What can you expect in the Food Thread on PF?

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The discussion revolves around a vibrant exchange of food-related topics, with participants sharing favorite recipes, culinary experiences, and kitchen mishaps. A notable focus is on lentil recipes, with suggestions for dishes like chocolate lentil cake and lentil lasagna, as well as creative uses of lentils in various cuisines. Participants also share recipes for pasta with pesto, grilled shrimp marinades, and Indian dishes like dahl and gulab jamun. There’s a strong emphasis on improvisation in cooking, with many contributors discussing how they cook "by feel" rather than following strict measurements. The conversation also touches on cultural influences, such as the appreciation for Lebanese and South Indian cuisine, and the importance of traditional meals like the Indian sadya. Additionally, humorous anecdotes about kitchen disasters and the challenges of cooking techniques, like frying mozzarella sticks, add a lighthearted tone to the thread. Overall, the thread celebrates the joy of cooking and the communal sharing of food experiences.
  • #4,501
Evo said:
I was going to give you some tips to consider but didn't want to come across wrong.
Don't be shy, I'll listen to any advise no matter how wrong it is. Just look at Borek's ridiculous and highly insulting suggestion above.
 
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  • #4,502
Jimmy Snyder said:
Don't be shy, I'll listen to any advise no matter how wrong it is. Just look at Borek's ridiculous and highly insulting suggestion above.
Alrighty then!
 
  • #4,503
Your stew sounds fine - probably just needs aging and a few additives.

Never fail beef stew
1 large can Dinty Moore Beef stew
1 large tomato chopped
3 spring onions chopped
garlic to taste
frozen peas thawed in microwave
frozen corn thawed in microwave
left over red wine that's been in the frig for ever if you have any
frozen green beans thawed in microwave if you wish ( I do three minutes on frozen vegs)
any leftover beef, spaghetti sauce (NOT the sweet kind), hamburger
dried shriveled up hot peppers from the back of the frig
any other leftovers that seem like they would meld well
spinach goes well too - leftover, canned or frozen
leftover sausage, either link or patty go well also
fresh carrot nuked until soft and then sliced

Dump all the ingredients into a large pan. Heat until it starts to simmer at least. Season to taste. Eat with homemade biscuits or cornbread. Save leftovers as they get better each day.

Things that from experience don't go well in it - black beans, red beans, lentils, etc., pasta, things with lemon, capers, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage is iffy - not much is probably OK, basil, hot dogs, chicken, collard greens, cheese.
 
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  • #4,504
  • #4,505
I don't particularly like corn in beef stew. It's great in Brunswick stew with lima beans. Especially when cut fresh from the cot. It is interesting that the recipe from the Chew did leave out the peas and something else I think.
 
  • #4,506
In honor of St. Paddy's day, as some of our family are indeed Irish, I wanted to share the fact that Irish Potatoes come from South America and that they have a huge number of different types. Now you can find probably six or seven varieties of potato but as a kid there were the regular russet, what is called "new potato" which is a young russet, a the redskin used for potato salad. Now they have the golds and the purples and several white varieties. When we lived in Colombia we asked Colombian friends what they found to be the most fascinating thing the US when they visited. All agreed that it was our grocery stores. They were enthralled by them. No wonder so many of us are horizontally enhanced - so many great things to eat now. My Colombian students told me that each time they spent the summer in the US they gained 15 pounds. Higher calories and more food and less walking
 
  • #4,507
As a kid (about 50 years ago) we had varietal potatoes in Maine. One of the best was Katahdins. They were pretty resistant to rot, and kept well. There were more varieties, but we couldn't afford to plant 1/4 acre of each to try them out...
 
  • #4,508
Forgot, in the quick and easy and amazingly good beef stew, be sure the red wine is DRY. This is a great recipe to use up wine you forgot to drink as it doesn't matter if it's gotten a bit vinegary.
 
  • #4,509
lisab said:
If you soak them in rum first (or a spirit of your choice), raisins become something even an anti-raisin person could love :!).
I think it has to be rum. And then perhaps baked into a rum cake.
 
  • #4,510
Curry is good.



OK that was half random thought. Maybe we need a random food thought thread?
 
  • #4,511
I just had a pizza delivered, and I think it would have been tastier if I'd eaten the cardboard box.

I'm just too damn lazy to make my own.
 
  • #4,512
cooked raisins, rum or not - gaaaggg

Green curry with real Thai eggplant - amazing!

made eggplant salad tonight and it turned out quite good. I ate the whole thing.
1 medium eggplant nuked until soft
1 medium tomato
parsley
cilantro if you like it
greek olives
three spring onions
extra virgin olive oil
1 cap of fish sauce
lemon juice to taste

scrape the inside of the eggplant into a bowl and use scissors to cut it up into small pieces
slice spring onions
chop tomato
chop parsley and cilantro
combine and add fish sauce and olives and olive oil
add lemon juice last and stir.
Good as a dip also but I like it plain
Just use salt if you don't have fish sauce DON'T use soy sauce. You can use some anchovy paste in maybe half teaspoon of water instead of fish sauce.

I served this with Indian chicken in a yoghurt sauce with some tomato in it also. I'm sooo stuffed.
Dessert - 1/2 cup heavy cream, unsweetened cocoa, powdered sugar, cinnamon and vanilla to taste. Whip until stiff - instant mousse.
 
  • #4,513
A full-grain sandwich with goat cheese and raisins, yumm.
 
  • #4,514
My wife bought me some Applegate Farms uncured ham (no preservatives or additives) and last night she made me a grilled ham and cheese sandwich with mustard. (I was not feeling well, after dealing with the guy that tuned up our furnace, since his clothing smelled like perfume, Bounce and other crap.) This morning I chopped ham, fried it in butter with a bit of onion, and dumped in some scrambled eggs to make a quick-and-dirty ham omelet. I usually like to cook, but tossing stuff together works when you're feeling crappy. My sinuses are stuffed up and my arthritis is flared up, so I hope today is another "summer" day that I can spend on the back deck with Duke.
 
  • #4,515
Sounds yummy Turbo. And you could do the chopping in larger quantities to have ready when you're too tired to do anything more challenging.

For those of you who love a good pasta sauce but don't have time to make it Gia Russa makes a Cherry Tomato sauce that is really great. I like Serrafina a little better but can't seem to find it any more. Both are a bit pricey - about $6 for about a 24 ounce jar - but it's made with fresh cherry and San Marzano tomatoes, olive oil, fresh garlilc and fresh basil. And NO SUGAR in it. One of the few that doesn't have added sugar. I use them as a base, added chopped tomatoes, more garlic, more basil, peppers and whatever else I happen to have that goes well. It makes a great base for pasta, pizza, chili, vegetable soup, eggplant Parmesan, and I've even used it for gumbo and jambalaya. Walmart has one bottled sauce that is not bad and cheaper - about $4 - but I can't remember the brand. Out of all their varieties I found only one worth eating.

Forgot to mention I'm doing home made potato chips. I got a cheap mandoline from Kmart (thank you Martha Stewart), slice them right over the oil and they're done in no time. You can also do them in the microwave if you lightly oil your clean microwave glass dish and nuke until they start turning brown. Just watch the first batch to see how long your oven takes. If you use small potatoes you can get a carb fix with no oil this way and if you eat the meat, veggies and fats first you don't spike your blood sugar.
 
  • #4,516
  • #4,517
There is no need for added sugar in tomato sauce. Want to add "sweetness"? Add basil and simmer. No extra calories, and the smell and taste is to die for.

My wife bought a mandoline a while back, and it is quite handy for processing small batches of raw vegetables. I prefer the old ways, and reach for my Sabbatier knives whenever I'm slicing or chopping. If I could justify the cost, I'd buy an entire set of Thiers-Issard cutlery from the little tiny paring knives at least through the 9" chef's knifes. Their knives are killer.
 
  • #4,518
I grew up with a mandoline, my mother had a professional one that you could adjust to accommodate to do anything. All I have is a cheapo plastic japanese mandoline, but when you're cutting a lot, or uniformity is important and you want to go fast, that thing blazes though vegetables. No need to get a cuisinart dirty just to slice something. Small jobs, I use a knife.

I agree on the no sugar in tomato sauce.
 
  • #4,519
turbo said:
There is no need for added sugar in tomato sauce. Want to add "sweetness"? Add basil and simmer. No extra calories, and the smell and taste is to die for.

Or a carrot.
 
  • #4,520
lisab said:
Or a carrot.
I found out that is actually a common trick with italian cooks, just discovered it a few months ago. If you grate it up fine, no one will even know it's in there. Never too late to learn new tricks.
 
  • #4,521
Shredded carrots can do wonders. I prefer basil, but you can do a lot with carrots. Plus, they tend to add bulk as a sauce is thickening.
 
  • #4,522
Evo said:
I grew up with a mandoline, my mother had a professional one that you could adjust to accommodate to do anything.
Dang. At first I thought I was going to hear music to dine by.

200px-Piccolomando.jpg


But learned what it really is.

http://canfieldcooking.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/mandoline-300x230.jpg
 
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  • #4,523
My parents were working late tonight so I was left in charge of dinner.

I started to make burgers and couldn't find any onion to put in them, so I chopped up some smoked bacon, some dried chilli and tomato and then I added some maple syrup to the mix to add a bit of stickiness.

Delicious.
 
  • #4,524
I like a double or triple meat (patty) bacon cheeseburger (real cheese, e.g., monterrey jack) with avocado and jalapeños (or better habaneros) with hot sauce - on a toasted multigrain bun. :biggrin:
 
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  • #4,525
Astronuc said:
I like a double or triple meat (patty) bacon cheeseburger (real cheese, e.g., monterrey jack) with avocado and jalapenos (or better habaneros) with hot sauce - on a toasted multigrain bun. :biggrin:

Me too, minus the avocado. :wink:
 
  • #4,526
My usual breakfast sandwich is sausage, bacon, egg and cheese with jalapeños on a roll. :-p

It's my minimum daily requirement of red meat, cholesterol, saturated fat and salt.
 
  • #4,527
On the chew a few weeks ago they made a burger and topped it with barbecued pulled pork and I think slaw and who knows what else. Hard to find a good burger today. The steak houses have pretty good ones and steak and shake isn't bad. They have one with guacamole that was interesting. I never buy raw burger - always buy the whole cut and get it ground or grind it myself. I do wonder why frozen beef doesn't hold together in a burger like the unfrozen. Where are our resident tissue experts? Have to ask Google.
 
  • #4,528
Supermarket frozen beef is almost guaranteed to contain pink slime. My wife buys ground buffalo meat (locally-grown animals) from the local artisan butcher, and it holds together beautifully in a skillet and out on the grill. Tastes great, too. Some supermarket chains have vowed to stop selling ground beef containing pink slime, but it should be noted that many of them get their beef from huge processors and they might not actually have the control that they claim to have.
 
  • #4,529
Still haven't found out why freezing beef before grinding or after for that matter keeps it from sticking together. Freezing does rupture cell membranes but why would that cause the ground beef to be less sticky??
 
  • #4,530
Please refer to the previous post (4532). Frozen beef from a supermarket has often contained quite a bit of "pink slime" (you should Google that). If you buy decent cuts and grind it yourself, it will hold together lots better during cooking.
 

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