Ridgerunner
Garden Master
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2009
- Messages
- 8,233
- Reaction score
- 10,075
- Points
- 397
- Location
- Southeast Louisiana Zone 9A
I read that water is what draws out the slime. If you avoid water, you avoid the slime.
One recipe I tried was to pat the the okra dry after you wash it and keep your hands and utensils dry. Slice it and cook it down very slowly with tomato, onion, garlic and one tablespoon of white vinegar. I don't have the measurements of the other ingredients, but about enough to serve 4. I added olive oil to the pan and stirred a lot to keep it from burning. I did not have the tomato at the time but will next time, but that is another thread. I did coarse chop a young green pepper and fried that with it. It was not slimy and was pretty good even without the tomato. Next time I'll have the tomato and may add some sage to see how that works.
One hint I saw was to freeze the okra until it was well frozen, probably overnight, then slice it while it was still frozen. I did not try that method. I'd expect my execution to not meet the theory and it would thaw on me due to my warm hands. Keeping it dry worked.
One recipe I tried was to pat the the okra dry after you wash it and keep your hands and utensils dry. Slice it and cook it down very slowly with tomato, onion, garlic and one tablespoon of white vinegar. I don't have the measurements of the other ingredients, but about enough to serve 4. I added olive oil to the pan and stirred a lot to keep it from burning. I did not have the tomato at the time but will next time, but that is another thread. I did coarse chop a young green pepper and fried that with it. It was not slimy and was pretty good even without the tomato. Next time I'll have the tomato and may add some sage to see how that works.
One hint I saw was to freeze the okra until it was well frozen, probably overnight, then slice it while it was still frozen. I did not try that method. I'd expect my execution to not meet the theory and it would thaw on me due to my warm hands. Keeping it dry worked.