T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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589.1 | peeled, or like garlic without a press | CSCMA::PERRON | | Tue Apr 21 1987 14:48 | 10 |
|
Start off by peeling the ginger root.
I find the best way to finely dice ginger root is to put it
into the food processor with the metal blade.
If you don't have a food processor just chop it up like you
would garlic. They also sell ginger root graters, I guess any fine
grater would work.
|
589.2 | What out! if you try using a garlic press | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Apr 21 1987 14:54 | 9 |
| Just be careful if you decide to try to force the peeled ginger
through a garlic press - I tried this once, since I also needed
chopped garlic at the same time (most Chinese recipes I make start
out with chopping garlic and ginger together...). Ginger is much
harder than garlic is - I broke the garlic press! On the other
hand, I replaced it with a much heavier-duty press, which I actually
can use to process ginger. It is much, MUCH eaiser to chop both
substances in the food processor if you are going to be using the
processor anyhow, though!
|
589.3 | Keep it simple - a knife | YIPPEE::GLANTZ | Mike | Tue Apr 21 1987 17:08 | 6 |
| I vote for the knife and cutting board. For the small quanitities
usually involved, a food processor is overkill. Much more time and
effort when cleanup is included. Would you chop 2 cloves of garlic
in a Cuisinart DLC-10?
- Mike
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589.4 | Grate ginger! | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Wed Apr 22 1987 09:01 | 20 |
| I used to use most of the above methods, and then I found the ginger grater
that the Frugal Gourmet raves about. I bought it. It is the gratest (sorry).
You don't have to peel the ginger, and it grates it very fine, and leaves the
tough fibers behind. Every now and then I slice off a hunk of the dried
fibers before grating more ginger. After grating, just leave the fibers
attached, and let the air dry the end. I never refrigerate the ginger, and it
has never molded on me.
The grater itself looks like a little ceramic washboard. It has tiny points
of ceramic raised up to do the work. The points are not sharp enough to do
damage to your fingers. In the past year and a half, since I bought mine for
$3.99, the same store has increased the price to $5.99. I bought it in
Lunenburg at the Cook's Nook. They also carry all the other tools that Smith
raves about on his show.
- JP
BTW: In the wintertime, take your ginger trimmings and dump them into the
water kettle on the woodstove.
|
589.5 | While we're on the topic of ginger.. | USMRW2::JTRAVERS | | Wed Apr 22 1987 10:02 | 6 |
| While we're talking about ginger, can anybody give advice on the
best way to store it? I've tried storing it in the frig - it molds,
I try leaving it out in the bin with my onions and it dries up.
How do you REALLY store ginger?
Jeannie
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589.6 | Ginger sherry | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Wed Apr 22 1987 12:48 | 6 |
| I peel it and put it in a small jar of sherry in the fridge. I
use both the sherry and the ginger in chinese food, adding more
sherry when it doesn't cover the ginger any more. Keeps for months
in the fridge this way, and it's already peeled.
--Louise
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589.7 | Freeze it! | CSSE32::AUBUT | | Thu Apr 23 1987 10:52 | 4 |
| I have had a piece of ginger in the freezer for about a month now
and it has kept wonderfully. I wrapped it in plastic wrap. Whenever
I need it, I just grate what I need, rewrap it, and pop it back
into the freezer. It hasn't failed me yet and still tastes very fresh.
|
589.8 | Unrefrigerated works fine, too. | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Mon Apr 27 1987 08:29 | 7 |
| I keep mine in my wire baskets with the garlic, onions, shallots, etc. It
keeps for months without molding or drying (even thru a dry winter with a
woodstove). The only time I had some dry up on me was some stuff that looked
marginal (somewhat wrinkled skin).
- JP
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589.9 | storing the ginger roots | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Apr 27 1987 14:16 | 6 |
| I keep mine in a wicker basket with the garlic (shallots, which
I grow and therefore have LOTS of at some seasons, are in a different
basket). We use quite a bit of ginger, but it will eventually dry
up if it sits around TOO long in the winter, or sprout if it sits
too long in the summer (you can always plant the sprout - makes
a nice houseplant).
|
589.10 | Any one thought of Ginger Powder? | SKYHWK::ANANDRAJ | | Tue Apr 28 1987 09:32 | 7 |
|
I keep the ginger in a small plastic bag (freezer bag) tied in
the refrigerator and it stays fine without drying or wrinkled.
As far as the dicing the ginger - Has anyone tried using ginger
powder which is as good as fresh ginger?
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589.11 | Japanese Ginger | MELODY::CHIASSON | | Tue Apr 28 1987 12:55 | 9 |
| I have a question about Ginger that someone maybe able to answer
I've been eating Japanese food lately and I notice the Ginger they
use is orange/pink in color and taste different much milder less
bite than the Hawaian Ginger that at the markets
ED
|
589.12 | | AITG::NELSON | | Tue Apr 28 1987 13:24 | 7 |
| This reply is to the first question (it seems to be rather late...).
The way I like to chop ginger is to peel it with a potato peeler,
then bang at it on a board with the flat of a cleaver or the back
end of a knife to crush it; then chop it up. Crushing it makes
it much easier to chop. You can do this with garlic, too, and that
makes it easier to peel the clove.
Beryl
|
589.13 | More on ginger | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Apr 28 1987 14:22 | 10 |
| You can use powdered ginger if you really can't get the fresh root,
but the taste is very different - I'd save it for baking ginger
snaps or something, if I were you. I've had oriental food prepared
with powdered ginger in places where fresh ginger root is not available
(like Israel), and it is pretty strange indeed!
Japanese pickled ginger is the color it is because of food coloring,
I think. If you make it yourself (it is basically vinegar, sugar,
salt (not if I'm making it, though), and ginger slices), it doesn't
come out pink, but it tastes the same.
|
589.15 | Ginger Root: Chopping and Shredding | SRFSUP::JOHNSON | Claudia Johnson, ZBO, Sales Support | Thu May 07 1987 14:49 | 6 |
| First, you slice the ginger root very thin.
Then you stack severlalslice together, then you cut the ginger into
small strips.
Last, you cut the ginger strip into tiny pieces.
You chop, and chop...........
|
589.14 | ...IN SHERRY... | NISYSI::MEDVECKY | | Thu May 21 1987 13:47 | 5 |
| IM ANOTHER ONE WHO STORES GINGER IN A JAR OF SHERRY....BUT I NEVER
PEELED IT.....IT LASTS FOR MONTHS AND THE SHERRY TAKES ON AN ADDED
FLAVOR WHEN YOU NEED SOME FOR COOKING.
RICK
|
589.16 | To chop or not to scrape .... | PLDVAX::PKANDAPPAN | | Sun Jun 28 1987 16:50 | 11 |
| Used to follow this method for the past 10 years or so, till
I came to this country and saw Jeff Smith's show.
His cute little trick of grating the ginger works better; the
ginger is in uneven pieces, less work (if you do not mind cleaning
the grating board!) and the ginger seems to blend much better this
way.
Moreover, I prefer having my knuckles scraped to having them
chopped......
Ginger lover
-parthi
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589.17 | Use Jeff's grater! | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Mon Jun 29 1987 09:00 | 6 |
| If you use Jeff Smith's favorite ginger grater, the cleaning amounts to
holding it under running water for 5 seconds. AND, the grater does not add
any knuckles to the recipe!
- JP
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