Brussel sprouts
Author
Discussion

don4l

Original Poster:

10,058 posts

202 months

Wednesday 23rd December 2015
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We always have a traditional Christmas dinner which includes brussel sprouts. However, we always get baby sprouts as I cannot stand the taste of the big ones.

This 6ear we cannot find any baby sprouts. In fact, they are all bloody enormous. I've read somewhere that all the growers are using a new bigger variety. Has anyone tasted them? Do they taste the same as the old ones?


PositronicRay

28,777 posts

209 months

Wednesday 23rd December 2015
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Delicious, best put them on now though. yum

calibrax

4,788 posts

237 months

Wednesday 23rd December 2015
quotequote all
After boiling, drain them in a colander and let them just sit there while you bung a decent sized knob of butter in the pan along with some chopped bacon or lardons. Add back the sprouts once the bacon has crisped up a bit, and make sure they get a good coating of the butter/bacon. Makes any sprouts tasty, small or large smile

thebraketester

15,628 posts

164 months

Wednesday 23rd December 2015
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Just don't other.

marshalla

15,902 posts

227 months

Wednesday 23rd December 2015
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calibrax said:
After boiling, drain them in a colander and let them just sit there while you bung a decent sized knob of butter in the pan along with some chopped bacon or lardons. Add back the sprouts once the bacon has crisped up a bit, and make sure they get a good coating of the butter/bacon.
Then place directly in the bin.

cornet

1,471 posts

184 months

Wednesday 23rd December 2015
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Hate boiled sprouts (especially large ones). Roasting them or pan frying with bacon them is by far better.

Fry off bacon to render out the fat. Halve the sprouts and coat them in the fat, reserving the bacon. Roast in hot oven for ~20-30min. Toss the bacon through and serve.

or if you have a large frying pan - similar procedure but cook in pan for around 5-6 min on high heat, possibly with some garlic too.

However both these can be tricky if cooking for a lot of people so I'd probably go for one of the following as they take less time and can get away with a much smaller frying pan.

  • 1/2 the sprouts and blanch for 2-3 min, cool quickly in cold water
  • Then render out bacon fat as before and fry with some garlic for 2-3min until warm
or

  • Shred sprouts and blanch for 30seconds - 1min, cool quickly in cold water
  • Render out bacon fat and fry some garlic for for 1-2min



fttm

4,444 posts

161 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
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they're good , saute with bacon and walnuts what's not to like ?

V8mate

45,899 posts

215 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
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don4l said:
This 6ear we cannot find any baby sprouts. In fact, they are all bloody enormous. I've read somewhere that all the growers are using a new bigger variety.
Nope. It's the weather. The mild, wet season has made them all 'over-grow'.

don4l

Original Poster:

10,058 posts

202 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
quotequote all
thelittleegg said:
It's Brussels, not Brussel.
I had typed it with the 's', but I deleted it before posting.


Thanks for all the answers. The OH has just been out to collect the turkey and she has returned with some hand selected sprouts. She picked the smallest ones and they are the size of golf balls!

We might try doing them with bacon to see if we can hide the taste.

Next year I think that we will break with tradition and do some cauliflower cheese instead.

crossy67

1,570 posts

205 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
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Steam not boil so they don't become water logged and Baby, since when have sprouts given birth?

BoRED S2upid

21,018 posts

266 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
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We have small ones on a stalk big at the bottom which will be going on the compost small at the top. Will be served shredded stir fried with bacon.

condor

8,837 posts

274 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
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I managed to get a bag of mainly small sprouts from Tescos at 39p smile

NormalWisdom

2,179 posts

185 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
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Par-boil, then drain
crisp up some lardons with onion and garlic (season to taste)
cut sprouts into 1/2 or 1/4 and add to garlic, onions and lardons
fry for 5 minutes and serve

I like to keep some crunch in my sprouts and have grown to really like them.

They are much larger this year due to the unusually warm Autumn, for 89p, Lidl are selling on the stem - Very good indeed.

All that jazz

7,632 posts

172 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
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marshalla said:
calibrax said:
After boiling, drain them in a colander and let them just sit there while you bung a decent sized knob of butter in the pan along with some chopped bacon or lardons. Add back the sprouts once the bacon has crisped up a bit, and make sure they get a good coating of the butter/bacon.
Then place directly in the bin.
rofl

All these people boiling them and performing all manner of torture on the poor little blighters are DOING IT WRONG nono. That's what wrecks the taste and makes them taste acidic. You should be STEAMING them but still be careful not to overcook them as you'll get that acidic taste if they're over done. I eat them all year round as I love them. I get the washed ones already in a bag from Sainsburys and they're not bad at all. No need to do anything with them, the odd bit of stalk you can see softens right up when you cook them. Chuck them in a steamer with a cupful of water in the bottom and then micro them on high power (900W micro) for 5 mins, give them a shake, then another 3 mins and done. Leave them to stand for a min or so while you sort out the rest of your meal and bang them on. Perfect cloud9 .

Hoofy

79,696 posts

308 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
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Just boil them to death and they won't taste of anything. You'll know you've boiled them enough when you can cut them with a spoon. Or just let others have them.

PositronicRay

28,777 posts

209 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
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You need to do plenty whether you want them or not. Essential in bubble and squeak for Boxing Day.

Speed 3

5,224 posts

145 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
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I love them steamed and sauted with bacon but I cringe at the thought of how my mum used to cook them in the 70's.....in a pressure cooker for 15 minutes with the rest of the veg. I do now know what astronaut "toothpaste tube" food is like though. I guess it was her way of reducing the cooking time down from 3 hours nuts

All that jazz

7,632 posts

172 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
quotequote all
Speed 3 said:
I love them steamed and sauted with bacon but I cringe at the thought of how my mum used to cook them in the 70's.....in a pressure cooker for 15 minutes with the rest of the veg. I do now know what astronaut "toothpaste tube" food is like though. I guess it was her way of reducing the cooking time down from 3 hours nuts
Same nightmares here too. Those damned pressure cookers!!! Anything you did in them was nuked to the some disgusting mush!

Speed 3

5,224 posts

145 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
quotequote all
All that jazz said:
Speed 3 said:
I love them steamed and sauted with bacon but I cringe at the thought of how my mum used to cook them in the 70's.....in a pressure cooker for 15 minutes with the rest of the veg. I do now know what astronaut "toothpaste tube" food is like though. I guess it was her way of reducing the cooking time down from 3 hours nuts
Same nightmares here too. Those damned pressure cookers!!! Anything you did in them was nuked to the some disgusting mush!
To be fair I still use the one she had but for what they were intended - tenderising cheap cuts of meat. They're awesome for Goulash. Plus they make good steamers if you keep the weight off which brings us back nicely to the original post.

soad

34,443 posts

202 months

Thursday 24th December 2015
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fttm said:
they're good , saute with bacon and walnuts what's not to like ?
Prefer mine with chestnuts. yum