John Connor
Lifer
- Nov 30, 2012
- 22,757
- 619
- 121
How do you pronounce Gyro.. I've heard it as guh-eye-row, Juh-eye-row, Guh-ear-row. And shawarma.. what is the difference between that and a gyro?
I say it like Euro. <--best I can spell it.
How do you pronounce Gyro.. I've heard it as guh-eye-row, Juh-eye-row, Guh-ear-row. And shawarma.. what is the difference between that and a gyro?
Between Rochester and Buffalo
i say year-ohHow do you pronounce Gyro.. I've heard it as guh-eye-row, Juh-eye-row, Guh-ear-row. And shawarma.. what is the difference between that and a gyro?
i say year-oh
Not sure I understand the need to cook uniformly and precisely to 165 F, only for it to be sliced up thinly and broiled afterwards. Wouldn't the broiling process make the slices go way above 165 F anyway?
Not sure I understand the need to cook uniformly and precisely to 165 F, only for it to be sliced up thinly and broiled afterwards. Wouldn't the broiling process make the slices go way above 165 F anyway?
man o man do i want gyros now. /droooooool
shiiiiiiiiit now I want gyros for lunch
the broiler is to give them the crispy, "finished" texture.
sous vide is the only way to cook the meat to the exact temperature uniformly.
I get that, but unless your slices are pretty thick, I think your whole slice has to end up being above 165 F if you are to getting any significant crisping done under a broiler.
I get that, but unless your slices are pretty thick, I think your whole slice has to end up being above 165 F if you are to getting any significant crisping done under a broiler.
getting it to 165 slowly is going to help break up any remaining connective tissue in the mix and help give it the smooth texture. you wouldn't get that if you went straight to broiling from the meat paste. i think. the broiler then adds another texture on top of that.
Doner kebab, shawarma, gyro, and tacos al pastor are all the same thing. The particular sauces and garnishes vary by region and restaurant.
holy fuck, they are not the same thing at all. the only similarity is lots of meat stacked on top of each other + vertical rotisserie thing. also fails to take into account american gyro, which is different from european gyro.
