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Spice of the Fortnight (SOTF) #4: Saffron (beg. Oct. 30)

Posted on 10/30/17 at 6:02 pm
Posted by RedStickBR
Member since Sep 2009
14577 posts
Posted on 10/30/17 at 6:02 pm


quote:

Saffron is responsible for that distinctive bright yellow color and flavor of Italian risotto milanese, French bouillabaisse, Spanish paella, and Indian biryanis. Like truffles, some people find saffron completely intoxicating and addictive.


quote:

What Is Saffron?

Taste: Sweet, bitter

Most Popular Use: Rice, vegetables, baked goods

Saffron is the dried orange-red stigmas of a particular kind of crocus flower. There are only 3 stigmas in each flower, and you have to harvest them carefully by hand just as the flower is opening. It takes almost 70,000 crocus flowers to produce just one pound of dried saffron. And as such, it comes with a pretty high price tag.

Saffron has a very subtle flavor and aroma — some say it's floral, some say it's like honey, and some would just say pungent. The flavor can be hard to nail down and described. If you're going for authenticity in dishes like paella and bouillabaisse, you've got to have saffron. There's really no substitute for its flavor.

When buying saffron, look for threads that are uniformly long and have an eye-popping color. Don't bother with broken saffron, saffron powder, or threads that look dull and dusty, they're not worth the cost.

This is definitely one of those spices where it's worth it to pay more. So-called "bargain" saffron is probably very old or mixed with saffron styles (another part of the crocus) or marigold flowers.


LINK

Recipes with Saffron:

LINK
This post was edited on 10/30/17 at 6:10 pm
Posted by MeridianDog
Home on the range
Member since Nov 2010
14539 posts
Posted on 10/30/17 at 6:44 pm to
Nice photo. Beautiful color. Great composition. $250.00 worth of Saffron!


Posted by RedStickBR
Member since Sep 2009
14577 posts
Posted on 10/30/17 at 7:28 pm to
I just paid about $10 for two grams, but by God there's not a single spice I'm not going to try.
Posted by BottomlandBrew
Member since Aug 2010
29292 posts
Posted on 10/31/17 at 3:53 pm to
I don't have any experience with saffron, so this will be a good learning experience for me.
Posted by gmrkr5
NC
Member since Jul 2009
15101 posts
Posted on 10/31/17 at 4:15 pm to
quote:

$250.00 worth of Saffron!


lol yep... at least $250
Posted by MeridianDog
Home on the range
Member since Nov 2010
14539 posts
Posted on 10/31/17 at 5:38 pm to
quote:

gmrkr5


If you said "No that is $500.00 worth of saffron." I would have agreed.

Only use it for special dishes for special people, because the saffron adds $20.00 or more to the cost of any dish.

Don't want to do that for a F&D Post.

This post was edited on 10/31/17 at 5:41 pm
Posted by RedStickBR
Member since Sep 2009
14577 posts
Posted on 10/31/17 at 6:59 pm to
Fully agree, but you have to know HOW to use it before you can impress anyone. Consider this a down payment
Posted by Degas
2187645493 posts
Member since Jul 2010
11953 posts
Posted on 10/31/17 at 8:23 pm to
Posted by BottomlandBrew
Member since Aug 2010
29292 posts
Posted on 11/3/17 at 7:28 pm to
As mentioned earlier, my saffron experience is nill. I bought some on Amazon the other day. I'm not sure of the quality, but it smelled good and tasted fine.





I decided to make this dish to start out with. Pretty much did it verbatim, minus the parsley because I honestly forgot to go cut some before serving and I added some of Kroger's finest grated parmesan.

Not a bad dish. I think I could have used a different pasta that held some more sauce nuggets. It was nice and fishy from the anchovies, which I enjoyed. The saffron was perceptible, but not dominating.

Posted by RedStickBR
Member since Sep 2009
14577 posts
Posted on 11/4/17 at 10:57 pm to
Your dish looks perfect. Also, this would be a great way to explore saffron because all of the other ingredients in the dish are normal for American diets (unlike some of the Indian / Korean dishes we did for Garam Masala and Gochujang). This should allow the taste of the saffron to be isolated nicely. Thanks for the recipe and pics and nice work on the dish.
Posted by BottomlandBrew
Member since Aug 2010
29292 posts
Posted on 11/7/17 at 8:10 pm to
Worked over a bit tonight, so I did a quick dish with mixed beans, tofu sausage, onion, kale, garlic, parsley, paprika, vegetable stock, a touch of liquid crab boil, tomato paste, and, of course, a generous pinch of saffron. Put it in the instant pot for 30 minutes. It's not the most photogenic dish, but it hit the comfort spot after a cold, rainy day.



Posted by RedStickBR
Member since Sep 2009
14577 posts
Posted on 11/8/17 at 3:10 pm to
Looks great to me. Thanks for posting. I've been traveling but looking forward to getting to a saffron dish this weekend.
Posted by Twenty 49
Shreveport
Member since Jun 2014
20868 posts
Posted on 11/8/17 at 7:52 pm to
Milk Street podcast (Chris Kimball's new gig) had a lady on who started Rumi Spice, which sells legit saffron from Afghanistan.

She said much of what we get here is old or is cut with stuff like died corn silks and other impostor ingredients.

They'll sell you 2 grams for about $30, or .5 gram for $9.



LINK

They have an interesting backstory:

quote:

Started by a team of US military veterans joining forces with a lawyer who worked for the Afghan Rural Enterprise Development Program, Rumi sources saffron from local Afghan farms and employs more than 300 women in Herat, Afghanistan to hand-harvest the delicate crimson stigmas of the flowers.

Committed to empowering Afghan women and bolstering the country’s economy, Rumi reinvests back into agricultural and manufacturing infrastructure.
Posted by MeridianDog
Home on the range
Member since Nov 2010
14539 posts
Posted on 11/8/17 at 8:20 pm to
I have a old business friend who is in QC incoming inspection with McCormick at their facility in Hunt Valley, MD. He is an expert at microscopic examination of spices to identify contamination. They sample all receipts and then determine how contaminated they are. He has told me that the majority of spice vendors are cheats or outright crooks at heart and will contaminate spices with whatever they can find that looks similar and is cheaper.

I can imagine what lengths they would go to in order to add junk to saffron.

Oh, he always said India-Indians were the absolute worst crooks of all.
This post was edited on 11/8/17 at 8:22 pm
Posted by MeridianDog
Home on the range
Member since Nov 2010
14539 posts
Posted on 11/10/17 at 9:43 am to
I try to never post a recipe that I haven't cooked, but this one from the website "Hunter, Angler, Gardener, Cook" looks like a great feature for Saffron.

Trout, with Orange Saffron Sauce


Here is a photo I borrowed from his article. Looks nice to me and I have cooked this guy's stuff. It is first rate and he does everything - foul, venison, bison, fish, whatever.



You could use other than trout, but Costco and Sam's both carry it from time to time.

Non Saffron related comment.

Look up his Salmon Chowder and Icelandic Salmon Soup on the site when you get there. I will do the soup - very soon. It jst looks too good to pass up.

This post was edited on 11/10/17 at 9:45 am
Posted by RedStickBR
Member since Sep 2009
14577 posts
Posted on 11/10/17 at 11:18 am to
That looks incredible. And I've got trout in the freezer! Jackpot.
Posted by Maggie6d
Member since Aug 2015
425 posts
Posted on 11/10/17 at 11:19 am to
I use turmeric on dishes calling for saffron. Cheaper and i can't tell the difference
Posted by RedStickBR
Member since Sep 2009
14577 posts
Posted on 11/11/17 at 9:13 pm to
Made this Spanish Chicken in Almond Sauce tonight and it was fantastic. The pungent taste of the saffron, the egg yolk and almond paste, the meatiness of the bone-in chicken legs and thighs ... it all combines into an incredibly complex flavor profile.

We made a few edits:

1 - we withheld the bread

2 - we used a bit of Cajun spice mix and a curry spice mix in addition to the salt and pepper

3 - we doubled the wine and doubled the chicken stock

4 - we deboned our chicken about halfway through

5 - we sautéed some bacon pieces after the initial browning of the chicken

6 - we topped with basil

LINK




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