Trial and Error, an Ongoing Process

As my better-half and I continue our journey towards competing in an IDOS 3-Pot Cook Off, we decided to prepare two recipes at our local Dutch Oven Gathering with the Prairie Dog Chapter of the Lone Star Dutch Oven Society. Steve was inspired by Alton Brown‘s Good Eat’s show about Braciole and I wanted to see if I could bake and frost a pretty and yummy carrot cake, based on techniques and recipe from the May/June 2012 issue of Cook’s Illustrated.  The bottom line was that we have a long way to go in our outdoor kitchen before we will be ready to compete!  Fortunately, our friends didn’t mind and ate everything we prepared.

The carrot cake recipe was perfect for our 10″ dutch ovens.  The goal was to have four thin layers so that the cake had a nice height and was visually appealing.  The shallow layers cooked in less than 20 minutes at 350 degrees, just as the recipe stated.  I was only able to get three layers out of the recipe, but that was fine with me.  They cooled quickly and were easy to remove from the dutch ovens, thanks to the parchment paper on the bottom.  The cakes were perfectly cooled and ready for frosting well before the cake was due to be delivered to the serving table.

However, the frosting was a sloppy flop.  The hand-mixed (no power equipment allowed at IDOS competitions!) frosting came together well but took a LOT of elbow grease.  I put the frosting in our cooler to chill for about 20 minutes, but when I needed to frost the cake, the frosting was runny.  I went ahead and did my best but as you can see, the visual results were far from what I had hoped for.

Here are a few lessons learned in case we actually decide to bake this cake for competition.  First, I needed a cooler dedicated only for the cake.  It needs to be BIG!  A big cooler would hold enough ice and have room for a bowl of frosting and the layers.  It would have helped chill the cake layers more thoroughly.  Second, I should have started work on the frosting as soon as possible so that it had as long as possible to hang out in the cooler.  Third, I substituted light butter, which I now blame on the super soggy frosting since it has oil in it and does not harden the way that real butter does.  Fourth, if I want four layers out of this recipe, I need to increase the volumn by 20%.

Steve was very disapointed in his Braciole because it fell apart when he served it.  The stuffing didn’t stay inside the flank steak, despite his careful attention to tieing the roll together with butcher’s twine.  We don’t know why it didn’t work but suspect that the meat wasn’t thin enough and we wonder if the meat was seared well enough.

We learned a lot from our experience and are encouraged to keep on trying!

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Test. Test. Test! Chicken Florentine Casserole

My better-half and I are thinking seriously about entering an IDOS 3-Pot cook off. This is a huge leap of cooking-faith for us, trust me! So, I decided to make dinner tonight in our 12″ Camp Chef Texas Dutch Oven, following (and slightly amending) America’s Test Kitchen’s recipe from Cover and Bake, pages 57-58, to see if this might be a recipe we try at a Cook Off. I love spinach and chicken, and who doesn’t love Gruyere cheese??? I’ve gathered most of what I will use to make Chicken Florentine in a 12″ Dutch Oven with everything except charcoal. Let’s see if this recipe is a winner!

My first variation from the recipe’s instruction was to use french bread and oilve oil, not white sandwhich bread and butter. Next time, I will toast the bread to make it crunchy.  The olive oil was delicious, light, and added a lovely peppery flavor to the topping.

With the oven set to 400 degrees, I added olive oil and crushed garlic to the pot for a few minutes.  Next, I  prepared the spinach in two stages, according to the recipe. At first, I thought I could get both into the pot, but after trying this, I agree with the authors that two stages are needed to prepare the spinach and garlic.

I am always amazed how much fresh spinach shrinks!

Next, I take paper towels to wipe the 12″ pot clean, then add more olive to saute a medium sweet onion.

Next, I add the rice to the hot oil and onions, stiring to coat the grains with oil. I substituted arborio rice instead of the long-grain rice called for in the recipe. We like the soft texture of this risotto and appreciate the way it sticks together in a dish. I also substituted chicken stock for water, adding another layer of flavor to the dish.

While the rice was cooking, I made the cheese sauce in an 8-inch dutch oven. I realized that I don’t have a wire-wisk that is safe for the dutch oven so I had to use my red-rubber coated tongs to mix the flour, butter, and chicken stock together. I was worried it would be lumpy, so you can imagine my suprise when the sauce was smooth and silky!

The nutmeg in this Gruyere cheese sauce adds a lovely and subtle flavor to the finished dish. The recipe calls for 1/8th of a teaspoon. Next time, I will double it to at least 1/4th.

When the rice finished cooking, I added the drained and chopped spinach, then the chicken cutlets, cheese sauce, and bread crumbles.

Waiting for the dish to cook was the hardest part of the process, but was well worth it!

Here is a shot of the final results. We loved the smooth texture of the risoto combined with the spinach. The chicken was moist and tender. I had a hard time tasting the Gruyere cheese and I thought the whole dish needed more salt throughout. I’m not sure this one would be fancy enough for an IDOS 3-Pot Cookoff, but I do know it would be wonderful for any meal served at a Dutch Oven Gathering.  This is a delicious recipe to prepare and easily feeds 6 to 8 hungry folks.

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