annak wrote:I can't tell from your lasagna concept whether you're going for bite-on-a-stick or multiple-bites-on-a-stick (more like a corndog), but one thing that comes to mind is playing with food that is conventionally stickish and adding all the accoutrements. So, for instance, the skewer of souvlaki or the spit of gyro - spinning that into an entire pita-tzatziki-veg-meat on a stick, in which the pita somehow acts like the corncake part of a corndog...
zoid wrote:Seems like the cheese and sausage would fall off the stick.
I'm lazy so I'd make (or parish the thought even buy) some cheese and spinach tortellini or ravioli and be sure to keep it firm then fry big chuncks of sausage and alter them on the skewer.
teatpuller wrote:my thought: make a shallow pan of lasagne. cut into cubes as you say. chill. put on stick. lightly batter and deep fry.
justjoan wrote: any food that tastes good on a stick has probably already been created,
teatpuller wrote:my thought: make a shallow pan of lasagne. cut into cubes as you say. chill. put on stick. lightly batter and deep fry.
stevez wrote:teatpuller wrote:my thought: make a shallow pan of lasagne. cut into cubes as you say. chill. put on stick. lightly batter and deep fry.
I was thinking dipped in chocolate to hold it all together, but I'm liking this batter idea. Hammond, have you consulted the master of novelty on-the-stick dining, Gus at GNR Wiener and Still Champion? I'll bet he'd be a font of knowledge.
Ursiform wrote:David, how about pie on a stick? I went to Girl Scout camp for a month every summer growing up, and we used to make something called "campfire pies." This involved bread, butter, and pie filling, cooked over a hot fire on a stick or a tong (if you were lucky). We had to pinch the edges tightly to seal them, they were slightly dangerous and fun at the same time. Perhaps a riff on this, deep fried or grilled, would suit your experiment?
David Hammond wrote:Some excellent thoughts, guys. I especially like Matt's suggestion of the jambalaya on a stick (it seems impossible, kind of like spaghetti and meatballs on a stick, which has also been attempted).
razbry wrote:Just saw a piece on the Today show this morning. Interesting recipe involving gelatin to hold the food on the stick for the deep fry process.
David Hammond wrote:The inconceivable Mike Gebert came up with a good one: soup on a stick.
On the train ride home, it came to me: vichyssoise. Add gelatin, cut in small cubes, it might actually be good.
Rene G wrote:David Hammond wrote:The inconceivable Mike Gebert came up with a good one: soup on a stick.
On the train ride home, it came to me: vichyssoise. Add gelatin, cut in small cubes, it might actually be good.
Make soupsicles. Vichyssoise, gazpacho, borscht with sour cream swirled in. Perfect snack for a sweltering day.
Fried soup on a stick would be awesome. Use a little gelatin and more methyl cellulose, which creates thermoreversible gel that's firm when hot, liquid when cold*. That way the gelatin would set it just enough when cold to be firm enough to batter, when it hit the grease the gelatin would melt, but the methyl cellulose would prevent it from boiling and oozing out. When it was pulled out from the fryer and cooled down to edible temperatures, it'd be too hot for the gelatin to set, too cold for the methyl cellulose to set. Inside your crisp, fried shell: soup.David Hammond wrote:The inconceivable Mike Gebert came up with a good one: soup on a stick.
On the train ride home, it came to me: vichyssoise. Add gelatin, cut in small cubes, it might actually be good.
Dmnkly wrote:Rene G wrote:David Hammond wrote:The inconceivable Mike Gebert came up with a good one: soup on a stick.
On the train ride home, it came to me: vichyssoise. Add gelatin, cut in small cubes, it might actually be good.
Make soupsicles. Vichyssoise, gazpacho, borscht with sour cream swirled in. Perfect snack for a sweltering day.
I'm so stealing this one.
dansch wrote:Fried soup on a stick would be awesome. Use a little gelatin and more methyl cellulose, which creates thermoreversible gel that's firm when hot, liquid when cold*. That way the gelatin would set it just enough when cold to be firm enough to batter, when it hit the grease the gelatin would melt, but the methyl cellulose would prevent it from boiling and oozing out. When it was pulled out from the fryer and cooled down to edible temperatures, it'd be too hot for the gelatin to set, too cold for the methyl cellulose to set. Inside your crisp, fried shell: soup.David Hammond wrote:The inconceivable Mike Gebert came up with a good one: soup on a stick.
On the train ride home, it came to me: vichyssoise. Add gelatin, cut in small cubes, it might actually be good.
The incredible - and free - hydrocolloid recipe collection from Khymos would be the place to start.
-Dan
* there are all sorts for various gel strengths, temperature ranges, etc
spinynorman99 wrote:Have a friend who's a caterer and he uses his anti-gridlle for this regularly.
http://www.cuisinetechnology.com/the-anti-griddle.php

