T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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658.1 | how 'bout another cooking tip?! | EXIT26::AYER | Jennifer | Wed Jul 22 1987 13:37 | 5 |
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how should they be cooked???? fried, baked, etc.??? for how long
and at what temperature??
all in all, they sound wonderful!
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658.2 | cooking them | HPSVAX::MANDALINCI | | Wed Jul 22 1987 14:05 | 8 |
| The rings should be fried in vegetable oil. I have not tried lard
for onior rings (only fries). Get the oil hot. I could not give
you an exact temperature but the ring should fry quickly so as not
to absorb alot of oil but not to the point that the batter gets
black. Test the oil by dropping a little batter into it. It should
cook up nicely. You may have to keep adjusting the flame because
as soon as you fill the pan full of rings you lose some of the
temperature.
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658.3 | slice under cold running water-no tears | OVDVAX::WIEGMANN | | Thu Jul 23 1987 11:24 | 4 |
| I've wondered about this before - what's your preference for onions
for rings - red, white, yellow, Vidalia?? Just hadn't bothered
to do a side-by-side taste yet - what do you recommend? Thanks.
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658.5 | CAUTION WHEN USING HOT OIL | BCSE::DTPTINKER | | Wed Aug 05 1987 17:07 | 6 |
| WORD OF CAUTION WHEN COOKING WITH HOT OIL
Keep a cover handy that will fit the pan. If the oil should get
too hot and catch on fire (God forbid but it has happened to me)
just place the cover on the pan to smother the flames and of course
remove from heat as soon as cover is on.
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658.6 | Aunt Jemima Complete Pancake Mix for Onion Ring Batter. | STRATA::STOOKER | | Thu May 16 1991 13:07 | 14 |
| I tried this one time just to see if it would taste OK. It turned out
wonderful, but I don't know how well it would turn out for baking.
I cut the onions(Vidalia onions are the best), separated the rings and
placed into a bowl of ice cold water for about 15 minutes. I then took
Aunt Jemima Complete Buttermilk Pancake Mix (I didn't use any
particular portions), I just dumped the mix into a bowl and added water
to make a very very thick batter. Then I coated the onion rings with
the batter and then put into a pan with very hot vegetable oil. It
took just a few seconds on each side (until golden brown) and then
placed on paper towels to drain. These were terrific. Better than
any I have ever gotten at any restaurant.
Sarah
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658.7 | Try "Joy of Cooking" | KAHALA::WEISS | | Thu May 16 1991 16:36 | 4 |
| The "Joy of Cooking" has an excellent Beer Batter for onion rings.
I think they call it Tempura batter for vegetables.
It's a great recipe.
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658.8 | Good old Ritz | HELIX::MCGRAY | | Fri May 17 1991 11:39 | 8 |
|
I used to work summers in a very nice seafood restaurant, and
they made their onion rings with crushed Ritz crackers... sounds
weird, but they were soooo good! It's been MANY years, but I
think they were just dipped in water-flour-water-ritz and
deep-fried. I imagine you could bake them too, but I'm sure
they wouldn't be near as crispy.
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658.9 | Buffalo Onion Rings | CASDOC::ANASTASIA | Let there be songs to fill the air. | Mon May 20 1991 09:34 | 10 |
| This isn't an onion ring recipe, but I thought it might be a good
place to put it.
I had dinner at the The Concord Inn in Concord, MA this past weekend.
The menu listed Buffalo Onion Rings. Of course we had to try them.
They made standard onion rings and served them with a bowl of buffalo
wing sauce - butter and Frank's Red Hot sauce. The onion rings weren't
very crispy, but the idea was good.
-Patti
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658.10 | Easy Beer Batter | PSYLO::HACHE | Gimme Sleep | Tue May 21 1991 15:33 | 10 |
|
You can make beer batter with Aunt Jemimah's Pancake Mix,
just use beer for part or all of the water. The trick to
battered onion rings is DRY. Make sure they have been
blotted before placing the rings in the batter or it just
slides off.
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658.11 | don't use batter, try this! | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue May 21 1991 16:21 | 9 |
| a trick for tasty "oven fried" veggies (onions, zuchini segments, egg plant
slices, etc.). Dip the veggie slices/segments/rings into buttermilk or,
for those who are slim already, into vegtable oil, and then into highly
seasoned flour - seasoned pepper, salt, powdered garlic, etc., tossing to
coat well. spread out on a well-oiled baking pan and bake at a high temp
until well browned. This produces a delicious thin crust on your veggies.
re: pancake batter - probably will work very nicely for this...just add
spices. try Paul P's Louisiana spices, perhaps???
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