swampdragon
Bluelighter
Star anise in gravy, eh? I might actually try that, you know.
(Sorry!)
(Sorry!)
Star anise in gravy, eh? I might actually try that, you know.
(Sorry!)
Yeah. That photo's so shit I vomited all over my screen. Sort it out, Bear. How dare you present such vile food to us in such vile pictorial form. I just puked again quoting the pic without seeing it twofold in front of me it's so disgusting.
As Shambles has said, in prettier language, don't be a twat. That's a beautiful photo, one of the best you've ever posted. But then I'm a sucker for the colour green.
So yeah, shit photo actually.
You can buy 'Umami' paste/purée now too. I have some in my fridge.
As mentioned in the post, you've not seen the ingredients list in this stuff
Have never had Parmesan Chicken, it looks scrummy
I had leftover TexMex mince concoction wiv ultrareduced chili con carne and rice ready meal - was actually quite interesting to compare the two. Mine was waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay better. Obviously.
Hahahahahahahahaha! I thoroughly approve of your anti-anise stance
Can't bloody stand the taste of aniseed in any variant myself. Although I do accept it as part of a balance of spices - it has its place but it should never be centrestage in my book. I would not add it to gravy. You would taste it. It's aniseed. In gravy.
If you can taste aniseed you're adding too much. The idea is that you add a very tiny amount to enhance the umami created by the Maillard reaction that is responsible for giving gravy it's flavour.
A single star anise is pretty damn aniseedy. I would notice it in anything. I take the general point that small amounts can be enhancing rather than overpowering but what was mentioned was not a small amount. If you can't taste a whole star anise in something you have broken tastebuds.
A single star anise in anything you are cooking at home is fucking loads though.
Well, each to their own and all that but....
Unless you're talking oriental food or a few notable exceptions I would say a whole star anise is a lot, if not too much to be using in pretty much anything cooked in home quantities. It will just start overpowering stuff.
My opinion is of course far from definitive, but I would consider myself to have a pretty decent palette having done work experience at The Fat Duck, worked full time as a chef de partie in a michelin starred kitchen voted Londoner's favourite for the last ~8years in Harden's restaurant guide and a two starred kitchen that came 13th in the last San Pellegrino Best Restaurants in the World Awards.
Like I say, each to own t- chuchehough, everyone has different preferennces. It's definitely one of those 'less is more' ingredients though.