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Most difficult dish ever successfully finished.

Posted on 9/7/25 at 7:28 pm
Posted by Potchafa
Avoyelles
Member since Jul 2016
4142 posts
Posted on 9/7/25 at 7:28 pm
For my wife and I, it was a scotch egg. It took us a dozen or so of eggs, soft boiled perfectly. Our sausage around the egg was home, ground pork and elk meat. Most difficult part was not bursting the eggs while trying to wrap with the meat, then deep fried.



After two bottles of Stag Leap, we finally pulled it off. It was delicious.
Posted by TigerBait1971
PTC GA
Member since Oct 2014
15894 posts
Posted on 9/7/25 at 7:33 pm to
Beef Wellington.

Was awesome.

Will never fix it again.
Posted by gumbo2176
Member since May 2018
19206 posts
Posted on 9/7/25 at 10:52 pm to
The most involved dish I've ever cooked is a Turducken.

I make them for big crowds and use a 4 lb. chicken deboned and stuffed with oyster dressing, an 8 lb. duck deboned and layered with andouille dressing and finally a 20 lb. deboned turkey layered with cornbread dressing.

Then the chicken goes inside the duck and that goes inside the turkey and slow roasted in the oven until done.


I believe the next dish would be my homemade crawfish bisque since I boil my own crawfish and do everything from scratch. It is usually a 2 day thing to be done properly.
Posted by sleepytime
Member since Feb 2014
3839 posts
Posted on 9/7/25 at 11:39 pm to
I cloned Popeyes fried chicken to a friggin t. It took a few months of trial and error but nailed it down. I'll make bones skinless chicken thighs Popeyes style every blue moon but it's too much dang work.
Posted by Professor Dawghair
Member since Oct 2021
1681 posts
Posted on 9/8/25 at 8:08 am to
I guess I would say tamales. Not necessarily difficult, but time consuming and lots of steps.
Posted by Joshjrn
Baton Rouge
Member since Dec 2008
31372 posts
Posted on 9/8/25 at 10:04 am to
quote:

I guess I would say tamales. Not necessarily difficult, but time consuming and lots of steps.

I've done it once. They were delicious, but I'll never do it again. I'm happy to pay someone's abuela for her trouble
Posted by coolpapaboze
Parts Unknown
Member since Dec 2006
20279 posts
Posted on 9/8/25 at 10:18 am to
quote:

Beef Wellington.

Was awesome.

Will never fix it again.

Totally understand, but in my experience Wellington is one of those dishes that really gets easier with repetition.

For me it's either the Gateau Marjolaine LINK, or Thomas Keller's Palat d'or chocolate cake. LINK
Both have lots of steps involving a lot of different techniques. Results are amazing, but both are a huge pain in the butt.
Posted by Napoleon
Kenna
Member since Dec 2007
73050 posts
Posted on 9/8/25 at 11:38 am to
Agree I'm one and done on Welligton.
That was a lot with the mushrooms and the pastry. But it was so good.
Posted by LSUlefty
Youngsville, LA
Member since Dec 2007
28108 posts
Posted on 9/8/25 at 5:30 pm to
I do the Wellington for Christmas. I didn't find it that difficult just time consuming. I used Gordon Ramsays Christmas recipe.
Posted by Roscoe14
Member since Jul 2021
345 posts
Posted on 9/8/25 at 5:54 pm to
I did scotch eggs once and they came out okay, but the yolks weren't runny like yours.. Any hints?
Posted by lsufan1971
Zachary
Member since Nov 2003
23504 posts
Posted on 9/8/25 at 6:08 pm to
Quail Joesph
Posted by GregMaddux
LSU Fan
Member since Jun 2011
18595 posts
Posted on 9/8/25 at 6:24 pm to
quote:

I cloned Popeyes fried chicken to a friggin t.


Please share.
Posted by Boston911
Lafayette
Member since Dec 2013
2325 posts
Posted on 9/8/25 at 6:27 pm to
quote:

The most involved dish I've ever cooked is a Turducken.
Wanna save yourself a lotta work? Use deboned duck breast around a big ball of partially frozen cornbread dressing, wrap with wax paper into the shape you want, partially freeze that, then coat with cornbread dressing, wrap with deboned chicken thigh or breast then repeat with turkey etc and shove into a woven elastic meat sock or whatever they call it. Leaving the skin off eliminates the greasiness and you don’t have to mess with deboning birds
Posted by gumbo2176
Member since May 2018
19206 posts
Posted on 9/8/25 at 6:57 pm to
quote:

Wanna save yourself a lotta work? Use deboned duck breast around a big ball of partially frozen cornbread dressing, wrap with wax paper into the shape you want, partially freeze that, then coat with cornbread dressing, wrap with deboned chicken thigh or breast then repeat with turkey etc and shove into a woven elastic meat sock or whatever they call it. Leaving the skin off eliminates the greasiness and you don’t have to mess with deboning birds



NO, just NO. The purpose of this dish is to not only make something delicious and appealing to the eye, it is also to demonstrate your culinary skills in accomplishing such a labor intensive dish and make it come out delicious.

When I make a turducken I debone all the birds and use the bones to make a pot of stock. Then I take the time to make my dressings from scratch to be used in the stuffing of the birds and that includes shucking my oysters and making my own andouille sausage.

It is a labor of love that I like to share with friends and family not some hacked together crap you can get from the frozen food section of Winn-Dixie.
Posted by pbro62
Baton Rouge
Member since May 2016
15165 posts
Posted on 9/8/25 at 7:34 pm to
By far crawfish bisque but well worth it.
Posted by Chipand2Putts
trembling hills
Member since Apr 2012
1723 posts
Posted on 9/8/25 at 10:10 pm to
Dark red mole’ with braised pork
Posted by jpainter6174
Boss city
Member since Feb 2014
6233 posts
Posted on 9/9/25 at 8:08 am to
quote:

After two bottles of Stag Leap


Apostrophe before or after the "s"... one must know!

Food looks great!
Posted by Potchafa
Avoyelles
Member since Jul 2016
4142 posts
Posted on 9/9/25 at 8:10 am to
quote:

I did scotch eggs once and they came out okay, but the yolks weren't runny like yours.. Any hints?


Getting the eggs barely soft boiled and letting my wife do the wrapping was the trip. She was more gentle with the eggs. Don't fry it at 350 or 375. I did it at 325 / 315. The meat wrap was barely cooked but it was perfect.
Posted by Peejack84
Lafayette
Member since Aug 2019
140 posts
Posted on 9/9/25 at 8:50 am to
You're gonna tell us you nailed Popeyes to a T and not explain?!??
Posted by BlackCoffeeKid
Member since Mar 2016
12889 posts
Posted on 9/9/25 at 9:46 am to
(no message)
This post was edited on 10/26/25 at 6:27 pm
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