Kristen Miglore makes Caramelized Cream Carrots
Podcast |
Play Me a Recipe
Publisher |
Food52
Media Type |
audio
Podknife tags |
Food
How To
Personal Journals
Recipes
Categories Via RSS |
Arts
Education
Food
Home & Garden
How To
Leisure
Publication Date |
Apr 10, 2023
Episode Duration |
00:10:14

On Play Me a Recipe, your favorite cooks will walk you through their most treasured recipes, offering all the insider tips, stories, and tricks you won't get from a written recipe—and you'll be right alongside them, every step of the way. Feel free to pause, jump back, or navigate the steps via the podcast chapters.

If you're cooking along, here's the recipe we're making today. Go ahead and grab the ingredients below (Kristen starts listing them at me-a-recipe.simplecast.com/episodes/ideas-in-food-caramelized-cream-carrots-episode?t=1m58s">1:58) before  starting the episode.

cream-carrots.html">Caramelized Cream Carrots

  • Carrots (as many as you want to eat; Kristen uses 2 large)
  • Heavy cream (enough to coat the bottom of your pan; Kristen used about 1 cup)
  • Salt (to taste)

"The question today was what if we cooked carrots in a touch of cream? They should first steam and then caramelize in the cream as it transfoms into brown butter. We would eliminate a par cooking step and keep all the flavor in the vegetable. It turns out that the idea works like a charm. I put the carrots, cream and salt into a pan. I covered the pan and cooked the carrots on medium high. When I heard sizzling I removed the lid and stirred the carrots in the reduced and almost broken cream. I continued to cook the carrots turning them in the fat and coating them in the caramelizing milk solids. The cream became a flavorful browned butter. The carrots are tender with a light bite. The caramelized milk solids add a richness.

The next questions we ask: what can be the carrots and what flavors can we add to our cream?"

Excerpted from  Alex Talbot and Aki Kamozawa's Ideas in Food.

Lobby Time Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

'The Genius Recipe Tapes' host Kristen Miglore caramelizes carrots in—you guessed it—cream. Learn about butter, fat, and butterfat; the many things you should be cooking in cream from now on; and enjoy some very nice burbling sounds.

On Play Me a Recipe, your favorite cooks will walk you through their most treasured recipes, offering all the insider tips, stories, and tricks you won't get from a written recipe—and you'll be right alongside them, every step of the way. Feel free to pause, jump back, or navigate the steps via the podcast chapters.

If you're cooking along, here's the recipe we're making today. Go ahead and grab the ingredients below (Kristen starts listing them at me-a-recipe.simplecast.com/episodes/ideas-in-food-caramelized-cream-carrots-episode?t=1m58s">1:58) before  starting the episode.

cream-carrots.html">Caramelized Cream Carrots

  • Carrots (as many as you want to eat; Kristen uses 2 large)
  • Heavy cream (enough to coat the bottom of your pan; Kristen used about 1 cup)
  • Salt (to taste)

"The question today was what if we cooked carrots in a touch of cream? They should first steam and then caramelize in the cream as it transfoms into brown butter. We would eliminate a par cooking step and keep all the flavor in the vegetable. It turns out that the idea works like a charm. I put the carrots, cream and salt into a pan. I covered the pan and cooked the carrots on medium high. When I heard sizzling I removed the lid and stirred the carrots in the reduced and almost broken cream. I continued to cook the carrots turning them in the fat and coating them in the caramelizing milk solids. The cream became a flavorful browned butter. The carrots are tender with a light bite. The caramelized milk solids add a richness.

The next questions we ask: what can be the carrots and what flavors can we add to our cream?"

Excerpted from  Alex Talbot and Aki Kamozawa's Ideas in Food.

Lobby Time Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

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