gastro gnome wrote:I was leaning towards roasting, but I wanted to poll the board for brilliant ideas.
Usually beets are easier to peel after roasting. Would removing the peel significantly cut down on cooking time? If not, is there a reason to do it ahead of time?
Aschie30, I find similar time frames for roasting whole beets. I imagine that for a beet this big, I would have to lower the oven temperature a bit to keep the thinner bits from drying out.
AngrySarah wrote:I think you are doing a disservice to us all by not posting several pictures of the big beet..
AngrySarah wrote:Am I the only one a little sad he was cut up?
Louisa Chu wrote:(And that was Alain Passard who roasted the beet on Diary of a Foodie - who can afford to use French sea salt.)
eatchicago wrote:Louisa Chu wrote:(And that was Alain Passard who roasted the beet on Diary of a Foodie - who can afford to use French sea salt.)
I'm curious: does the type of salt really matter here? I always thought the purpose of this technique was to essentially create a hard chamber for the food to cook within, the salt being a construction tool rather than something to season or enhance the food.
Certainly, you want a "flakier" salt rather than iodized table salt for construction purposes, but if it can make a shell is the good stuff really necessary?
Mike G wrote:I would carve out the insides, poke out eye holes, and wear it.
gastro gnome wrote:The one time I baked something in a salt crust, it was also from Good Eats. The problem was that, the salt 'dough' never really cohered completely. The crust, was indeed crack-able, but much loose salt also clung to the fish. Made for a bit of a hassle to remove and a little bit of a mess. I haven't tried again.
So, is there a golden ratio to remember when salt-encrusting something?
Maybe using rock salt will solve the problem as its large size will make for easier clean-up.
Mike G wrote:I would carve out the insides, poke out eye holes, and wear it.
Rick T. wrote:I roast beets indirectly on the grill over medium hight heat until the outside is charred and the inside is soft. Cool, peel, and use however you want.
Choey wrote:Mike G wrote:I would carve out the insides, poke out eye holes, and wear it.
GAAA: a vegetarian Gregor Samsa.



G Wiv wrote:Used two in the salad, one in a beet, gorgonzola, smoked pork, onion, olive pizza and have two left for another day.