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The Food Thread |
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| Dec1-12, 07:16 PM | #4795 |
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The Food Thread
My father and the other male adults would "stake claim" to those mincemeat pies ASAP. His baby sister played along because she was so flattered by the attention. If you were a kid, you were out of luck.
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| Dec1-12, 07:37 PM | #4796 |
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| Dec1-12, 08:15 PM | #4797 |
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| Dec2-12, 07:06 PM | #4798 |
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-hygeio. |
| Dec2-12, 08:18 PM | #4799 |
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My current favorite food are sorrentinos (Argentine pasta, similar to ravioli but bigger) filled with butternut squash and mozzarella. A pure pleasure.
Back in 2005 I made a trip to Peru and I've eaten so much and so many things (including a Guinea Pig). Gastronomically it's an unbelievable country, very rich if not the richest by far. I ate a lot of rice (arroz) as it seems to be popular. May I mention the famous ceviche. I'll never forget that day when we (the people I was living in their house and I) went to the restaurant and ordered ceviche; I started it by eating the red chili on the top of the raw fish. I've got "burned" so badly that I could not eat anything for some hours so I did not eat the ceviche that day. |
| Dec3-12, 12:05 AM | #4800 |
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One day I was served what I thought was cake for dessert. It looked just like a white cake with white icing and sprinkles on top. Much to my surprise, it was made of potatoes! I was there for work and spent a lot of time in a factory. I was treated as a special guest and sat with the president and upper management for lunch. We got meat for lunch, but only our table got meat. No one else did. And what we got was terrible! Then I made the mistake of inviting a mid-level manager to eat with us one day. BIG mistake. When he sat down the entire table fell silent and no one would speak until he got up and left the table. Whoops! I didn't realize until that moment just how class-based the culture is. But eating at the hotel at night was a gastronomical delight to be sure. What a wonderful trip that was! Of the 300K airmiles I traveled over a period of a few years, that trip was the best. Less the part where upon landing we were held hostage at gunpoint at a miltary base for eight hours, with no food, water, or toilets, it was a great trip! On another note, yesterday a friend informed me that he likes to make chocolate-covered bacon. |
| Dec3-12, 04:06 PM | #4801 |
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Also I've eaten some cucumber salad that was astonishing, it was watered with the juice of small lemons. |
| Dec3-12, 09:54 PM | #4802 |
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In total we were on that plane for something like 24 hours. Long flight! |
| Dec3-12, 10:06 PM | #4803 |
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| Dec3-12, 10:13 PM | #4804 |
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| Dec4-12, 01:00 AM | #4806 |
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| Dec4-12, 02:32 PM | #4807 |
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Seat of the Pants Soup. If you want to make an incredible soup and don't mind working without a detailed recipe, here you go.
Cube-cut a decent steak, and mince some yellow onions and garlic. Put the steak, onions, and garlic in the bottom of a hot soup-pot with peanut oil, and sear everything. Add a large can of ground sauce tomatoes ( I like Contadina) and a little water, plus the drained contents of a medium-sized can of black beans. Now is the time to add barley, chopped carrots, frozen string beans and frozen whole-kernel corn. For a hearty soup, cumin and some cayenne should be in the mix, too. If the soup is a bit too runny, consider adding a small can of tomato paste and simmering longer, but consider that the barley will thicken the soup. I don't like to salt soups, because once the salt is in, you can't take it out. Ground celery seed can be a good addition. |
| Dec9-12, 01:47 PM | #4808 |
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im so happy you guys had an extraordinary experience food wise in Peru. i will share you how to make ceviche. It is one of the easiest dishes you will ever make.
INGREDIENTS: 1. Freshness. THIS is the most important thing for a ceviche. The fish needs to be day caught and never frozen. The best fish to use for ceviche is pacific ocean flounder. 2nd alternative is 'corvina' or white sea bass. 2.The limes should be key west lime, since we are in the US, or try finding Mexican lemons that are really small about 2 inches. *Edit. if you are able to find, for some miracle, peruvian 'piura' lemons, those are the lemons you should use for ceviche. * 3. Red Onion. 1 per fish will do. 4. kosher salt, white pepper (or black). 5. OPTIONAL: 'Rocoto' or 'aji amarillo' if you cant find any of these, you can try using jalapenos. Thats it... Steps. 1. you'll need ~7-10 lemons per fish. (This is where you have to experiment, since fishes vary in size and lemons vary in liquid.) 1a. Squeeze lemons into bowl.Dont squeeze the lemons fully, because when you do, the outer shell *the rind*, which is bitter, also gets squeezed into the bowl. 1b. set aside. 1c. Cut the onions as thinly as you can. put into some kind of strainer. Add lots of salt on top of it and mix well. Leave in sink. 2. Cut the fish in cubes approx. 1/2 - 1 inch cubes. uniformity is key. 2a. place into a bowl. big enough bowl to move the fish freely for tossing. 3. OPTIONAL: if you're going to use any of the chili peppers I posted. Cut the chili in the middle and just rub the cut portion along the wall of the bowl. Make circles along the bowl to get the spiciness. (the longer you do this, the spicier it will get. adjust accordingly.) 3a. after 10-15 minutes water the salt away from the onions. use your hand to squeeze the onions' water. or you can use a salad spinner. 3b. add onions to where fish is. 4. splash in some lemon juice and use a wooden spoon to fold the fish over the liquid. 4a. add your salt and pepper to taste. 4b. continue to add lemon juice until the fish can no longer soak up the liquid. you can still add more lemon juice it will not 'destroy' the dish but the fish will no longer absorb more lemon juice. you can use the rest of the lemon, if there's any left over, to make a 'salsa criolla'. (ill post later if people are interested). 5. SERVE IMMEDIATELY. Some recipes will tell you to cook the fish in lemon 30 minutes. but dont. you want the fish taste and not the overpowering of lemon 'cooking' the fish. Super Easy. Told ya. Hopefully, this makes sense. I'll answer any questions. |
| Dec9-12, 02:02 PM | #4809 |
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And to guarantee that you don't ingest live parasites from the fish, make sure the fish was frozen first.
http://seafoodhealthfacts.org/seafoo.../parasites.php |
| Dec9-12, 02:06 PM | #4810 |
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If you are weary about parasites, I guess go for frozen. I will never do that. Been eating ceviche for 25 years the same way and im still ticking. :)
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| Dec9-12, 02:11 PM | #4811 |
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Here's a nice video about worms from raw fish. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YKM7LacSfBQ |
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