT::DARROW | | Tue Jun 23 1987 18:55 | 27 |
|
Back to recipes -
I don't know if this method is considered "authentic," but my family
always fixed fried okra as follows:
- Clean okra by cutting off tips and "caps" (the stem end).
- Steam the okra 'til just tender.
- Beat one or two eggs, depending on how much okra you have.
- Using a rolling pen, crush saltine crackers 'til you have
cracker crumbs that are about 1/8 inch big. Don't crush them
too fine; you want some crunch left.
- After the okra has cooled, dip each piece in the egg mixture.
- Dip the egg-coated okra in the cracker crumb mixture. This is
where it gets messy, so you might want to use forks and do this
one piece at a time. (Or get your kids to do it. I loved this messy
process as a kid!)
At this point, you can freeze the crumb-coated okra. This is
especially good if your garden overfloweth and you want some
in the winter!
Finally, fry the okra (fresh or thawed-frozen) in a skillet filled with
3/4 inch of vegetable oil until the crumbs are browned.
This is very tasty!
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576.21 | stir fry | BOXTOP::HARQUAIL | Romance Junkie | Thu Aug 10 1989 10:25 | 2 |
| Stir fry with scallions, soy, little sugar and vinegar and lots
of ginger! serve on top of rice.
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576.23 | Scallops & Okra | WRKSYS::CHALTAS | Come with me to the Cash Bar | Wed Jul 19 1995 20:05 | 20 |
| I was experiment with Okra the other nite, came up with this:
1 lb Okra (fresh or frozen)
3 cloves crushed garlic
1/2 lb Scallops
2 T Olive Oil
1/2 cup lemon juice
Tabasco
Chop the okra into chunks. Saute with garlic
in oil and and several dashes of
tabasco until slimy but not mushy. Add scallops and a splash of
lemon juice and saute until the scallops are done (not too long!) --
you may want to add another dash or three of tabasco too.
Remove okra and scallops, and deglaze the pan with the remaining lemon
juice. Pour pan liquids over okra & scallops.
George
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