G Wiv wrote:Beef glorious beef! 28-day dry-age prime porterhouse from Joseph's Finest Meats . . .
ronnie_suburban wrote:I truly admire your bone's rigid verticality. I guess that steak was excited to see you!
LTHers don't sleep on Joseph's hot dogs. Natural casing, balanced spice, incredible snap followed by a burst of juicy pure hot dog goodness. If one is motivated by this post Joseph's is closed on Sundays and out of natural casing dogs until middle or late next week. They make them in-house and occasionally run out.seano wrote:Those are some of the finest hot dogs available.
I amG Wiv wrote:If one is motivated by this post ...
good to hear, heading over first thing tomorrow morningG Wiv wrote:Joseph's natural casing hot dogs are back in stock.
Joseph's uses hog casing for the hot dogs which may get tough with a rolling boil. I drop* into cold water and bring to a simmer, 185° to 190°, for 7-9 minutes for best results.Sweet Willie wrote:good to hear, heading over first thing tomorrow morning
Doubt it, though a hard boil toughens the skin. I should point out my observations are anecdotal, not based on science. Also, I am not advocating longer is better, as in simmer for 30+ minutes. One simply wants the dogs heated all the way through so the interior is hot and juicy.Cathy2 wrote:Does this lengthy simmer soften the snap a little bit?
But, when heated to temperatures between 160 F and 205 F, collagen starts to melt and turn into gelatin, which coats the muscle fibers of the meat and causes it to feel moist and succulent. Boiled meat, on the other hand, becomes tough and stringy, because the higher temperature causes the proteins to denature. Denaturing disrupts the structure of proteins, with one result being that they don't hang onto water molecules and another that they clump together, both of which can result in an undesirable change in texture.
G Wiv wrote:Joseph's uses hog casing for the hot dogs which may get tough with a rolling boil. I drop* into cold water and bring to a simmer, 185° to 190°, for 7-9 minutes for best results.
Sounds wonderful! How were the hot dogs?Sweet Willie wrote:Mrs Willie & I really enjoyed, so far, the breakfast sausage, hot dogs and the Italian Sausage (mild). The latter I had grilled up, then sliced. Put slices of sausage, sauteed mushrooms, bit of mozzarella on the delicious focaccia bread purchased at Josephs, then put entire thing on the still warm grill to crisp up bottom and melt cheese. Delicious.
G Wiv wrote:Joseph's natural casing hot dogs, count me a Fan!
Yes, that is the rib-eye on the grill and plate a few posts up. Was terrific. I liked David Burke's Primehouse quite a bit, loved the 35-40 day dry age beef. I once had a 75-day dry-age at Primehouse which was a little much, at least from that particular dry-aging room. Think super stinky/ripe Epoisses.budrichard wrote:Did you purchase any of the 40 day dry aged?