Bob Ross wrote:Thomas, I'm in a cranky mood tonight I guess -- note my graceless comment to Jo Anne -- but from time to time okra irritates me -- it seems to have a slimy quality that is quite off putting. Any idea of how to avoid that mouth feel?
Regards, Bob
Bob Ross wrote:Thomas, I'm in a cranky mood tonight I guess -- note my graceless comment to Jo Anne -- but from time to time okra irritates me -- it seems to have a slimy quality that is quite off putting. Any idea of how to avoid that mouth feel?
Regards, Bob
Thomas wrote:So far, the "I don't like okra" crowd has been rather quiet. I know that Robin is one of them...
Robin Garr wrote:Thomas wrote:So far, the "I don't like okra" crowd has been rather quiet. I know that Robin is one of them...
You must have been listening to me before you had your coffee! I said I'm just fine with okra, but prefer preparations that ameliorate the slime. Fried okra, good. Okra in gumbo, great! (Contrary to Bucko's assertion, I'd note that in well-made gumbo the okra has been de-slimed through browning before it becomes part of the soup.) A similar, simpler Acadian dish, okra browned with tomatoes, green peppers and onions and Cajun spice, is also a delight.
I haven't ruled out your okra omelet, but gently dissent from your suggestion that either well-made eggs OR well-made okra need to be slimy. I like my omelets fluffy and moist, but if you're getting slime, you've got uncooked egg whites in your dish, and that's not good eats.
Thomas wrote:"grab your yoke and get your whites; leave your okra in the middle; life would be so sweet, on the slimy side of the street."
Bob Ross wrote:Thanks, Thomas. I've always cooked eggs on a very low heat and never get sliminess with them -- except with raw eggs, of course.
Regards, Bob
Bob Henrick
Kamado Kommander
3919
Thu Mar 23, 2006 7:35 pm
Lexington, Ky.
Stuart Yaniger wrote:
Water is the enemy. Dry-cooking will minimize the mucilage.
Thomas wrote:My sunny side up eggs are almost chirping when I dig in...gives me something to do with the bread.
Robin Garr wrote:
I wonder if we do have a different definition for "slime," Thomas.
Stuart Yaniger wrote:Bob, "frying" would be one example of dry cooking.
Robert Reynolds
1000th member!
3577
Fri Jun 08, 2007 11:52 pm
Sapulpa, OK
Thomas wrote:I suppose you can run cut okra under water and wash out the slime, but never having done that I can't say whether or not it intrudes on the okra taste.
The other way is to cook the okra to within an inch of it petrifying...but then, you might as well eat something else.
Hoke
Achieving Wine Immortality
11420
Sat Apr 15, 2006 1:07 am
Portland, OR
Robert R. wrote:Thomas wrote:I suppose you can run cut okra under water and wash out the slime, but never having done that I can't say whether or not it intrudes on the okra taste.
The other way is to cook the okra to within an inch of it petrifying...but then, you might as well eat something else.
As one born and reared in the Deep South, I was exposed to okra in all its many guises, and I can say unequivocably that no amount of water will "wash out the slime". Slicing thin, rolling in a bit of cornmeal and frying in a hot iron skillet in some bacon grease or peanut oil until browned, and served up with a plate of purple-hulled crowder peas, fresh picked sweet corn, buttermilk cornbread, and fresh-from-the-garden tomatoes and cukes is as close to heaven as I can imagine. And is a large part of how I built my ample physique!
On the flip side, the mucilage in okra is a well-known thickening agent in gumbos and Brunswick stew, so the slime isn't totally unwelcome.
Jo Ann Henderson
Mealtime Maven
3990
Fri Feb 16, 2007 9:34 am
Seattle, WA USA
Thank you Bob. I have corrected my tagline for those who are familiar and require literary exactitude in our plagiarisms. Yet, I have maintained that portion of the quote that sings to me and perfectly reflects my sentiment about salt. I love and highly recommend the stuff, others' personal preferences or medical reasons notwithstanding.Jo Ann, I've read your posts with great pleasure, but your tagline leaves out a very important caveat that appears in Farrar Capon's excellent article in the New York Times in 1982
Water will only make a bad situation worse, in this instance. A bit of acid in the form of vinegar or lemon juice will usually do the trick.I suppose you can run cut okra under water and wash out the slime, but never having done that I can't say whether or not it intrudes on the okra taste.
Bob Henrick
Kamado Kommander
3919
Thu Mar 23, 2006 7:35 pm
Lexington, Ky.
Stuart Yaniger wrote:Bob, "frying" would be one example of dry cooking.
RichardAtkinson wrote:Thomas,
25 Okra plants? That should produce enough okra for...say.. a small town? You must really like okra. Do your neighbors hide from you as the end of summer gets closer?
My dad used to overplant zucchini when my brother & I were kids. By the end of summer (every summer) we were hauling it out of the garden in 5 gallon buckets and leaving them on neighbors front doorsteps..unasked for, since they wouldn't come to the door anymore when he drove up.
When I think back to those days.... Of course, when Harvest Time rolled around? It became Dad's garden. The rest of the time it was our garden to hoe, weed, water etc...
Richard
Robert Reynolds
1000th member!
3577
Fri Jun 08, 2007 11:52 pm
Sapulpa, OK
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