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Celerity

(43,383 posts)
Sat Nov 5, 2022, 05:30 PM Nov 2022

Salt and Pepper Brick Mushrooms: Sear mushrooms under a skillet for a dish with steakhouse appeal

https://www.washingtonpost.com/food/2022/10/30/brick-mushrooms-recipe/

https://archive.ph/Al1s9



Andrea Gentl spent much of her childhood looking down. As she put it, “I preferred seeing what was under my feet as opposed to looking up.” She lived on a family farm in a small town in Western Massachusetts. She spent most of her time outside, much of it in the woods, and what were often under her feet were the things she was most interested in contemplating, drawing, and later in her life, cooking and photographing: mushrooms.

Is any food in the plant kingdom more beautiful? “They’re so sculptural, and I studied sculpture in college, too, so I just love their form,” she tells me in a Zoom call from London, where she and her husband, fellow photographer Martin Hyers, were on a shoot. Her aesthetic appreciation eventually led to a culinary one. Now Gentl has a cookbook out, “Cooking With Mushrooms,” that celebrates an ingredient she lauds for its versatility, flavor, health-boosting qualities and general deliciousness in the kitchen. More than anything, her book displays a dedication to treating mushrooms with respect and a knack for getting the absolute most out of them by paying careful attention to technique.

To Gentl, the secret to cooking mushrooms well has to do with moisture management. They have a lot of water, and you want to get rid of it. That means that one of the biggest mistakes you can make when cooking them is to be too timid with the heat — and the time. “You want that high heat,” she says. “I also think people don’t cook them long enough. If you don’t get rid of enough water, they’re going to end up just being kind of slippery and not what you really want.” (Her one concession to the beauties of lower heat is drying, when you use super-low heat — and a lot of time — to dehydrate mushrooms, concentrating their umami and turning them into potent seasoning powders.)

Her one-page explanation of five mushroom-cooking techniques is one of the best, most succinct I’ve seen, and that alone is worth the price of her book. She includes instruction for sauteing (with fat), dry sauteing (without), roasting, searing and grilling. For the most part, she cautions, you want to make sure you don’t salt the mushrooms too early in the process, which can turn them rubbery.

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Salt and Pepper Brick Mushrooms: Sear mushrooms under a skillet for a dish with steakhouse appeal (Original Post) Celerity Nov 2022 OP
TY so-o-o much for this! fierywoman Nov 2022 #1
Sounds and looks wonderful! MLAA Nov 2022 #2
Bookmark! nt AKwannabe Nov 2022 #3
"Is any food in the plant kingdom more beautiful?" Danascot Nov 2022 #4

Danascot

(4,690 posts)
4. "Is any food in the plant kingdom more beautiful?"
Sat Nov 5, 2022, 10:37 PM
Nov 2022

Is the chef saying this or the columnist? Either should know mushrooms 🍄 are their own kingdom, fungus. Yes, they're often beautiful and often bizarre.

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