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Fred19Flintstone
Posts: 1,813
So I go to the market to get a couple of ingredients for Mickey's Coffee Rub; Instant Espresso Ground Coffee and Ancho Chili Powder. Just like a quick offensive football series, I went "3 & Out". I couldn't believe I got shut out at three markets! What a bummer! I'm gonna have to go shopping at my Mom's market for these mysterious ingredients! You can get just about anything there!
It's just as well anyway. I had to work on the car today so my grimy hands were not Egg worthy.
If my calculations are correct, when this baby hits 88 miles per hour, you're gonna see some serious shit!
Comments
I would have no other use for the instant stuff, so it would just sit around for a long time.
I love a coffee rub on some nice thick chops!
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeYeah, I was thinking about substitutions. I have no use for instant coffee and aside for standard Sanka and the mochas and other flavored garbage, neither does anyone else around here. I would have bought instant dark, but there was none to be had. The ancho baffled me.
AleBrewer said:
You know, I kept looking at the regular espresso beans and grinding them fine, but I was concerned about them adding a gritty texture.If my calculations are correct, when this baby hits 88 miles per hour, you're gonna see some serious shit!
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeWhen you're right, you're right. Cracked black pepper is an excellent reason to try substituting finely ground beans for the instant. I also use ground bay leaf in things including a poultry rub I make. Chocolate covered coffee beans are one of life's simple pleasures, aren't they? Every once in a while, I get in a mood for a tumbler of Sambuca which is served with three coffee beans floating in it.
Since I have less than a clue about ancho, I have no idea about a substitute for it. You mentioned paprika, but since I'm unfamiliar with the ingredient (ancho, not paprika ha ha), I'm gonna wait until I can shop at my Mom's market.
If my calculations are correct, when this baby hits 88 miles per hour, you're gonna see some serious shit!
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeGo to an Indian grocery store. Like a ...Bazaar. You will find indian instant coffee called Bru.
All you need. Excellent in a rub and completely dissolves with no grit. It is made out of pure coffee and chicory.
Large and Small BGE
And all the toys to make me look like a Gizmo Chef.
>:)
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeIf my calculations are correct, when this baby hits 88 miles per hour, you're gonna see some serious shit!
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeHere's the bomb!
Ingredients
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeOk, here's the mysterious ancho chili powder again! I like fennel seed and the cocoa powder is intriguing.
If my calculations are correct, when this baby hits 88 miles per hour, you're gonna see some serious shit!
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeAll purpose, especially good on ribeye steaks and pork chops.
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeFred,
A local Hispanic market will have whole, dried Ancho chiles. Toast in a CI skillet a few min until fragrant, deseed and destem, grind. Once you start experimenting with different chile flavors and heat the flavorless paprika, chile powder, and cayenne will stay on the shelf. A few of my faves and a little on the milder side of the scoville scale are Ancho, Guajilla, Pasilla, Cascabel, and Aleppo. Aleppo would be #1, use it on everything. Couldn't find it locally and purchased from Penzey's.
"I embrace my desire to feel the rhythm, to feel connected, enough to step aside and weep like a widow, to feel inspired, to fathom the power, to witness the beauty, to bathe in the fountain, to swing on the spiral...of our divinity, and still be a human."--------Maynard James Keenan F(n) = F(n-1) + F(n-2) = tool
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeThanks for all the responses! I live in the Flint area and go to the Detroit area every couple of weeks to visit my Mom. I'll certainly go to Penzey's to check them out. In the meantime, there is a hispanic market according to google that's about 10 miles away. I'll give them a shot!
I have to mindfull about heat because Wilma hates spicy.
If my calculations are correct, when this baby hits 88 miles per hour, you're gonna see some serious shit!
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeYou can get good chile flavor without the heat. Here is a good reference when gauging. Hot sauces are included, Cholula is 3600. Ancho is very low at 1000-2000.
http://www.chilliworld.com/FactFile/Scoville_Scale.asp
"I embrace my desire to feel the rhythm, to feel connected, enough to step aside and weep like a widow, to feel inspired, to fathom the power, to witness the beauty, to bathe in the fountain, to swing on the spiral...of our divinity, and still be a human."--------Maynard James Keenan F(n) = F(n-1) + F(n-2) = tool
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeI also had trouble tracking down ancho chili powder. I think it was Nolaegghead who told me that regular chili powder is not an acceptable substitute. I'm glad I asked before trying it. Once I found the ancho stuff, I sampled it and compared to the standard chili powder...way, way different. The ancho is mild and smoky, but not terribly spicy. I shudder to think how overpowering the rub would have been if I would have used regular chili powder.
I also agree that a Mexican grocery store is your best bet. For any fellow Omaha/eastern Nebraska eggheads, go to Jacobo's in east Omaha. I got a 10oz bag of bulk ancho chili powder for $4.00. That makes a lot of rub. Plus, they have homemade burritos, carnitas by the pound, fresh tortillas and chips, as well as the best salsa I've ever had in my life.
For the instant espresso, I used Medaglia d'Oro. If you can't track it down in the store, you can find it online. The link I saw on Amazon sold it in six-packs of jars for about $30. That's a bit pricey, and would make a ton of coffee rub. I used it on a turkey breast for Thanksgiving, and it was incredible. A 5-gallon bucket of coffee rub might seem excessive, until you try it. Then you'll make a second batch.
LBGE since June 2012
Omaha, NE
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